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Saturday, November 5, 2016

CLR To Report Two Huge Bakken Wells; Still On Confidential List; Russian Frigate Reaches Syria; Pause In Ground War Ends; A/C Carrier Carrying Out Exercises Off East Coast Of Crete -- November 5, 2016

For more on these two wells, go to this post.

This well is still on confidential status, but has this production profile:

DateOil RunsMCF Sold
9-20164673041850
8-20161000773

It's neighbor has this production profile but is still on the confidential list:

DateOil RunsMCF Sold
9-20161604411216

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Update On The Russian North Fleet Heading For Syria

If the Russian North Fleet is still being accompanied by the tug providing signal location, the fleet is still loitering off the east coast of Crete.

It is possible part of the fleet, including the tug, is on the east coast of Crete while the rest of the fleet heads to Syria.

On the other hand, it maybe positioning itself the coast of Crete -- similar to what the US does when it brings its a/c fleets in this "American sea." Meanwhile, at least one frigate from Russia's Black Sea Fleet has passed through the Bosphorus and has reached the coast of Syria.
The Admiral Grigorovich, part of Russia’s Black Sea fleet, arrived off the Syrian coast on Friday as the latest pause in the Russian bombardment of eastern Aleppo came to an end, adding to an emphatic Russian show of naval force in the Mediterranean. 
Unlike the Admiral Kuznetsov aircraft carrier and Peter the Great nuclear-powered battle cruiser, whose arrival in the region has drawn considerable publicity, the newly commissioned Grigorovich has a fearsome ground attack capability in the form of Kalibr land-attack cruise missiles.
Three Russian submarines from Russia’s northern fleet capable of firing Kalibr missiles are also reported to have arrived in the Mediterranean
Ah, here it is, the explanation for the "pause" off the coast of Crete:
The Kuznetsov battle group paused in its approach towards Syria off the east coast of Crete on Thursday, to carry out aviation exercises. Russian ministry of defence footage showed warplanes taking off and landing on its deck.
The Kuznetsov is carrying about 10 Sukhoi-33 and four Mig-29 fighter aircraft, as well as up to two dozen helicopters. Although the Su-33’s have recently been adapted to drop bombs more accurately, the plane has never been used for ground attack. Only the Mig-29 is designed for that purpose.
But, then again, how many fighter/bomber aircraft does one need to take on one city? Four Mig-29's seem to be more than adequate. 

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Five Maps Showing How Onslaught Has Shaped Aleppo

Link here at The [London] Guardian. By the way, this was the kind of reporting and the kind of mapping I grew to expect in The Atlantic. But like so many American publications, it has lost its way, and during the presidential campaign has become another mouthpiece for Hillary, and why I canceled my subscription. The British media continue to provide outstanding reports.

Update On A Re-Fracked BR Sun Notch Well In Sand Creek -- November 5, 2016

I was following this well to see if/when the frack data would be scanned in (July 13, 2016: see if they post the frack data for the re-frack on well #20336.) From an earlier post:
  • 20336, 1,162, BR, Sun Notch 43-32H-R, Sand Creek, a Middle Bakken well, t9/11; cum 41K 5/16; permit for Three Forks, but it's a middle Bakken well, 1280-acre spacing; to start on/about 2/15/11; spud 3/13/11; reached TD 4/24/11; stimulated 8/8/11 with 20 stages, 2.1 million lbs; IP of 1,162; sundry form received 10/9/15, a request to redrill the lateral of this well; and amend the name of the well to Sun Notch 43-32H-R; frack data for re-drilling not available; API: 33-053-03451; FracFocus shows only the 2011 frack;
Update: the re-frack data is now available; it also shows up at FracFocus: stimulated with 8.5 million gallons of water; water, 94% by mass; sand, 5% by mass. Date stimulated -- 5/20/16 - 5/28/16: 32 stages; 4.2 million lbs; 

The IP for the 5/20/16 stimulation: 4,202

Production profile for the past couple of years; note the re-frack was in May, 2016:

PoolDateDaysBBLS OilRunsBBLS WaterMCF ProdMCF SoldVent/Flare
BAKKEN9-2016301469614187411826688266880
BAKKEN8-2016201117812114310622273222730
BAKKEN7-2016311916618639669836095360950
BAKKEN6-2016108807821229001521193365875
BAKKEN5-20160000000
BAKKEN4-20160000000
BAKKEN3-20160000000
BAKKEN2-20161000000
BAKKEN1-2016144020000
BAKKEN12-20151615931920612170717070
BAKKEN11-20152017681539432157415740
BAKKEN10-201593114672853563560
BAKKEN9-201520508480362509187322
BAKKEN8-201519574422540706463243
BAKKEN7-201522687951657880663217
BAKKEN6-201525576432645967538429
BAKKEN5-20153188496487615831130453
BAKKEN4-201520673564567740549191
BAKKEN3-20152687781485419151562353
BAKKEN2-2015281225147714261109986124
BAKKEN1-2015144184556824070407
BAKKEN12-20140000000
BAKKEN11-20144163002470247
BAKKEN10-2014122683552133703700
BAKKEN9-201430794782726672047
BAKKEN8-201431655810101751510
BAKKEN7-201431196517131419155315530


Random Update On An EOG Clarks Creek Well That Has Been Fracked But Still On Confidentail List -- November 5, 2016

This must have been an error: the name of the well was changed according to the August 29, 2016, daily activity report, suggesting it was being converted to a salt water disposal well (August 29, 2016: EOG change the name of file #31247).

It was corrected a day later, August 30, 2016. This is how it stands now:
  • 31247, conf, West Clark 103-0136H, Clarks Creek, API 33-053-06954, still on confidential list -- production profile -- according to FracFocus, it was fracked 4/3/16 - 5/1/16, with 9.4 million gallons of water; water made up 79% of proppant by mass; sand made up 21% of proppant by mass;
DateOil RunsMCF Sold
9-20161752063978
8-20161155422619
7-20163107775251
6-20163711885473
5-20161626429938

Update On Whiting's Twin Valley Flatland Federal And Tarpon Federal Wells Sited In Section 4-152-97

Screenshots this date:




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There may be errors on the graphic above.

Note:
  • the Tarpon Federal horizontals are labeled
  • the eight horizontals without "names" are all Flatland Federal wells
  • based on names, there appear to be six Flatland Federal Three Forks wells
  • the "R" in #27521 is not a re-entry but rather a permit that was revised
The Flatland Federal wells on the Flatland Federal 3-well pad (#27520 - 27522 inclusive):
  • were all off-line most of July, August, and September, 2016 
  • #27520 was back on line for two days in September
  • the other two wells were still offline all of September
The Flatland Federal wells on the Flatland Federal 5-well pad:
  • 30688: test date 10/7/15: off-line most of July, 2016; off-line all of August, 2016; off-line all of September, 2016
  • 30687: test date 10/16/15: off-line most of July, 2016; off-line all of August, 2016; back on-line for two days in September, 2016;
  • 30776: test date 10/10/15: off-line most of July, 2016; off-line all of August, 2016; back on-line for one day in September, 2016;
  • 30775: test date 10/8/15; off-line since the test date; it is listed as IA; no production since 10/15; fracked with 31 stages; 4.8 million lbs; nothing in the file report since the completion data;
  • 30774, test date 10//15; off-line most of July, 2016; off-line all of August, 2016; and back on-line for four days in September, 2016; 
**********************************
30774
Scout Ticket and Production Profile

NDIC File No: 30774     API No: 33-053-06747-00-00     CTB No: 227520
Well Type: OG     Well Status: A     Status Date: 10/6/2015     Wellbore type: Horizontal
Location: LOT4 4-152-97        Latitude: 48.022443     Longitude: -103.108521
Current Operator: WHITING OIL AND GAS CORPORATION
Current Well Name: FLATLAND FEDERAL 11-4-5TFH
Elevation(s): 2002 KB   1977 GR   1984 GL     Total Depth: 22112     Field: TWIN VALLEY
Spud Date(s):  6/4/2015
Completion Data
   Pool: BAKKEN     Perfs: 11110-22062     Comp: 10/6/2015     Status: F     Date: 10/9/2015     Spacing: 2SEC
Cumulative Production Data
   Pool: BAKKEN     Cum Oil: 375920     Cum MCF Gas: 1043862     Cum Water: 86653
Production Test Data
   IP Test Date: 10/9/2015     Pool: BAKKEN     IP Oil: 1844     IP MCF: 4148     IP Water: 595
Monthly Production Data:
PoolDateDaysBBLS OilRunsBBLS WaterMCF ProdMCF SoldVent/Flare
BAKKEN9-20164546443682234930992753
BAKKEN8-20160000000
BAKKEN7-20161310524107591940465344641471
BAKKEN6-2016302914529290627811279411263648
BAKKEN5-201631347393482370641119211086783136
BAKKEN4-20163037617370834467122637121577960
BAKKEN3-20163144583449235288141867140859903
BAKKEN2-20162443519434479698108313108095142
BAKKEN1-2016315435054271102971340721320611922
BAKKEN12-2015316329363835150051526011479474556
BAKKEN11-201515351583495311139630184968713271
BAKKEN10-201514175281679613243407963029510445

Again, this post was done quickly, and there may be factual and typographical errors. If this information is important for you, go to the source.

The US Demand For Gasoline, Jobs, Unemployment, And The US Labor Force Participation Rate -- November 5, 2016

Gasoline demand:

*********************************
Jobs Report

Jobs report: I posted this yesterday, but never got around to finishing it --
Jobs: first stories coming out on the jobs report today are rosy, but by the end of the day we will know how bad the report really is. Again, the numbers underwhelm. The only reason the unemployment rate ticked down was because a larger number of folks dropped out of the labor force. The numbers are bad, not really, really bad, but bad. We'll post them later. I'm getting ready to go biking -- before the rain hits.
First, the numbers:
Then the spin: The New York Times was literally giddy overt this jobs report.

The magic numbers: New jobs: 200,000 (< 200,000 new jobs: economic stagnation). This is the number that was used throughout the George W. Bush presidency and in the very early days of the Obama administration. 

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Gasoline Demand and Jobs

My thesis is this:

Gasoline demand in the US is driven by two numbers:
  • commuting miles to work
  • leisure miles
Generally speaking:
  • leisure miles is affected most by an individual's income, and the price of gasoline (comparing same months year-over-year).
  • commuting miles to work -- pretty much depends on whether one has a job or not; public transportation year-over-year changes very, very little
Right now, oil prices are as low as they have ever been, taking into consideration the value of the dollar, inflation, cost of living, whatever -- gasoline is very inexpensive, and incredibly available. In this month's report, it was also stated that wages have increased. So, wages are increasing, the price of gasoline is down, and yet, the demand for gasoline has plunged over the past few weeks. That would suggest there has not been a decrease in leisure driving. In fact, with more and more folks out of the labor force, more and more of these folks, when driving, are driving either for leisure, or to the bank to deposit unemployment checks. Or disability checks.

So, when I see the demand for gasoline plunge in the US -- as it did over the past few weeks -- I assume it is related directly to job growth, and the jobs reports seem to bear it out.

There are a lot fewer folks driving to work these days because the percent of Americans not in the labor force continues to rise. The absolute number not working would also be rising because the population of the United States is rising.

Number of Americans UP x percent of Americans not in labor force  UP = number of Americans not driving to work UP. This is not rocket science.

With no spin whatsoever, directly from Google when asked "percent of Americans not in the labor force":
Labor Force Participation Rate in the United States averaged 63 percent from 1950 until 2016, reaching an all time high of 67.30 percent in January of 2000 and a record low of 58.10 percent in December of 1954. Labor Force Participation Rate in the United States is reported by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
That google reply came from tradingeconomics. The US Labor Force Participation rate. The recent slight increase is due to an increase in service jobs (aka "flipping hamburgers"):



Nothing About The Bakken -- November 5, 2016

The biggest story to watch during the election coverage -- which begins at 4:00 a.m. Monday morning on Fox: the "delta" between the exit polls and the actual vote, or what will be known as the "Soros count." If in fact, the exit polls reflect the graphic below, and the official results hand the election to Hillary, .... well, just remember, electronic voting machines in 16 states were supplied by Soros, including every battleground state (except North Carolina): Florida, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Michigan,

From the USC-Los Angeles Times poll:

At 48%, this is the highest Donald Trump has ever polled in this poll. The delta is wide, but it is not a record.  The delta is 5.4 today but it was 6.7 back on September 19, 2016. The separation minimally exceeds the range of uncertainty.


Let the lawsuits begin: if Hillary Clinton takes Washington State as expected, at least one elector, a Bernie Sanders supporter, will not vote for Hillary. "Constitutional crisis" talk will gain momentum.

Obama leaves a terrible legacy. From Investor's Business Daily. I track Obama's Legacy at the sidebar at the right. The good news: the link will be removed on January 21, 2017.

And finally, before moving on to "Top Stories of the Week" (next post), it is being reported that a "crashed Tesla exploded into a massive fireball." Authorities say it is not unusual for massive fireballs to occur after cars -- even non-EVs -- crash into trees at high speeds.

The Cost Of An Outright Ban On Fracking; North Sea To Flood Global Market With Oil; Canada Blocks Exxon-InterOil -- November 5, 2016

Fracking ban being discussed again as we head into last few days before election. Remember, Hillary has said very clearly she wants to ban fracking; do to the oil and gas industry what has been done to the coal industry. From Rigzone
  • an outright ban would hit Colorado, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Texas the hardest
  • Ohio: would lose almost 400,000 jobs
  • Pennsylvania would lose more than 460,000 jobs
  • Texas wold lose almost 1.5 million jobs
  • gasoline prices would almost double; natural gas prices would skyrocket
  • a $1.6 trillion GDP decline by 2022
North Sea producers to flood global market with oil if OPEC cuts. From Bloomberg:
  • North Sea producers poised to ship the most crude in more than four years
  • shipments will increased 10% yoy to about 2.2 million bopd in December
  • this wold mark the most crude oil shipments from the region since May, 2012
  • current OPEC talk: trip output to a range of 32.5 million to 33 million bbls/day
  • in its September monthly report, OPEC reported that it produced 33.24 million bopd
  • Brent crude: $46.28 at the time of the Bloomberg report
Looks like the Canadian government will block Exxon's attempt to buy InterOil Corp. Story here. It's a story but it certainly is not news.

*****************************************
 
Starbucks earnings (4Q16) -- November 3, 2016:
Starbucks: 55 cents forecast; actual: 54 - 56 cents; U.S. comparable store sales increase of 4%; traffic up 1%; apparently very concerned about pace of store traffic; reading between the lines, SBUX concerned that "coffee infatuation" may have peaked; CEO suggests the "Amazon effect;" if so, he's referring to Starbucks stores inside Barnes & Noble; or too many competitors for coffee "just as good" a whole lot cheaper;
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The Literature Page 
Friday Evening

There are days I come this close [ ] to simply packing my bags -- actually one bag -- jumping on a plane and disappearing, much like Connie Converse did many years ago. Only one thing keeps me from doing that. Family. Three granddaughters. Two daughters. One wife. Not necessarily in that order.

Maybe next autumn, 2018. I have a contact. He could arrange it. Far from the madding crowd.

It hit me today. Once a week I treat myself to a 3/4 ounce of Scottish whisky. In today's mail, I had a Medicare bill and the monthly London Review of Books. The Medicare bill will be taken care of later this weekend.

Meanwhile, a 3/4 ounce of Scottish whisky -- Tomatin, to be precise -- with two cubes of ice which are tossed about five minutes into sipping. And then the Review. Some issues are great; some issues are spectacular. This is a so-so issue, somewhere between great and spectacular.

But this is what it would make it spectacular. To be in a small hovel at the far southwestern tip of Scotland sipping Scottish whisky and reading the Review. I say the southwestern tip of Scotland because I really do have a contact who has given me an open-ended invitation to "live" at his summer house whenever I want. He would be thrilled if I watched it over the winter. It's enticing.

In this month's Review, the first of several articles that I can hardly wait to read slowly and fully, John Pemble's "Besieged by Female Writers," an essay/review of Frederik Van Dam's Anthony Trollope's Late Style: Victorian Liberalism and Literary Form.

It's overcast, like I remember northern Yorkshire, along the Scottish border. It's already getting dark, like northern Yorkshire, along the Scottish border.

And the first bit of whisky is having its intended effect. And the Review is open to John Pemble's article. And I am on the MacBook Air, thinking of northern Yorkshire, along the Scottish border.

Back in 2004, I believe it was, I forget, I began a very, very aggressive reading program. I started with Ovid and moved chronologically forward, culminating with Virginia Woolf, and pretty much ending my journey there, with some exceptions. There were some exceptions: Hunter S Thompson (had read him earlier but then came back to him); Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Tim O'Brien.

I thought about all of that while paging through this month's issue of the Review. I completed the essay on Anthony Trollope. I have never read a novel by Trollope but have always been curious about this author. He was a Victorian author but not considered particularly interesting. Then in 1927, 45 years after Trollope's death, Michael Sadleir published a reassessment. According to the essay, soon after "Trollope made to into the canon and finally into Westminster Abbey where a plaque was unveiled in 1993.

I was curious. Did Harold Bloom include Anthony Trollope in his western canon? I took down my copy of Harold Bloom's The Western Canon: The Books and School of the Ages, c. 1994. There, on page 512, Appendix C, "The Democratic Age", along with Brontes, William Makepeace Thackeray, Oscar Wilde, and dozens of others, Trollope is listed, along with two of his novels and two of  his novel series, The Pulliser Novels and the Barsetshire Novels.

It's "funny" how things work out. I am currently reading Dante's Inferno -- a reader suggested that I should read it, and I'm reading one canto of the Inferno every day. I find it fascinating. Now I note that Harold Bloom, in The Western Canon has devoted a full chapter to the Inferno: "The Strangeness of Dante: Ulysses and Beatrice." I see I have already that chapter -- some time ago -- many inky notations in the margins. I will read it again.

Five New Permits; Eight Permits Renewed -- November 5, 2016

Active rigs:


11/5/201611/05/201511/05/201411/05/201311/05/2012
Active Rigs3767190183189

Five new permits:
  • Operator: Newfield
  • Fields: Haystack Butte (Dunn) 
  • Comments: permits for five wells on same pad in section 18-148-97
Eight permits renewed:
  • Hess (5): five AN-Gudbranson permits in McKenzie County
  • Resource Energy CAN-AM (2): a Curly permit and a Kenyon permit in Divide County
  • EOG: another Hawkeye permit, in McKenzie County
Three permits canceled:
CLR: three Omlid permits in McKenzie County

Note:
  • Whiting has announced three more Flatland wells are on the "plugged or producing" list. These three "Flatland" wells are in the Banks oil field and should not be confused with the spectacular "Flatland Federal" wells (also Whiting wells) in Twin Valley oil field. I track the Flatland Federal wells in the Twin Valley oil field here.