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Wednesday, December 5, 2018

Welcome To Bakken 2.5: Ten DUCs Completed; Some Huge Wells -- December 5, 2018

Active rigs:

$52.6312/5/201812/05/201712/05/201612/05/201512/05/2014
Active Rigs62533964188

Four new permits:
  • Operator: Hess
  • Field: Robinson Lake (Mountrail)
  • Comments: Hess has permits for a four-well EN-Weyrauch B pad in 30-154;
Ten producing well (DUCs) reported as completed:
  • 34052, 2,480, WPX, Howling Wolf 28-33HZ, Wolf Bay, t11/18; cum 1K after 18 days;
  • 30138, 2,574, CLR, Pletan 7-18H, Jim Creek, t10/18; cum 27K after 13 days;
  • 30137, 1,228, CLR, Pletan 6-18H1, Jim Creek, four sections, t11/18; cum 16K after 13 days;
  • 23791, 1,990, CLR, Pasadena 3-2H1, Banks, t10/18; cum 25K after 16 days;
  • 34326, 1,566, Whiting, Vandeberg 31-4TFH, Stockyard Creek, t10/18; cum 20K after 21 days;
  • 34327, 1,726, Whiting, Vandeberg 31-1-3H, Stockyard Creek, t10/18; cum 13K after 25 days;
  • 34325, 1,563, Whiting, Vandeberg 31-1-4H, Stockyard Creek, t10/18; cum 20K after 21 days;
  • 33288, 378, Whiting, Talkington Federal 41-25PHU, Bell, t10/18; cum 3K after 20 days;
  • 32288, 769, Whiting, Smith Federal 34-12-2PH, Park, t10/18; cum 5K after 22 days;
  • 30569, 564, Petro-Hunt, USA 153-95-22C_15-6H, 10/18; cum 16K after 24 days;

Slawson Activity In Big Bend -- December 5, 2018

It appears the Slawson Torpedo Federal wells in Big Bend have been fracked. The wells are tracked here. I did not see the Torpedo Federal wells listed on the confidential well list which would have given the date they come off the confidential list.

In addition, Slawson's Lunker wells to the east of the Torpedo wells have also been fracked:
  • 29621, 2,548, Slawson, Lunker Federal 1 SLH, Big Bend, 4 sections, t10/17; cum 138K 10/18; full production profile:
PoolDateDaysBBLS OilRunsBBLS WaterMCF ProdMCF SoldVent/Flare
BAKKEN10-20183125527252691976217078247911691
BAKKEN9-20189419434182777280202308
BAKKEN8-20180000000
BAKKEN7-20180000000
BAKKEN6-20180000000
BAKKEN5-2018102480500
BAKKEN4-20182014691150506128988553492872
BAKKEN3-2018292403924189996116262100423489
BAKKEN2-20182626957272411071518796139201847
  • 23105, 778, Slawson, Lunker Federal 2-33-4H, 33-061-02154, Big Bend, t10/12; cum 381K 10/18; selected production, but get this: this well has not been re-fracked; this well is 0.22 miles from #29621 (1,200 feet away)
BAKKEN2-20182861146341225724183461279
BAKKEN1-20182672006988273329415111541
BAKKEN12-20172891429481451246603127425
BAKKEN11-20173012398121457275742259491
BAKKEN10-201718100809650623954603700594
BAKKEN9-20170000000
BAKKEN8-201717115222314218106030
BAKKEN7-20173124292038704155911421
BAKKEN6-2017231818206063311958790
BAKKEN5-2017251948205264312809460
  • 18499, 710, Slawson, Lunker Federal 1-33-4H, 33-061-01188, Big Bend, t7/10; cum 467K 10/18, production profile, selected, most recent; note, recently offline:
PoolDateDaysBBLS OilRunsBBLS WaterMCF ProdMCF SoldVent/Flare
BAKKEN10-2018682011658120
BAKKEN9-2018212341693122035418
BAKKEN8-20181844367540331610077
BAKKEN7-2018311340885534848403146
BAKKEN6-2018291213130544179446354
  • #18499, first year after initial frack:
BAKKEN7-20113016613169843710799276920
BAKKEN6-2011282252721761510512055117750
BAKKEN5-20112717035182364447949092200
BAKKEN4-2011292324622959582313158128680
BAKKEN3-20113014369147203149765173510
BAKKEN2-201121260019603388636530
BAKKEN1-201129329335925797444540
BAKKEN12-201031536550481021198916790
BAKKEN11-20103010772108792668545451540
BAKKEN10-201031958597612728500146910
BAKKEN9-20103013381130832274699766970
BAKKEN8-20103114766149864176418438740
BAKKEN7-20101572766256112315000

The graphic:

Mexico Halts All New Upstream Auctions For At Least Three Years -- December 5, 2018

Mexico. When President Obama killed the Keystone XL it was clear he did not understand energy.

Now, just as clearly, Mexico's new president does not understand energy. The Mexican president has halted upstream auction rounds for three years.

He rationalizes why he has taken this move, but it is clear he does not understand how the oil business works.

Story at S&P Global / Platts.
The postponement of auction rounds will have a long-term, material impact on Mexico's oil and gas output, according to a transition report issued by the outgoing administration of Enrique Pena Nieto over the weekend.
According to the report, by halting auction rounds by two years, Mexico's output will only reach 2.46 million b/d by 2027, not 3.07 million b/d. Similarly, if auctions continue, Mexico would produce 7 Bcf/d of natural gas by 2028, 640 MMcf/d more than if the lease sales are shelved for two years, it said.
But does it matter in the big scheme of things? Nope. Look at what the outgoing administration is quibbling over: 2.5 million bopd vs 3 million bopd. Inconsequential in the big scheme of things.

One wonders how much Canada is losing due to faux environmentalists: Northern Gateway (killed); TransMountain (killed);  Keystone XL (killed); Line 3 (delayed, possibly killed).

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Macron Caves On Green Energy Tax

Updates

December 6, 2018: Considering how little France contributes to global CO2 this whole exercise seemed ludicrous. Add that to Macron's suggestion that France needs its own army to protect itself against Russia or  the United States makes me wonder how really "batty" this guy is. He's starting to make Occasional-Cortex look like an Einstein. Article at ABC News

Original Post

France: "most taxed" country in 2017, and still Macron not satisfied. France overtook Denmark as the most taxed country in 2017. Link here. The few examples given in the article are quite interesting.
The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) said on Wednesday overall government tax revenue on average reached 34.2 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) last year among 34 developed countries for which the Paris-based body compiled data.
Though up only slightly from 34.0 percent in 2016, the figure was the highest average overall tax take since the international policy forum’s records began in 1965, it said.
In France, tax revenues rose to 46.2 percent of GDP, surpassing Denmark, where the ratio fell to 46.0 percent. 
  • Mexico: lowest at 16.2% of GDP
  • US: 27% of GDP; if one includes state and property income tax, one wonders how high the US tax rate would be
  • Israel: 32.7% of GDP

Another Global Warning Rant -- Ignore -- For The Archives -- Nothing About The Bakken -- December 5, 2018

On December 4, 2018, I posted a note why I don't accept the "man-made global warming" scheme. Here's another great example, from twitter today:
If the movers and shakers (Algore, Tom Steyer, Occasional-Cortex, the UN) seriously "believed" that the earth would be uninhabitable by the end of century if we did not stop the rise of atmospheric CO2, wouldn't there be "Manhattan Projects" to find solutions instead of conferences in Poland and PowerPoint Presentations. Even eighth graders should be able to see through this. So, from twitter, above, another example of the need for a "Manhattan Project" if folks are serious about AGW:
nuclear fusion energy.

And another "Manhattan Project": carbon capture and sequestration. Instead of relying on private enterprise to determine if it's cost effective, simply give DARPA a blank check to do all they could to bring atmospheric CO2 down.

By the way, the fact that Occasional-Cortex has become the new spokesperson for fighting global warming tells me all I need to know about this scam.

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Truly Bizarre ... and This Comes From The Financial Times


I guess the Financial Times was concerned about protests in Paris. 

EIA Energy Profiles By State -- December 5, 2018

It's possible I've linked this site before.

EIA energy profiles by state. That link will take you to Massachusetts, but you can substitute "ND" for "MA" in the URL and it will take you to North Dakota. And you can do that for all the other states as well.

When you get to that link for Massachusetts, do this:
  • scroll down to the bar graph
  • "consumption by source" will be the default
  • go to the right of that and click on "Prices" at the far right
  • another bar graph pops up; "0" is the US average price of for natural gas and electricity, residential, commercial, and industrial
  • so in this case, residential electricity in Massachusetts costs about 55% more than the national average
  • let's do a few more states, price of electricity compared to national average
    • TX: holy mackerel; all the bars go to the left! residential electricity 12% lower than the natioanl average
    • ND: 10% lower than national average
    • VT: 35% higher for Bernie Sanders et al
    • CT: wow, 60% higher than national average
    • WA: as expected; all to the left (lower than national average); residential electricity 26% lower than rest of nation
    • CA: as expected; all bars to the right; no natural gas; residential electricity 55% higher than national average
    • NY: 12% higher


An Incredible New Link -- Location Of Wells / Rigs In Norh America -- December 5, 2018

Wow, what a great note from a reader:
First thank you for keeping links to our websites (https://www.geoactivity.com/ & https://www.riglocations.ca) in your blog.
 
We would like to let you know that the second link under Data Base in your “Data Links” tab is not working (http://www.click2map.com/v2/dgriffin94/Bakken_Oil_Company)
 
We recently introduce the powerful search by well name and rig name in North Dakota, we believe there is no other service as easy and smart as our web app to locate a rigs or wells in North Dakota.
Will it be possible for our link (https://www.riglocations.ca) to be listed in the position of the previously mentioned link? And if it possible as “Rigs & Wells in North Dakota” since you can find both there. We are already listed as “Rig Locations in Canada”.
I've deleted that link that no longer exists, and have replaced it with that new link. I'm not quite sure if I have everything exactly as suggested, but I think it works. The new links are under "Data Base" on my "Data Links" tab -- one of the tabs at the top of the page of the blog. 

Comment: Wow, that new link is incredible. It takes a moment to get use to it, but it's very, very good. The first big thing I noted is that to zoom in/zoom out, on Apple use the "command +" or the "command -" option. One can use one's fingers with a touch screen but the "command +" / "command -" seems to be the preferred method. "Swiping" the usual way will move the map to where  you want it.  I assume the same for non-Apple computers. 

A huge thank you for the web developer of this site to notify me of the new links and an incredibly good tool for locating rigs and wells in North America.

The Market, Energy, And Politcal Page, T+29 -- December 5, 2018

Disclaimer: This is not an investment site. Do not make any investment, financial, job, travel, or relationship decisions based on what you read here or what you think you may have read here.
 
Pipelines: for several faithful readers -- Tallgrass Energy update from Michael Fitzsimmons over at SeekingAlpha.
  • Tallgrass is now a dividend-paying corporation. That means no IDRs, no K-1 tax forms, and a simplified corporation structure.
  • But the company's business is still the same. It has interest in two tier-1 pipelines: REX (natural gas) and Pony Express (oil).
  • Tallgrass has transitioned away from the MLP model that is so out of favor with investors and Wall Street.
  • The current 8.7% yield is safe and secure. Two auspicious crude oil pipeline projects ensure organic growth going forward.
  • The shares are a Buy and could rise to $26/share over the next 12 months, for a total return potential of 25%+.
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Digital Media Implosion

Obviously there's a lot more to this, but when I quickly read through these articles about all the digital media outlets that were going broke (see screenshot from the Drudge Report below), one common thread: most of them were political in nature, even such digital magazines as Vanity Fair, have become way too political. I have quit subscribing to The New York Review of Books and The London Review of Books because there was just too  much anti-Trump stuff. I've also pretty much quit reading The New Yorker for the same reason having canceled my subscription a year ago or so, after subscribing for decades. I can read it in the library but generally not interested any more. People have simply gotten tired, fed up, bored. irritated, whatever, with all the political stuff.

One wonders if we might see the same thing on cable networks and or network television.

It was interesting to note that the Weekly Standard may be ending, it was a conservative outlet, but interestingly enough, it was noted for being anti-Trump.


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In Other News

Quiet Day -- December 5, 2018

China: link here


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Back to the Bakken

No wells coming off confidential list today.

Active rigs:

$53.2312/5/201812/05/201712/05/201612/05/201512/05/2014
Active Rigs64533964188

RBN Energy: IMO 2020' market impacts and challenges to refiners.
The planned shift from 3.5%-sulfur marine fuel to fuel with sulfur content of 0.5% or less mandated by IMO 2020 on January 1, 2020, will require a combination of fuel-oil blending, crude-slate changes, refinery upgrades and, potentially, increased refinery runs, not to mention ship-mounted “scrubbers” for those who want to continue burning higher-sulfur bunker. That’s a lot of stars to align, and even then, there’s likely to be at least some degree of non-compliance, at least for a while. So, what’s ahead for global crude oil and bunker-fuel markets — and for refiners in the U.S. and elsewhere — in the coming months? Today, we continue our analysis of how sharply rising demand for low-sulfur marine fuel might affect crude flows, crude slates and a whole lot more.
For the past few years, the International Maritime Organization (IMO), a specialized agency of the United Nations, has been ratcheting down allowable sulfur-oxide emissions from the engines that power the 50,000-plus tankers, dry bulkers, container ships and other commercial vessels plying international waters.
The global cap on sulfur content in bunker (marine fuel) was reduced to 3.5% (from the old 4.5%), and 13 months from now — on New Year’s Day in 2020 — the cap is set to be reduced to a much stiffer 0.5%. There is an even tougher 0.1%-sulfur limit already in place in the IMO’s Emission Control Areas (ECAs) for sulfur, which include Europe’s Baltic and North seas and areas within 200 nautical miles of the U.S. and Canadian coasts. (Bunker fuel demand for these ECAs comprises 10-15% of total petroleum-derived bunker fuels.) That standard will remain in force within the ECAs when the 0.5% sulfur cap for the rest of the world becomes effective 13 months from now.