- Great River Energy's Stanton Station power plant
- 189-MW; on-line since 1966
- to close by May, 2017
- one-two punch: a) not economical in low-price environment; b) war on coal/carbon emissions
- will help North Dakota meet the 45 percent CO2 emissions reduction set forth by the Clean Power Plan, currently stalled by lawsuits
- GRE continues to operate the Coal Creek Station power plant near Underwood and the Spiritwood Station plant near Jamestown
Friday, July 15, 2016
One-Two Punch Knocks Out North Dakota Coal Plant -- July 15, 2016
Data points:
Week 28: July 10, 2016 -- July 16, 2016
Military coup in Turkey is being reported; has yet to play out. The attempted coup appears to have begun on Friday, July 15, 2016. There are reports that the Turkish premier is asking for asylum in Germany. [Later: it appears the coup has failed. If the military failed, this is most likely Turkey's last chance not to become an Islamic state.]
Director's Cut released today revealed that North Dakota crude oil production in May (2016) increased ever so slightly after remarkable decline in April. Tea leaves suggest the worse may not be over for the Bakken.
The glut of oil and gasoline has continued to increase. Gasoline is down to $1.68 in some parts of north Texas. The persistently, stubborn low price is causing worry for Saudi Arabia.
Operations
Possible halo effect on a very old vertical well
An MRO well produced 52,000 bbls in first 20 days
Rig counts mean little in predicting production in the Bakken -- Mike Filloon
Denbury sells remaining non-core Williston Basin acreage
Fracking
Random update of a re-fracked well following a failed frack
Pipelines
Update on the Dakota Access Pipeline
Director's Cut released today revealed that North Dakota crude oil production in May (2016) increased ever so slightly after remarkable decline in April. Tea leaves suggest the worse may not be over for the Bakken.
The glut of oil and gasoline has continued to increase. Gasoline is down to $1.68 in some parts of north Texas. The persistently, stubborn low price is causing worry for Saudi Arabia.
Operations
Possible halo effect on a very old vertical well
An MRO well produced 52,000 bbls in first 20 days
Rig counts mean little in predicting production in the Bakken -- Mike Filloon
Denbury sells remaining non-core Williston Basin acreage
Fracking
Random update of a re-fracked well following a failed frack
Pipelines
Update on the Dakota Access Pipeline
Eight (8) New Permits -- July 15, 2016
Active rigs:
Eight (8) new permits:
7/15/2016 | 07/15/2015 | 07/15/2014 | 07/15/2013 | 07/15/2012 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Active Rigs | 29 | 73 | 194 | 186 | 215 |
Eight (8) new permits:
- Operators: Whiting (3), MRO (2), BR (2), Enerplus
- Fields: Moccasin Creek (Dunn), Reunion Bay (Mountrail), Blue Buttes (McKenzie), Antelope (McKenzie)
- Comments:
- BR (2), a Helson permit and a Craterhawk permit, both in McKenzie County
- Whiting, a Wright permit in McKenzie County
Top 23 Bakken Fields Based On Oil Production Per Well -- May, 2016
Ranked in descending order, fourth column - "May oil / well / month."
The last (fifth) column is the percent change in production per well from April, 2016, to May, 2016. This is independent of the number of new wells or wells newly shut in or inactivated.
Field
|
May 2016 Production
|
May Wells
|
May Oil/Well/Month
|
Percent Change Apr-to-May
|
Spotted Horn
|
756,635
|
86
|
8,798
|
0.52%
|
Long Creek
|
233,213
|
27
|
8,638
|
31.08%
|
Twin Valley
|
120,559
|
18
|
6,698
|
-16.41%
|
Pershing
|
230,624
|
39
|
5,913
|
3.59%
|
Grail
|
980,087
|
172
|
5,698
|
-7.56%
|
Camel Butte
|
188,393
|
34
|
5,541
|
-9.44%
|
Bear Den
|
242,148
|
44
|
5,503
|
-15.36%
|
Crazy Man Creek
|
238,769
|
44
|
5,427
|
11.86%
|
Corral Creek
|
802,581
|
148
|
5,423
|
8.24%
|
Antelope
|
862,851
|
164
|
5,261
|
2.67%
|
Johnson Corner
|
157,295
|
31
|
5,074
|
20.79%
|
Blue Buttes
|
650,386
|
140
|
4,646
|
26.57%
|
Elm Tree
|
138,701
|
31
|
4,474
|
9.89%
|
Tobacco Garden
|
229,960
|
52
|
4,422
|
6.47%
|
McGregory Buttes
|
410,277
|
93
|
4,412
|
-6.99%
|
East Fork
|
456,669
|
104
|
4,391
|
-9.79%
|
Keene
|
196,933
|
45
|
4,376
|
13.42%
|
Bear Creek
|
117,299
|
27
|
4,344
|
-26.45%
|
Grinnell
|
196,253
|
47
|
4,176
|
31.04%
|
Camp
|
523,724
|
127
|
4,124
|
13.46%
|
Mandaree
|
333,668
|
82
|
4,069
|
-1.82%
|
South Fork
|
116,404
|
29
|
4,014
|
-1.48%
|
The last (fifth) column is the percent change in production per well from April, 2016, to May, 2016. This is independent of the number of new wells or wells newly shut in or inactivated.
Top 20 Fields By Field Production -- May, 2016 -- The Bakken
Field
|
April Wells
|
May 2016 Production
|
May Wells
|
May Oil/Well/Month
|
Percent Change Apr-to-May
|
Sanish
|
600
|
1,503,121
|
600
|
2,505
|
0.03%
|
Parshall
|
365
|
1,092,382
|
433
|
2,523
|
-0.74%
|
Grail
|
172
|
980,087
|
172
|
5,698
|
-7.56%
|
Antelope
|
162
|
862,851
|
164
|
5,261
|
2.67%
|
Alger
|
310
|
855,217
|
312
|
2,741
|
22.63%
|
Corral Creek
|
148
|
802,581
|
148
|
5,423
|
8.24%
|
Siverston
|
223
|
788,308
|
223
|
3,535
|
2.21%
|
Spotted Horn
|
80
|
756,635
|
86
|
8,798
|
0.52%
|
Banks
|
173
|
657,457
|
176
|
3,736
|
27.76%
|
Blue Buttes
|
137
|
650,386
|
140
|
4,646
|
26.57%
|
Reunion Bay
|
146
|
582,569
|
146
|
3,990
|
-3.73%
|
Heart Butte
|
177
|
555,355
|
177
|
3,138
|
-2.48%
|
Alkali Creek
|
141
|
554,427
|
141
|
3,932
|
2.29%
|
Camp
|
127
|
523,724
|
127
|
4,124
|
13.46%
|
Van Hook
|
178
|
518,249
|
178
|
2,912
|
14.64%
|
Truax
|
171
|
491,445
|
171
|
2,874
|
-4.04%
|
East Fork
|
104
|
456,669
|
104
|
4,391
|
-9.79%
|
McGregory Buttes
|
88
|
410,277
|
93
|
4,412
|
-6.99%
|
Big Bend
|
116
|
409,073
|
116
|
3,526
|
86.65%
|
Robinson Lake
|
168
|
406,293
|
172
|
2,362
|
-7.65%
|
Top twenty fields in order of total field production, descending.
The last (sixth) column is the percent change in production per well. This is independent of the number of new wells or wells newly shut in or inactivated. All data is May, 2016, except for the second column which is the number of producing wells in April, 2016.
So, for example:
- Alger field: only two additional wells in May, but production per well increased by almost 23%.
- Banks field: only three additional wells in May, but production per well increased by almost 28%
- Blue Buttes field: similar results as Alger and Banks fields
- Camp, Van Hook: double digit percent increase in production per well, but same number of wells
- Big Bend: huge increase in percent change in production per well, but number of wells unchanged
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