- crude oil:
- forecast: a draw of 167,000 bbls
- actual: a whopping 6.86 million bbls
- gasoline:
- forecast: a draw of 333,000 bbls
- actual: a draw of 1.82 million bbls
Wells coming off confidential list today -- Wednesday, April 24, 2019: 75 wells for the month; 75 wells for the quarter
- 34309, drl, Crescent Point Energy, CPEUSC David 10-29-32-157N-99W-LL TFH, Lone Tree Lake, no production data,
- 34214, 788, Whiting, Periot 24-20TFH, 40 stages; 6.1 million lbs; Dollar Joe, t11/18; cum 66K 2/19; spud date, August 10, 2018; cease drilling, August 21, 2018; vertical drilled in about 24 hours; middle Bakken TVD, 9,954 feet; max gas reading of 2,699 units in lower Bakken; max gas, 5,872 units in the Three Forks; TVD, top of the Three Forks, 10,031 feet; target, 20' into the Three Forks;
$65.97 | 4/24/2019 | 04/24/2018 | 04/24/2017 | 04/24/2016 | 04/24/2015 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Active Rigs | 61 | 62 | 48 | 29 | 84 |
RBN Energy: more US LNG export projects moving toward FID. Archived.
2019 is slated to be a watershed year for U.S. LNG export projects vying to catch the second wave — the first wave being the slew of liquefaction trains already operational or in the process of being commissioned or constructed.
As expected, regulatory and commercial activity has heated up around the two dozen or so longer-term proposals to add liquefaction capacity along the U.S. coastlines over the next decade.
Last week, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved two of those projects — Tellurian’s Driftwood LNG and Sempra’s Port Arthur LNG — and several others, including Driftwood and NextDecade’s Rio Grande LNG, also have made progress on the commercial front. Many of these projects are targeting a final investment decision this year. Today, we continue a series highlighting the second-wave projects’ latest developments.US LNG export terminals, December, 2018.
Original list, October, 2016.
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