Link here. "We" should have the least expensive energy in the country but due to crazy reliance on wind: Texas power prices jump to record as heat bakes state.
And "we" have seven more days of this.
And I love it.
Not complaining.
From the linked Reuters article:
Spot
power prices in Texas soared to a record high for Thursday as consumers
cranked up their air conditioners to escape another brutal heat wave.
Temperatures
in Houston were expected to hit 99 degrees Fahrenheit on
Thursday and 100 or more through Sunday before easing to the mid-90s
next week.
The
combination of heat and humidity will make it feel more like 108 F in
Houston Thursday afternoon and above 110 over the weekend. The normal
high in the city at this time of year is 92 degrees.
Next-day
power prices at the ERCOT North hub soared from
$130 per megawatt hour for Wednesday to an all-time high of
$973.75 for Thursday.
That tops the previous record of $751 on Aug. 15 during the last heat
wave to hit the state.
I think Texas has more wind energy than any other state. And even so, the wind farms couldn't keep up with demand.
September 8, 2019: in the linked story at the original post, Kernza was said to be a "wild relative of annual wheat," suggesting to me it was "wild." Now this, from agweek, August 26, 2019:
Kernza is a brand of forage grass called intermediate wheatgrass. It
is is in the embryonic stages of development, with an intent toward
commercialization, with uses including making bread, pasta and beer.
Kernza,
a trademark name for a crop developed at Salina, Kan., by the Land
Institute, a group founded in 1976 to develop perennial grains, pulses
and oilseeds. The history goes back to the 1980s with the Rodale
Institute in Pennsylvania. Kernza research and production has been tried
from Kansas to Minnesota in the past several years.
From the linked article:
Kernza — a perennial grain crop that is under development in the Upper Great Plains — will be featured players in a field day, from 9 a.m. to noon, Sept. 26, at the Williston Research Extension Center.
Clair Keene, an Extension specialist with the WREC is offering the North Dakota's first research field day on the crop. Keene started the first research site during fall 2018.
And then like the Bakken, the dreaded decline rate:
Keene says it's difficult to talk about yields because part of the raw weight is the hull. Fernholz says older varieties produce 200 to 500 pounds of seed per acre. That translates roughly up to 30 bushels per acre, Fernholz says.
Kernza typically produces its best yields in its first three years of production and then production declines "significantly," Fernholz says.Older varieties are more vulnerable to shattering. Kernels are one-eighth to one-quarter the size of a spring wheat kernel.
And again, we don't get the full story. How does that 30 bushels/acre of Kernza compare to current North Dakota wheat?
North Dakota wheat production averaged 47 bushels of wheat acre in 2019, down two bushels from2018.
I assume when promoting something, there's a bit of hyperbole, suggesting that 30 bushels of Kernza/acre is on the high side and not the average, and it's in very, very controlled studies.
General Mills, Inc.’s Cascadian Farm subsidiary has set up a web site, www.DeeplyRootedForGood.com, for individuals interested in trying its Honey Toasted Kernza cereal.
The company said it has 6,000 boxes of the cereal available, with proceeds from the fundraiser going toward The Land Institute to further research on Kernza, a perennial grain that is a wild relative of annual wheat.
The decision to limit the cereal’s production run and launch the web site comes after Cascadian Farm in 2017 committed to developing a cereal or snack product made with Kernza due to its flavor profile and potential to positively impact the climate. Kernza is described as a sweet, nutty grain.
But the company soon encountered challenges.
Maria Carolina Comings, marketing director for Cascadian Farm, pointed out in an April podcast that Kernza takes two years to grow. Over the past two years, the company encountered many factors that impacted the yield, and there were some issues after harvest that affected the available supply of organic Kernza.
According to Cascadian Farm there are 1,200 acres of Kernza perennial grain in production, and the yields are relatively small — about one-quarter that of annual wheat.
The North Dakota connection ...
Why does one get the feeling that this was a "commercial" disguised as a news story? I saw this all the time as editor of a college newspaper.
NFL, season opener; 7 - 3, second quarter, NBC; and, it interests me not -- see next note.
Thursday Night Lights! Link here. Texas high school football! El Paso Eastwood High School at Plano Senior High. In Texas tonight, this is bigger than Green Bay / Chicago. LOL. This is huge. On prime time television, ABC. This is why I got to Texas as fast as I could on my way to retirement. Wow, it doesn't get any better than this. At The Star in Frisco. Jerry's house. Playing at a neutral field. It is awesome to hear local announcers providing pre-game coverage on national television. This is really amazing. Jerry Jones, Dallas Cowboys, offered his stadium for the game. Yeah, it's that big.
The last Oasis Petroleum presentation I posted at the blog was back in May, 2019. It's possible I've posted a newer one since then, but if I have, I've forgotten.
So, here's a look at the August, 2019, corporate presentation for Oasis Petroleum. Link here.
Disclaimer: this was done quickly. Some charts hard to interpret without the narrative. There will by typographical and factual errors. If this is important to you, go to the source. This was posted just to help me compare the Bakken with the Delaware (Permian)
Net acres
Williston: 414,000
Delware: 23,000
Gross operated top tier inventory:
Williston: 1,385 drilling locations
Delaware: 600 - 700 drilling locations
Rigs in 2019:
Williston: 2 - 3 (look at the efficiency -- 70 wells to be completed; 2 or 3 rigs)
Delaware: 2 (ten wells to be completed; 2 rigs)
YTD production (boepd)
Williston: 82,000 boepd ((will drop slightly y-o-y in 2019)
Delaware: 6,000 boepd (will increase y-o-y in 2019)
Costs (hard to be sure if I'm reading slide correctly but if I am):
Williston: $7.6 million / well
Delaware: $11.5 million / well (target: $9.6 million / well)
Completions:
Williston, 2019: target ~ 70 well completions
Delaware, 2019: target ~ 10 well completions
Free cash flow:
Year-to-date: positive cash flow: targeting $16 million in 2019
Williston asset producing FCF to fund Delaware and OMP growth
full year (2019): targeting $80 million FCF at $50 WTI
full year (2019): targeting $110 million FCF at $60 WTI
OMP outspend due to Delaware infrastructure build-out and funding Oasis' interest in Bobcat DevCo
Operations -- Bakken (to make sense of this, one needs to see the map at the presentation):
enhanced completions expand top tier position
top tier:
Montana: 27
enhanced completions
Red Bank perimeter: 56
Red Bank, Painted Woods, Indian Hills: 63
S Cottonwood: 8
additional upside:
N Cottonwood: 7
others:
Montana perimeter
Wild Basin (North Dakota)
Alger (Mountrail County)
1,385 top-tier operated locations: 20+ year inventory life at current rig pace
Breakeven prices below $45 WTI
South Cottonwood now top-tier inventory
Production per 1,000 feet of lateral:
South Cottonwood
pre-2016: 2,122 bbls cum 3 months
2016+ wells: 5,189 bbls cum 3 months
Bakken average, 2016+: 5,358 cum 3 months
Painted Woods
pre-2016: 3,028
OAS recent tests: 5,720
2016+ Bakken average: 5,358
similar in Montana
Comparing Oasis with 15 peers in the Bakken:
Oasis is #2 boe / #3 bo in "Williston well productivity" but pretty much tying #1
Fracking: focus on increasing frack entry points
Other:
Oasis' MLP is now the 2nd largest gas processor in the Williston Basin after hte startup of Wild Basin Gas Plant II in December 2018
Bobcat DevCo
Panther DevCo -- crude oil gathering and produced water in the Delaware Basin
Production per well in Delaware, slide 12:
UL Rattlesnake: one month cum of 3,500 bo/1,000 feet of lateral
UL Kerwin: three month cum of 7,500 bo/1000 feet of lateral
UL Stampede: 12 month cum of 21,000 bo/1000 feet of lateral
The Halliday wells in Werner oil field and Wolf Bay oil field have been completed. These are some very nice wells. Then look how far east they are. These wells are tracked here.
And, of course, of the two dozen wells or so at the linked site, this one caught my attention:
19786, 843, Hunt, Halliday 1-12-1H 1, section 13-146-93, Wolf Bay, Bakken, t5/11; cum 458K 7/19; huge well with nice jump in production, 1/19;
Water: a regular reader noted this before I did. Long before I noted it. Pay attention to the produced water. It is not uncommon to frack with 10 million gallons of water. Ten million gallons of water = 240,000 bbls of water.
35273, 2,405, CLR, Carson Peak 5-35H2, Oakdale, t6/19; cum 72K in less than two months;
Production:
Pool
Date
Days
BBLS Oil
Runs
BBLS Water
MCF Prod
MCF Sold
Vent/Flare
BAKKEN
7-2019
31
41100
41064
24099
40882
35322
5251
BAKKEN
6-2019
20
28751
28560
17753
24930
18836
5806
BAKKEN
5-2019
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
4-2019
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
3-2019
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
2-2019
4
2324
2324
729
667
0
667
BAKKEN
1-2019
2
0
0
1319
1207
0
1207
The new well:
35082, 1,593, CLR, Morris 8-26H1, Oakdale, see this note; t4/19; cum 126K 7/19;
Production:
Pool
Date
Days
BBLS Oil
Runs
BBLS Water
MCF Prod
MCF Sold
Vent/Flare
BAKKEN
7-2019
31
25821
25852
15429
28660
24763
3681
BAKKEN
6-2019
30
26062
26185
18108
25808
19499
6010
BAKKEN
5-2019
31
36743
36924
23377
41250
36468
4323
BAKKEN
4-2019
21
36555
36078
23484
39928
35051
4496
BAKKEN
3-2019
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
2-2019
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
1-2019
4
730
730
2988
714
0
714
*******************************
The Older Wells
The well:
17334, 811, CLR, Morris 1-23H, t11/08/ cum 317K 7/19;another
re-frack candidate; off-line 5/18; back on line as of 6/18; back on
line as of 4/19; looks like a pretty significant halo effect;
Recent production:
Pool
Date
Days
BBLS Oil
Runs
BBLS Water
MCF Prod
MCF Sold
Vent/Flare
BAKKEN
7-2019
31
8667
8461
4318
8989
8473
97
BAKKEN
6-2019
30
11157
11354
6207
12162
11016
748
BAKKEN
5-2019
31
13311
13146
9526
14171
13428
358
BAKKEN
4-2019
15
5835
5645
5911
5728
5336
236
BAKKEN
3-2019
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
2-2019
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
1-2019
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
12-2018
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
11-2018
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
10-2018
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
9-2018
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
8-2018
31
1142
1380
203
1499
1123
0
BAKKEN
7-2018
31
1123
1164
185
1402
927
58
BAKKEN
6-2018
30
1085
899
187
1260
861
0
BAKKEN
5-2018
2
22
0
33
26
0
26
BAKKEN
4-2018
29
835
1435
108
943
873
70
*************************
Another Well In The Group
The well:
18859, 680, CLR, Carson Peak 3-35H, t5/11; cum 726K 7/29; nice production profile (5/18); huge jump in production;
33220, 1,111, CLR, Miles 8-6H1, Dimmick Lake, 4 sections, t7/18; cum 46K in first couple of months; cum 63K 7/19; off line as of 12/18; remains off line through 4/19; back on line as of 6/19 and huge jump in production;
Recent production:
Pool
Date
Days
BBLS Oil
Runs
BBLS Water
MCF Prod
MCF Sold
Vent/Flare
BAKKEN
7-2019
1
521
560
1000
1138
83
1055
BAKKEN
6-2019
30
11991
11877
21862
24644
11826
12815
BAKKEN
5-2019
3
37
36
1136
554
390
164
BAKKEN
4-2019
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
3-2019
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
2-2019
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
1-2019
0
0
40
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
12-2018
19
4448
4475
13098
10344
5948
4395
BAKKEN
11-2018
26
13836
13928
25672
19863
17314
2547
BAKKEN
10-2018
30
18431
18286
36619
30884
20963
9918
BAKKEN
9-2018
5
2922
2912
7866
5090
4450
640
BAKKEN
8-2018
3
1189
1423
3833
2025
1682
343
BAKKEN
7-2018
11
8439
8201
22615
13690
12444
1246
BAKKEN
6-2018
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
5-2018
6
916
916
8148
2428
0
2428
***************************
Another Well In The Same Group
The well:
33221, 1,696, CLR, Miles 7-6H, Dimmick Lake, t7/18; cum 142K 7/19; huge well;
Recent production:
Pool
Date
Days
BBLS Oil
Runs
BBLS Water
MCF Prod
MCF Sold
Vent/Flare
BAKKEN
7-2019
1
1038
1070
749
2737
199
2538
BAKKEN
6-2019
22
19177
18994
14369
46727
22423
24299
BAKKEN
5-2019
0
0
16
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
4-2019
4
1104
1264
3746
2857
1550
1307
BAKKEN
3-2019
31
6558
6446
25130
21926
11397
10525
BAKKEN
2-2019
7
1469
1405
4715
6350
4026
2322
BAKKEN
1-2019
0
0
40
0
0
0
0
BAKKEN
12-2018
20
4466
4508
12079
21185
12181
9002
BAKKEN
11-2018
27
16874
16996
15011
30117
26252
3862
BAKKEN
10-2018
27
23664
23541
22399
44447
30169
14274
BAKKEN
9-2018
20
16499
16510
27940
33408
29204
4201
BAKKEN
8-2018
29
28936
29397
42335
60749
50469
10276
***************************
Another In The same Group
The well:
29124, 633, CLR, Kennedy 3-31H, t3/15; cum 321K 7/19;