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Thursday, April 9, 2020

Cuts -- April 9, 2020

Updates

Later, 5:32 p.m. CT: OPEC+ confirms cut of 10 million bopd in May, June, 2020. Will US see another one or two million of decreased production?


Original Post

OPEC+ rumorsLink here.
  • Cuts could be as large as 20M bbl/day, Reuters reports, citing an unidentified Russian source and an OPEC source. 
Natural gas fill rate, link here.


From RBN Energy the other day:

In line with my thoughts about Oasis.
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The Literature Page

Middle Earth.
Tolkien first used the term "Middle-earth" in the early 1930's in place of the earlier terms "Great Lands", "Outer Lands", and "Hither Lands" to describe the same region in his stories.
"Middle-earth" is specifically intended to describe the lands east of the Great Sea (Belegaer), thus excluding Aman, but including Harad and other mortal lands not visited in Tolkien's stories.
Many people apply the name to the entirety of Tolkien's world or exclusively to the lands described in The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, and The Silmarillion.
In ancient Germanic and mythology, the universe was believed to consist of multiple interconnected physical worlds (in Nordic mythology, in West Germanic and English mythology).
The world of Men, the Middle-earth, lay in the centre of this universe.
The lands of Elves, gods, and Giants lay across an encircling sea.
The land of the Dead lay beneath the Middle-earth. A rainbow bridge, Bifrost Bridge, extended from Middle-earth to Asgard across the sea. An outer sea encircled the seven other worlds (Vanaheim, Asgard, Alfheim, Svartalfheim, Muspellheim, Niflheim, and Jotunheim).
In this conception, a "world" was more equivalent to a racial homeland than a physically separate world.
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Bird Watching

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