Updates
March 1, 2018: And here it is. From CNBC -- the US will institute tariffs on steel and aluminum imports next week.
Original Post
Peak oil? What peak oil? During the past two years there have been numerous articles on lack of investment in offshore projects which some suggest are desperately needed to forestall a shortage of oil in the out year (think, "Peak Oil"). Today, from a GlobalData press release: investment of $97 billion on top ten offshore oil projects will add 1.6 million bopd by 2025. Looks like we have a successful projectLooks like we have a success project. ExxonMobil projects 500,000 bopd from the Guyana play. Data points:
WalMart joins Dick's in limiting gun sales; Trump stuns by embracing gun law changes. Is the tide turning on gun control?One store at a time.
$61.63↓↓ | 2/28/2018 | 02/28/2017 | 02/28/2016 | 02/28/2015 | 02/28/2014 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Active Rigs | 58 | 41 | 38 | 119 | 192 |
It has been a long time since Newfield announced it was leaving the Bakken to focus on wells in Utah. While that idea didn't seem to work out, its leasehold in the SCOOP/STACK has interesting potential.
Play results have been inconsistent, but we are beginning to figure out what the play can do. Newfield is active in three main plays. The other two are the Uinta in Utah and Bakken in North Dakota. In this data analysis, we break down and model oil production as a whole and then broken down by play over time.
This question of climate sensitivity goes not just to how much warming we can expect. It goes to the (almost verboten) question of whether the expected warming will be a net plus or net minus for humanity. And whether the benefit of curbing fossil fuels would be worth the cost.And, of course, again, as good as the op-ed, it fails to ask the most important question: to what extent is human activity contributing to climate change?
This question of climate sensitivity goes not just to how much warming we can expect. It goes to the (almost verboten) question of whether the expected warming will be a net plus or net minus for humanity. And whether the benefit of curbing fossil fuels would be worth the cost.Everything I've read suggests that climate warming will actually be a net plus for the northern tier of the United States, and probably great swaths of Canada and Siberia.
In early February, a small Virginia-based company—REAN Cloud—that partners with Amazon Web Services announced a nearly $1 billion deal to provide cloud computing services for the Defense Department.Boston: if I had all the money in the world, I would have two (town) homes in eastern Massachusetts. One in downtown Boston and one along the North Shore (think Gloucester) or at the end of Cape Cod (think Provincetown). I'll have to settle for the next best thing, I guess. LOL. I'm going to subscribe to the digital edition of the Boston Globe. I would like the print edition but they don't mail their newspaper to subscribers as far as I can tell. We loved the Boston Globe when we visited Massachusetts, and among the on-line newspapers, both my wife and I think it is the best.
The contract caught many industry players by surprise, in part due to the $950 million value and partly because it was awarded without a traditional government procurement. This deal may be a harbinger for how the Defense Department plans to purchase certain technologies moving forward.
Using buying powers quietly imbued by Congress over the past three years, U.S. Transportation Command made the award to REAN Cloud under an other transaction production contract based on a prototype project last year to migrate military applications to Amazon Web Services GovCloud region. The contract is a type of other transaction authority, commonly called an OT or OTA.
Led by the Defense Innovation Unit Experimental, which acts as a liaison between the Pentagon and industry, the Defense Department is targeting non-traditional suppliers to rapidly provide cutting-edge commercial technologies that address national security and military challenges.
Week
|
Date
|
Drawdown
|
Storage
|
Weeks to RB
|
Week 0
|
Apr 26, 2017
|
529.0
|
180
|
|
Week 24
|
October 12, 2017
|
2.8
|
462.2
|
40
|
Week 25
|
October 18, 2017
|
5.7
|
456.5
|
37
|
Week 26
|
October 25, 2017
|
-0.9
|
457.3
|
39
|
Week 27
|
November 1, 2017
|
2.4
|
454.9
|
38
|
Week 28
|
November 8, 2017
|
-2.2
|
457.1
|
42
|
Week 29
|
November 15, 2017
|
1.9
|
459.0
|
43
|
Week 30
|
November 22, 2017
|
1.9
|
457.1
|
42
|
Week 31
|
November 29, 2017
|
3.4
|
453.7
|
41
|
Week 32
|
December 6, 2017
|
5.6
|
448.1
|
37
|
Week 33
|
December 13, 2017
|
5.1
|
443.0
|
36
|
Week 34
|
December 20, 2017
|
6.5
|
436.5
|
30
|
Week 35
|
December 28, 2017
|
4.6
|
431.9
|
28
|
Week 36
|
January 4, 2018
|
7.4
|
424.5
|
25
|
Week 37
|
January 10, 2018
|
4.9
|
419.5
|
23
|
Week 38
|
January 18, 2018
|
6.9
|
412.7
|
20
|
Week 39
|
January 24, 2018
|
1.1
|
411.6
|
20
|
Week 40
|
January 31, 2018
|
-6.8
|
418.4
|
24
|
Week 41
|
February 7, 2018
|
-1.9
|
420.3
|
26
|
Week 42
|
February 14, 2018
|
-1.8
|
422.1
|
27
|
Week 43
|
February 21, 2018
|
1.6
|
420.5
|
27
|
Week 44
|
February 28, 2018
|
3.0
|
423.5
|
28
|
Spot cobalt metal prices in China have risen by nearly 50pc in the past year to 600-635 yuan/kg, according to Argus' latest assessment on 13 March. The rise in cobalt prices has forced many Chinese battery manufacturers to consider using substitute materials or to reduce the cobalt ratio in NCM ternary cathode material.
NCM lithium-ion material typically comprises 50pc nickel, 20pc cobalt and 30pc manganese (5-2-3 NiCoMn) in China. But many producers aim to change the proportion to 6-2-2 or 8-1-1 NiCoMn by the second half of 2018.Later, 12:45 p.m. CT: why I love to blog. About three days ago I sent Don an e-mail regarding cobalt. He replied with a link to USGS Minerals -- see the original post for the link. Now, this morning, this from Argus Media: low-cobalt batteries "vital to EV development." Data points:
$62.98↓↓ | 2/28/2018 | 02/28/2017 | 02/28/2016 | 02/28/2015 | 02/28/2014 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Active Rigs | 57 | 41 | 38 | 119 | 192 |
The Daily Times of Farmington reports the Tulsa, Oklahoma-based WPX Energy Inc. recently announced the sale of the last of its Four Corners assets to the tune of $700 million.
The company says WPX sold its holdings in the Gallup oil play to an undisclosed third party in a transaction that is expected to close by the end of March.
WPX spokesman Kelly Swan says the sale involves some 150 oil wells on about 100,000 acres.
Swan says WPX has been shifting its focus and funneling its resources to its operations in the Permian Basin of southeast New Mexico and west Texas and in the Williston Basin of North Dakota over the past few years.Back-of-the-envelope:
U.S. consumer confidence jumped to a 17-year high as optimism about employment prospects grew and Americans began seeing additional money in their paychecks from recently enacted tax cuts, data from the New York-based Conference Board showed Tuesday.More at the article.
The GDPNow model estimate for real GDP growth (seasonally adjusted annual rate) in the first quarter of 2018 is 2.6 percent on February 27, down from 3.2 percent on February 16.
After this morning's Advance Economic Indicators and durable manufacturing reports from the U.S. Census Bureau, the nowcasts of the contributions of real nonresidential equipment investment and real inventory investment to first-quarter real GDP growth declined from 0.45 percentage points and 1.20 percentage points, respectively, to 0.37 percentage points and 0.95 percentage points, respectively.
The nowcast of first-quarter real residential investment growth declined from 0.6 percent on February 16 to -4.5 percent on February 26 after housing market releases from the Census Bureau and the National Association of Realtors.
There was a certain air of triumphalism surrounding Anglo-Dutch major Shell’s statement in February that the world’s growing supply of LNG would be “comfortably” absorbed by rising demand in 2018, and that the much anticipated glut would never materialize.
This glut has been much predicted, predicated on the apparent surplus of new LNG capacity coming on stream versus predictions of demand rising, but at a slower rate than supply.
If Shell’s position holds, it is an important development because it could launch a new round of multi-billion dollar investments in LNG capacity, targeting an increasingly tight market between 2022-25.
This would have profound effects on the fortunes of many countries, not least those on LNG standby such as Mozambique and Tanzania, not to mention Qatar’s expansion plans for the giant North Field, Russia’s Arctic LNG 2, and the raft of developers waiting to export the growing volumes of “free” associated gas emanating from the latest shale boom in Texas’s Permian basin.
Of equal importance is that Shell’s statement justifies past spending because higher LNG prices mean that overspent LNG projects in Australia may be back in
the money, while US LNG gets a wide open arbitrage to Asia.
As US LNG production ramps up, producers there will be heavily dependent on this opportunity, which they hope will exist not as a function of below cost-recovery, must-run LNG production in the US — the glut scenario — but high prices in Asia as a result of strong demand growth.Much, much more at the link.
After a month of delay, Cove Point LNG is kicking into high gear. Yesterday's reading had US LNG exports coming in at ~4 Bcf/d, the highest in history. Total US gas exports, as a result, pushed passed 8 Bcf/d marking a milestone.And these milestones are not subtle. Look at these two graphs: