Friday, August 28, 2020

Two Wells Coming Off The Confidential List; Equinor To Stop Drilling In The Bakken --- August 28, 2020

Equinor: to stop drilling in the Bakken Equinor, as a Bakken operator, is tracked here. Status of Equinor permits from 2019 and 2020.

Active rigs:

$43.01
8/28/202008/28/201908/28/201808/28/201708/28/2016
Active Rigs1162615530

Two wells coming off confidential list -- Friday, August 28, 2020: 79 for the month; 150 for the quarter, 596 for the year

  • 36774, SI/A, Whiting, Iverson 11-14-2H, Sanish, t--; cum 61K 6/20; a 20K month;
  • 33946, loc/NC, MRO, Ranum USA 44-8TFH-2B, Reunion Bay,

RBN Energy: a propane molecule's journey to Mont Belvieu and beyond, part 3.  

About two-thirds of all of the propane consumed in the U.S. is used as fuel — for indoor and outdoor cooking, home heating, water heaters, drying crops, and running forklifts and fleet vehicles. The other one-third is used as a feedstock for producing ethylene and other petchems. About 95% of the propane supply to meet this demand is produced and processed right here in the U.S. of A., making propane the most American fuel we’ve got. 
But when firing up the grill out back and watching that first propane molecule flash to life, most backyard chefs don’t think much about the long and winding road their propane has traveled. It’s actually a fascinating tale of supply-chain logistics that involves high pressures, bitter cold, wild rides up and down tall towers, storage deep underground, and, of course, trains, trucks, and tanks. We think it’s a tale that needs to be told, and that’s what we’ve been doing in this update of another Greatest Hit blog.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.