- 20600, 1,831, XTO, FBIR Blackmedicine 24X-21B, Heart Butte, t6/12; cum 338K 10/18; recent production:
Pool Date Days BBLS Oil Runs BBLS Water MCF Prod MCF Sold Vent/Flare BAKKEN 10-2018 31 5839 6008 5921 2622 2038 507 BAKKEN 9-2018 30 5859 5884 7884 2728 2625 0 BAKKEN 8-2018 30 5656 5419 8236 2834 2746 0 BAKKEN 7-2018 20 3625 3492 9876 1546 967 541 BAKKEN 6-2018 3 127 448 0 42 17 24 BAKKEN 5-2018 28 10335 10545 7413 4475 778 3628 BAKKEN 4-2018 28 14341 13877 9641 6571 2986 3455 BAKKEN 3-2018 6 1258 1448 2384 583 372 185 BAKKEN 2-2018 28 6596 6651 15613 3037 640 2297 BAKKEN 1-2018 16 5667 6195 9632 2842 762 2003 BAKKEN 12-2017 22 8169 7371 12287 4280 289 3829 BAKKEN 11-2017 8 1340 1530 3870 688 107 566 BAKKEN 10-2017 31 9071 9266 13613 5310 1826 3409 BAKKEN 9-2017 30 5755 5734 5749 4283 664 3577
Pages
Sunday, September 2, 2018
An XTO FBIR Well With Huge Jump In Production; Not Re-Fracked -- September 2, 2018
Two XTO Wells With Huge Jump In Production -- And Neither Re-Fracked -- September 2, 2018
- 20521, 1,412, XTO, George Federal 21X-19B, Lost Bridge, t7/12; cum 225K 10/18; recent production profile; no production all the way back to 2/16, and then this:
Pool Date Days BBLS Oil Runs BBLS Water MCF Prod MCF Sold Vent/Flare BAKKEN 10-2018 31 13793 13748 16802 21494 7149 14314 BAKKEN 9-2018 14 6898 7043 8563 10139 1025 9103 BAKKEN 8-2018 21 8687 8810 13309 12613 707 11893 BAKKEN 7-2018 25 10219 9853 25037 13195 0 13168 BAKKEN 6-2018 2 0 0 2229 0 0 0 BAKKEN 5-2018 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 BAKKEN 4-2018 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 BAKKEN 3-2018 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 BAKKEN 2-2018 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 BAKKEN 1-2018 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 BAKKEN 12-2017 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 BAKKEN 11-2017 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 BAKKEN 10-2017 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BAKKEN | 1-2016 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 12-2015 | 3 | 255 | 705 | 185 | 861 | 251 | 29 |
BAKKEN | 11-2015 | 30 | 2407 | 2542 | 685 | 3913 | 1427 | 1673 |
BAKKEN | 10-2015 | 30 | 2460 | 2373 | 678 | 4133 | 2059 | 1241 |
BAKKEN | 9-2015 | 30 | 2102 | 2131 | 595 | 3360 | 302 | 2349 |
BAKKEN | 8-2015 | 31 | 2398 | 2319 | 693 | 4066 | 2123 | 1776 |
BAKKEN | 7-2015 | 31 | 2458 | 2358 | 758 | 5042 | 4655 | 198 |
BAKKEN | 6-2015 | 30 | 2483 | 2675 | 756 | 4312 | 2939 | 1188 |
BAKKEN | 5-2015 | 31 | 2592 | 2437 | 733 | 4008 | 2116 | 1708 |
BAKKEN | 4-2015 | 30 | 2651 | 2697 | 833 | 3325 | 0 | 3143 |
BAKKEN | 3-2015 | 31 | 3083 | 3124 | 840 | 3846 | 0 | 3557 |
BAKKEN | 2-2015 | 28 | 2156 | 2045 | 572 | 2673 | 0 | 2477 |
BAKKEN | 1-2015 | 31 | 2758 | 2823 | 762 | 3437 | 0 | 3158 |
BAKKEN | 12-2014 | 31 | 2996 | 2965 | 837 | 3609 | 0 | 3327 |
And another well in this immediate area:
- 17407, 1,273, XTO, Fenton Federal 11X-20, Lost Bridge, t6/09; cum 242K 10/18; recent production:
Pool Date Days BBLS Oil Runs BBLS Water MCF Prod MCF Sold Vent/Flare BAKKEN 10-2018 16 5237 5287 10932 8073 0 7816 BAKKEN 9-2018 1 0 790 0 0 0 0 BAKKEN 8-2018 19 8637 8765 19317 13423 0 13169 BAKKEN 7-2018 31 14806 14406 40157 22802 96 22290 BAKKEN 6-2018 30 4630 4063 33235 7118 721 6068 BAKKEN 5-2018 1 88 0 2035 137 0 129 BAKKEN 4-2018 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 BAKKEN 3-2018 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 BAKKEN 2-2018 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 BAKKEN 1-2018 4 210 243 232 328 278 0 BAKKEN 12-2017 31 1648 1881 767 2776 2396 0 BAKKEN 11-2017 30 1771 1670 591 2259 1913 0 BAKKEN 10-2017 31 1745 1609 726 2783 1623 776 BAKKEN 9-2017 30 1604 1643 1212 2554 2067 230
This One Case Speaks Volumes About The Future / The Potential Of The Bakken -- September 2, 2018
- 26952, Newfield, Siverston-Bakken; 14 wells on an existing 640-acre unit, section 13-149-98; McKenzie
The one producing well in that 640-acre unit:
- 18689, 1,869, Newfield, Bluefin 1-13H, Siverston, the middle Bakken is 44 feet thick here, 54K lbs mesh; 502K lbs sand; 980K lbs ceramic proppant, t5/10; cum 122K 7/18;
I wonder what #26612, in the section to the west, is doing?
- 26612, 1,507, Newfield, Hoffman 149-98-14-23-2H, Pembroke, t8/14; cum 187K 7/18;
By the way, "everyone" keeps talking about the "dreaded decline rate" in the Bakken.
Take a look at this well (at this link) -- the full production profile.
I'm not sure this well has paid for itself yet. At 187K bbls and $50/bbl = $9 million. I
f it hasn't paid for itself yet, it must be getting close.
It's decline rate was typical for a Bakken well -- dropping rapidly the first year, but by the end of the second year, production had leveled off and remained practically unchanged over the last two to three years. It's amazing, this well is only four years old. This well will go on producing for 30 years. It will be re-worked. It will be re-fracked -- mini-re-fracks and major re-fracks. It will be positively impacted when neighboring wells are fracked. If history is any guide, a full re-frack will result in a "new" well.
Imagine buying a single-unit rental house four years ago for $$10 million. Over the next four or five years you get enough rental income to pay off the house, and deduct mortgage payments, business expenses along the way. And then the renter continues to pay the same rent for decades, perhaps even going up a bit. And there's a good chance the property could appreciate. And with remodeling (re-fracks) the house appreciates in value. And you can use the collateral of this one house to buy a four-unit apartment complex.
September, 2018, Hearing Dockets Have Been Posted
Dockets are posted at the NDIC site here.
Dockets are tracked here.
The usual disclaimer applies. As usual this is done very quickly and using shorthand for my benefit. There will be factual and typographical errors on this page. Do not quote me on any of this. It's for my personal use to help me better understand the Bakken. Do not read it. If you do happen to read it, do not make any investment, financial, job, relationship, or travel plans based on anything you read here or think you may have read here. If this stuff is important to you, and I doubt that it is, but if it is, go to the source.
Highlights in bold.
Thursday, September 20, 2018: one page, a supplement -- one case
- 26953, PetroShale, McGregory Buttes-Bakken; four wells on an existing 320-acre unit; Dunn County; E/2 of section 19-148-93;
- 26903, NDIC, bond issue; Hydroil Solutions LLC
- 26904, NDIC ditto
- 26905, NDIC, to review the temporarily abandoned status of the Scout Energy mangement well, #12179, Fryburg field, Billings County
- 26906, NDIC, ditto, #13634 in Fryburg field, Billings County
- 26907, Hunt, Ross-Bakken, establish an overlapping 3200-acre unit; 3 wells; Mountrail
- 26908, RimRock, Heart Butte-Bakken, establish four overlapping 2560-acre units; 2 wells; Dunn County
- 26909, Southwestern Production Corp, Tracy Mountain-Tyler, establish a laydown 320-acre unit; S/2 of section 21-138-102, ; one well; Billings County;
- 26910, Liberty Resources, White Earth-Bakken, establish an overlapping 1280-acre unit; 8 wells; Mountrail
- 26911, Newfield, North Fork-Bakken, establish an overlapping 1280-acre unit; 1 well; McKenzie
- 26912, CLR, Epping-Bakken, establish an overlapping 2560-acre unit; 1 well; Williams County
- 26913, CLR, Indian Hill-Bakken; terminate an existing 2560-acre unit; 8 wells on an existing 1280-acre unit; McKenzie County
- 26914, CLR, Big Gulch-Bakken, establish an overlapping 2560-acre units; 2 wells; Dunn County
- 26915, EOG, Parshall-Bakken; establish an overlapping 1280-acre unit; multiple wells; establish three overlapping 1920-acre units; multiple wells; create four overlapping 2560-acre units; multiple wells; Mountrail
- 26916, EOG, alter the definition of the stratigraphic limits for the Squaw Creek-Bakken, for the existing 1280-acre unit as described; to allow all future wells to be drilled in the stratigraphc interval from 50 feet above the top of the Bakken formation to above the top of the Birdbear formation; McKenzie County
- 26917, EOG, revoke a PetroShale permits;
- 26918, XTO, pooling
- 26919, XTO, pooling
- 26920, XTO, pooling
- 26921, Liberty Resources, pooling
- 26922, CLR, pooling,
- 26923, CLR, pooling,
- 26924, CLR, Cedar Coulee-Bakken, 11 wells on each of two existing 1280-acre units; Dunn County
- 26925, CLR, Banks-Bakken, 2 wells on an existing 2560-acre unit; McKenzie, Williams
- 26926, CLR, comingling
- 26927, Slawson, pooling
- 26928, Slawson, pooling
- 26929, Slawson, pooling
- 26930, Slawson, Arnegard-Bakken, 9 wells on an existing 1280-acre unit; McKenzie
- 26931, Slawson, Baker-Bakken, 9 wells on an existing 1280-acre unit; McKenzie
- 26932, Slawson, Ellsworth-Bakken, 9 wells on an existing 1280-acre unit; McKenzie
- 26933, Slawson, North Fork-Bakken; 14 wells on an existing 1280-acre unit; McKenzie
- 26934, Slawson, Pleasant Hill-Bakken, 9 wells on an existing 1280-acre unit; McKenzie
- 26935, Slawson, Tobacco Garden-Bakken; 8 wells on an existing 1280-acre unit; McKenzie
- 26936, WPX, pooling
- 26937, WPX, commingling
- 26938, EOG, Parshall-Bakken, 2 wells on an overlapping 2560-acre unit; Mountrail
- 26939, Enerplus, risk penalty legalese
- 26940, Enerplus, risk penalty legalese
- 26941, Enerplus, risk penalty legalese
- 26942, Enerplus, risk penalty legalese
- 26943, Rimrock Oil & Gas, Heart Butte-Bakken, 13 wells on an existing 1280-acre unit; 11 wells on an existing 1280-acre unit; 12 wells on an existing 1280-acre unit; Dunn County -- 36 wells total
- 26944, Sinclair, flaring
- 26945, Sinclair, flaring
- 26946, Sinclair, flaring
- 26947, Newfield, pooling
- 26948, Newfield, pooling
- 26949, Newfield, pooling
- 26950, Newfield, pooling
- 26951, Newfield, Pembroke-Bakken, 14 wells on each of two existing 1280-acre units; McKenzie
- 26952, Newfield, Siverston-Bakken; 14 wells on an existing 640-acre unit, section 13-149-98; 14 wells on each of three 1280-acre units; McKenzie
- 26875, MRO, Bailey and/or Chimney Butte-Bakken; terminate two 2560-acre units; establish a 5120-acre unit; two wells; Dunn Count
- 26876, MRO, Bailey-Bakken, establish a 2560-acre unit; 2 wells; Dunn
- 26877, True Oil, Red Wing Creek-Madison, flaring
- 26878, Petro-Hunt, establish a 320-acre unit; recomplete the Haugen 3-9 well (#15013) in the Madison pool, McKenzie
- 26879, NDIC, Grinnell-Bakken; review the status of the leases in a 2560-acre unit to monitor the progress of developing those sections, McKenzie, Williams
- 26880, Whiting, Sanish-Bakken, establish two overlapping 1920-acre units; 2 wells on each unit; Mountrail
- 26881, Whiting, Sanish-Bakken, establish two overlapping 1920-acre units; 2 wells on each; Mountrail
- 26882, Whiting, Sanish-Bakken, establish four overlapping 1920-acre units; two wells on each; Mountrail
- 26883, Whiting, Sanish-Bakken; establish four overlapping 1920-acre units; 2 wells each, Mountrail
- 26884, Bruin E&P, Marmon-Bakken, establish two overlapping 3840-acre units; one horizontal unit; Williams
- 26885, Swanson, SWD
- 26886, Swanson, SDW
- 26887, Swanson, SWD
- 26888, Oasis, SWD
- 26889, Oasis, SWD
- 26890, Kraken Operating, pooling
- 26891, Hess, commingling
- 26892, Hess, commingling
- 26893, Petro-hunt, pooling
- 26894, Bruin E&P, Antelope-Bakken, 15 wells on a 1280-acre unit; McKenzie County
- 26895, Bruin E&P, pooling
- 26896, Bruin E&P, pooling
- 26897, MRO, Bailey-Bakken; 8 wells on an existing 1280-acre unit; 2 wells on a 2560-acre unit; Dunn County
- 26898, MRO, commingling
- 26899, MRO, commingling
- 26900, MRO, commingling
- 26901, MRO, pooling
- 26902, BR, commingling
- 26860 - 26874, inclusive; most if not all were Madison unit wells;
A BR CCU Zephyr Well Seems To Be Back On Track After Struggling -- September 2, 2018
November 23, 2017: follow up in three to six months; this well was fracked 1/17; had a great frack; then struggled; looks like it might be producing nicely as of 6/18 --
- 31999, 2,004, BR, CCU Zephyr 14-34 TFH, Corral Creek, t3/17; cum 82K 7/18; challenges? (2/18;); production profile now:
Pool | Date | Days | BBLS Oil | Runs | BBLS Water | MCF Prod | MCF Sold | Vent/Flare |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BAKKEN | 7-2018 | 29 | 8707 | 8647 | 5597 | 3965 | 3438 | 18 |
BAKKEN | 6-2018 | 20 | 8702 | 8453 | 5064 | 6064 | 5437 | 241 |
BAKKEN | 5-2018 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 4-2018 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 3-2018 | 1 | 306 | 301 | 118 | 170 | 145 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 2-2018 | 28 | 0 | 27 | 0 | 534 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 1-2018 | 2 | 812 | 806 | 275 | 776 | 407 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 12-2017 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 11-2017 | 8 | 930 | 930 | 417 | 692 | 517 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 10-2017 | 31 | 1401 | 1406 | 899 | 1476 | 736 | 0 |
Update On The XTO Lund Wells And The XTO Serrahn Wells In Siverston Oil Field -- Wells In The Process Of Being Completed -- September 2, 2018
Comments: XTO has permits for a 5-well Serrahn pad in 5-150-97, Siverston oil field (300 feet from the north line and 800 - 1000 feet from the west line) -- see below
Let's see what #21682 is doing:
- 21682, 968, XTO, Lund 44-8NH, Siverston, 22 stages, 2.8 million lbs, t7/12; cum 175K 7/18; back on-line; look at production after coming back on line:
Pool | Date | Days | BBLS Oil | Runs | BBLS Water | MCF Prod | MCF Sold | Vent/Flare |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BAKKEN | 7-2018 | 19 | 7042 | 6785 | 12121 | 10133 | 0 | 10133 |
BAKKEN | 6-2018 | 2 | 492 | 408 | 3454 | 1658 | 1658 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 5-2018 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 4-2018 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 3-2018 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 2-2018 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 1-2018 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 12-2017 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 11-2017 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 10-2017 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 9-2017 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 8-2017 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 7-2017 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 6-2017 | 20 | 800 | 1300 | 627 | 3118 | 3008 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 5-2017 | 31 | 1456 | 1241 | 1095 | 5081 | 4884 | 0 |
The graphic:
The wells:
- 33802, 1,214, XTO, Lund 44X-8C, Siverston, t7/18; cum 19K 7/18;
- 33803, SI/NC, XTO, Lund 44X-8G, Siverston,
- 33804, 894, XTO, Lund 44X8H, Siverston, t7/18; cum 9K after 17 days;
- 33805, SI/NC, XTO, Lund 44X-8DXA, Siverston,
- 34015, SI/NC, XTO, Serrahn 11X-5EXH, Siverston,
- 34014, SI/NC, XTO, Serrahn 11X-5A, Siverston, 10K after 10 days; similar production for the rest;
- 34013, SI/NC, XTO, Serrahn 11X-5E, Siverston,
- 34012, SI/NC, XTO, Serrahn 11X-5B, Siverston,
- 34011, SI/NC, XTO, Serrahn 11X-5F, Siverston,
- 27512, 1,652, XTO, Serrahn 41X-6D, Siverston, t7/14; cum 165K 7/18 -- recent production:
Pool | Date | Days | BBLS Oil | Runs | BBLS Water | MCF Prod | MCF Sold | Vent/Flare |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BAKKEN | 7-2018 | 15 | 6616 | 6457 | 11473 | 17140 | 13174 | 3863 |
BAKKEN | 6-2018 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 5-2018 | 3 | 149 | 0 | 5590 | 387 | 0 | 366 |
BAKKEN | 4-2018 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 3-2018 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 2-2018 | 7 | 225 | 491 | 120 | 635 | 593 | 0 |
BAKKEN | 1-2018 | 31 | 1733 | 1888 | 1025 | 4073 | 3817 | 0 |
Producing well:
- 21682, 968, XTO, Lund 44-8NH, Siverston, 22 stages, 2.8 million lbs, t7/12; cum 168K 7/17; off-line right now; work being done on pad;
Production Data Now In For The Top Three -- September 2, 2018 ... And The Winner Is ....
September 10, 2018: another data point. Iraq in September, 2018 --
- production: 4.4 million bopd
- exports: 3.6 million bopd
We have August production data for Russia and the US.
Saudi Arabia will release it's August data on September 12, 2018.
So the data, for August, 2018:
- Russia has bragging rights: 11.21 million bopd, data here;
- US: posting 11.0 million bopd -- data here;
- Saudi Arabia, estimate: 10.42 million bopd -- see below
- Saudi Arabia: 10.48 million bopd, which would round up to 10.5 million bopd -- data here; up and down; up and down; lots of talk over the past decade, but at the end of the day, Saudi is pretty consistent at 10.5 to 11.0 million bopd. See Saudi production note below.
Russia has been the main beneficiary from its agreement with the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries made two months ago to unfetter production. The country added nearly 250,000 barrels a day of output in June and July, while its biggest partner in the pact -- Saudi Arabia -- has kept supply below the level it was said to have indicated in June amid concerns over strength of global demand.
Note: someone must be reading the blog.Still, the Saudis pumped more than 10.42 million barrels a day last month, according to two OPEC delegates. That’s an increase of nearly 140,000 barrels from the July output it has reported to OPEC. The cartel is due to disclose its August data on Sept. 12.
I have used the word "unfettered" since 2010 or thereabouts when discussing Bakken production, as in, "unfettered, North Dakota could produce 2.1 million bopd."
But this is the first time I've come across a Bloomberg article using the word "unfetter" when discussing oil. Need to google. My bad. A quick google search reveals Bloomberg uses "unfetter" or "unfettered" quite often. Whatever.
By the way, from an earlier post, just a few weeks ago, regarding Saudi production:
Saudi Arabia nearly sets all-time production record. Yawn. How many times have we heard this story.
The kingdom’s oil production grew by 230,000 barrels a day in July, to 10.65 million barrels per day. This is just shy of an all-time peak reached in 2016, according to a Bloomberg survey of analysts, oil companies and ship-tracking data.
This story is more than two years old but I was not aware of this name change until now.
I spent one summer in Barrow, Alaska, while in college. Great experience.
But back in 2016, the name was changed.
Story here.
Kraken Operating Hitting Its Stride -- September 2, 2018
- 34042, conf, Kraken Operating, Sidney Josephine 32-29 1H, Burg, a nice well;
- 34041, conf, Kraken Operating, Jenna Mary 33-28 1TFH, Burg, a very nice well;
Kraken Operating also reported some nice wells in the Montana Bakken last week (previously posted).
Kraken Operating is tracked at "Bakken operators" although much has not been posted regarding this operator on that page.
More Idle Ramblings On A Sunday Afternoon In North Texas -- September 2, 2018
Canada: the pipeline stories and "landlocked" resources in Canada need to be put into perspective.
Look at this graph:
It certainly appears that even without the additional pipeline capacity, Canadian oil is getting to the states.
The actual numbers:
Look at that increase in the past couple of years.
It was recently reported that Canadian CBR will jump from 200,000 bopd to 800,000 bopd now that the Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion project has been killed. At least that's what I recall; I could be wrong. That's fine. We all have our own world views, our own myths.
140,000,000 bbls/month = 5 million bopd.
800,000 bopd / 5 million bopd = 16% of Canadian oil will go by CBR.
For newbies: the US refiners along the Gulf Coast need heavy oil to "balance" the light oil from the shale plays in the US. US refiners along the Gulf Coast were optimized for heavy oil from Venezuela and Canada twenty years ago -- just before the US shale revolution which changed everything, and further exacerbated when Obama killed the Keystone XL.
By the way, killing the Keystone XL was a tectonic event; it was completely unexpected; it will forever be seen as the "event" that empowered the North American anti-pipeline movement.
In the US oil industry, the Keystone XL will forever be seen as an unexpected momentous event.
In the world of terrorism: Yassir Arafat conceiving the idea of hijacking a commercial airliner.
In race relations: Rosa Parks and seating on a bus.
In women's rights: Margaret Sanger and the birth control pill.
In biology: Jim Watson and a bit of luck.
I never thought of Denmark as an exporter of oil so I was taken aback to read that Denmark has become a net importer of oil. That completely blew me away.
This is a huge story; I don't think folks have caught on to this yet.
Going forward, global trade will become more free, less dependent on tariffs. There is no reason for tariffs on automobiles any more, for example. As free trade becomes "more free" the gap between energy-producing countries and energy-consuming countries will widen. Europe will become the only continent in the world to depend on imported energy. That's huge and that explains a lot of angst among the Europeans. They see the writing on the wall.
All things being equal -- i.e., truly "free" trade -- and the gap between the the US and the EU will continue to widen.
Had it not been for Rockefeller (in this case, "Rockefeller" is used as a metonym) at least one more species of whale, and possibly three species of whales would now be extinct due to humans killing off whales for their oil.
Can you imagine the world had crude oil not been discovered?
Can you imagine the world had there not been a shale fracking revolution in the US and 90% of the world's oil supply controlled by Vladimir Putin and Prince Salman?
It would be interesting to trace back the history of renewables with an emphasis on that small factoid.
Prior to 2007, and probably prior to 2000, that's exactly where the world was headed. Ten years ago, the US was building huge terminals along the Gulf Coast to import natural gas; now, those same terminals have been re-purposed to export natural gas. The US is now free to export crude oil -- the law was changed under President Obama.
The US has had two lost decades: the Bush decade and the Obama decade, 2002 -- 2016. The US appears to be making up for lost time. Record low unemployment; record economy.
The rest of the world suffered through the same two lost decades, but, unlike the US, most of the world looks forward to another lost decade. Canada is in a world of hurt -- it can't close a deal, and NAFTA is coming to an end. Even with a "Hillary" in office in 2020, it will be hard to put that genie back in the bottle.
Mexico: a socialist president who appears to know how to run the country's oil industry.
Into the ground.
Venezuela. Oh my goodness. No light at the end of that tunnel.
I'm not keeping up with the Argentina story, but that doesn't sound good, either.
Mideast: in deep, deep trouble.
Turkey is going the route of Venezuela. I think Turkey is going to be one of the biggest international stories of the decade. And not a "good" international story. [September 3, 2018, The Washington Post: Turkey's woes could be just the start as record global debt bills come due.]
In the US we will see something similar: winners and losers.
California will go its own way. It will survive (and thrive) despite Sacramento's penchant for spending other people's money. The "big state" that needs to be worried: New York.
New York will lose a seat or two in the US House. Texas, California will gain.
New York state and Canada, it seems, have a lot in common. (Sacramento: another metonym for those playing along at home.)
I saw a beer ad on television last night: the state where more people move to than any other state: Texas. Welcome all those newcomers with a beer. Great ad.
The meteoric rise of Beto ("Justin") is fascinating on so many levels.
Idle Ramblings On A Sunday Morning In North Texas -- September 2, 2018
Later, 1:04 p.m. CDT: see fracking story below.
- AAPL shares appreciated 41%
- NOG shares appreciated 326%
What an incredibly beautiful weekend. I love three-day weekends. There are only two things that drive a five-day week in the US:
- the economy; and,
- the educational system.
The economy: American productivity is such that most companies could do quite fine with a four-day week. For those companies that need to need to operate 24/7, they could move to a "4-day week" and a "3-day week." Nurses these days often do that -- they get a 4-day week one week, followed by a three-day week the next week.
The education system is so incredibly inefficient, schools could accomplish the same amount of "production" in four days that they do in five. Home schoolers know that, and those who teach as full-time substitutes at public schools know that.
But as long as the "economy" works on a 5-day basis, the schools will remain on a 5-day basis.
Commercial airline pilots have an incredibly efficient schedule, from what I can tell, and emergency room physicians do so, also. Regulations and policies probably discourage this practice now, but in the "old days," emergency room physicians could work a 48-hour continuous, unbroken stretch at a time. Moonlighting.
A close physician friend did that routinely while in the US Air Force while assigned to Grand Forks AFB in the early 80s. His Air Force job was generally Monday through Friday, giving him weekends off. When he had weekends free, he drove to a rural hospital where he signed in at 6:00 p.m. Friday and signed out at 6 p.m. Sunday -- 48 hours pays for one weekend. Not much activity in the emergency room at a rural hospital, but the service had to be "covered."
I digress. But, wow, three-day weekends are nice.
Took me 23 minutes to get to "work" today -- Starbucks. Normally takes a few minutes more, but it's not the length of the ride that matters; it's the quality of the ride. Today -- everyone in Texas is at church or in bed, except a few cyclists. Beautiful, beautiful ride.
Later, 12:38 p.m. CDT: The "next financial crisis" with regard to fracking took place between 2014 and 2016 when Saudi Arabia tried to crush US oil companies. Saudi Arabia failed, but there was a financial crisis in the US oil sector, and many US oil companies failed/went away and/or declared bankruptcy and reorganized and are still drilling.
But the preponderance of business articles written about the fracking industry today suggests things have turned around quite spectacularly and we will see it in the year-end (2018) earnings reports.
The op-ed actually comes close to that, and then stops short -- it would not fit his thesis. I think most folks who actually follow the oil industry closely would argue that the fracking industry has never looked so robust.
A proxy for the Bakken would be the share price of either NOG (a non-operator) or CLR (an operator). These two companies probably know more about the geology of the entire Bakken than any other single oil company. Analysts and investors have now had almost twenty years of experience and/or records of the US fracking industry to study, and most would say that they have been through the worst. Share prices of CLR,and NOG for exactly one year:
A five-year graph would show exactly what the NY Times writer was writing about. But the article should have been written in 2014.
Because the op-ed was really a book review, it was already outdated; some "facts" are wrong; and other facts are not even provided. The book was written by a contributing editor at Vanity Fair, which I believe, is struggling financially (but could be wrong, but I doubt it).
The most glaring error: the real reason fracking succeeded. Not once was the price of oil mentioned nor the OPEC embargo nor the efforts of previous administrations and presidential wannabees to stop fracking.
The op-ed: "The next financial crisis lurks underground."
The writer's thesis: the "decline rate" and the "Red Queen."
From the article:
A key reason for the terrible financial results is that fracked oil wells show a steep decline rate: The amount of oil they produce in the second year is drastically smaller than the amount produced in the first year. According to an economist at the Kansas City Federal Reserve, production in the average well in the Bakken — a key area for fracking shale in North Dakota — declines 69 percent in its first year and more than 85 percent in its first three years. A conventional well might decline by 10 percent a year. For fracking operations to keep growing, they need huge investments each year to offset the decline from the previous years’ wells.
[Maybe: the writer should look at nameplate capacity of wind and solar.]
And the link goes to a New York Times article dated November 22, 2014, with a byline of Williston, ND. A lot has happened in the oil patch in the past four years.
That was true then and remains true today, although the numbers may be somewhat different.
The bottom line: the author of the book and the writer of the op-ed argue that companies drilling in the Permian and the Bakken must keep drilling to replace the oil they produce every year.
I could be wrong, but doesn't General Motors need to keep producing new cars each year to stay in business.
Profit? Let's talk Amazon and Tesla.
Crisis for investors? Let's talk GE. Wow, let's talk GE.
And that canard that frackers are not making a profit is outdated. The frackers, in general, are now producing profits. And many of them are paying (and increasing) dividends. Companies don't increase dividends if they're losing money.
But enough of this.
Oh, one last thing, the title of the op-ed and the thesis of the book: the next financial crisis lurks underground.
Without taking this out of context, isn't this a banking / Wall Street / private investment story? If the companies go bankrupt, the US government isn't going to bail them out, and banks are minimally exposed to risk in the oil industry in the big scheme of things.
On the other hand, the US debt is $10 trillion and rising and is "owned" by all Americans.
But, yes, if you don't understand the industry, I would not recommend investing in the oil sector.
River: One Man's Journey Down the Colorado, Source to Sea, Colin Fletcher, 1997.
I don't particularly care for the writing style -- verbose. One has to read closely and slowly to get any "facts" from the book. It's a great "travelogue" book -- one to read while resting by the poool if one has lots of time, and literally nothing else to do. But it moves glacially, and if one is easily distracted, one won't get far in this book. Maybe one page or two at a sitting.
I got it mostly for the maps.
Some quick notes:
- the source of the Colorado River is Peak Lake (actually a pond) on Knapsack Col in the Wind River Range on the western side of the Continental Divide
- the author started his trek at the four ponds just below Peak Lake -- he did not climb the Knapsack Col to get to the "ultimate" source. He started at the "penultimate" source, I guess
- from the four ponds, the source flows north, at which point it is called Green River
- about mile 10, the Green River turns south at "Big Bend"
- about 100 miles south, one reaches Big Piney, still in Wyoming, and then about 20 miles later one gets to the Oregon Trail (Sublette Cutoff), just north of the Fontenelle Reservoir
- at about 230 miles one reaches Green River, Wyoming, just north of Flaming Gorge Reservoir
- the Green River enters Utah about 280 miles downstream, into the Uinta Mountains of Utah; Flaming Gorge Dam is in northern Utah on the Green River
- the Green River exits Utah and enters Colorado for about 40 miles before it re-enters Utah and the Uinta Basin
- finally, around Mile 650, the Green River meets the Grand River at the "Confluence," still in Utah; from now it's the Colorado River we all know; it was a political decision to rename the Grand River; together, the main river and the former Grand became, together, "the Colorado"; see this post for more of the story;
- at about Mile 910, the Colorado River exits Utah and enters Arizona; just after entering Arizona, the river is dammed by the Glen Canyon Dam; the Navajo Generating Station is just off the southeast corner of the dam
- another eighty miles and the Colorado River is in Grand Canyon National Park, where it turns abruptly, making a 90-degree turn, from flowing south to flowing west; standing on the south side of the Grand Canyon, the river flows from your right to your left; from the east to the west
- the author marks his "Grand Canyon" map from Mile 1003 to Mile 1227
- the author's "Grand Canyon" map ends at the Arizona/Nevada state line
- as noted, the author's "Grand Canyon" map ends about Mile 1227, just short of the Nevada/Arizona state line
- Hoover Dam, on the border between Nevada and Arizona, about 30 miles southeast of Las Vegas, is located around Mile 1290 on the author's map; Lake Mead, behind the dam, extends almost all the way back to the Grand Canyon
- from Lake Mead, the river flows directly south from Boulder City, between Laughlin/Bullhead City, to Needles, CA, about Mile 1360; "Point 1180" on the author's map is about Mile 1380
- the river forms the California/Arizona boundary until it reaches Mexico, just west of Yuma, Arizona
- the Rio Colorado forms the boundary between Baja California and Sonora, Mexico
- the river ends in the Gulf of [Baja] California, at Mile 1741, El Gulfo de Santa Clara
Yesterday, I made a short visit to our local Target store. I had Sophia in tow. A few errands.
I parked the car next to a sleek, black Maserati sedan. It brought back vivid memories of being a passenger in a Maserati being driven by an older male acquaintance at fairly high speeds somewhere in the Italian mountains, a long, long time ago.
I remember it as if it were yesterday. I vividly recall the scenery and the incredibly smooth feel of the Maserati on the straightaways and the smooth handling as it took the curves. I recall the scenery, but I don't recall the "smell" of the forests. But the windows would have been rolled up. I remember the leather seats and how comfortable the bucket seats felt. It was a big sedan, but yet, it was a sports car all the same. It was very, very roomy -- unlike the Porsche 911-- I felt very small in the oversized passenger seat. I remember the manual shift with the wooden knob. I don't remember much else of the interior finish -- other than the exquisite leather seats -- but I do recall the wonderful finish -- most likely a dash with a wood finish.
The only problem: I've never -- in this lifetime -- been in a Maserati in Italy. Or in a Maserati anywhere else for that matter.
Spooky.