Get Up!
- WTI: up 1%; up 57 cents; now trading at $55.33;
- 10-Year Treasury: link here.
- DXY: link here.
- Silver: link here.
- CBOE volatility index: link here.
Apple:
- to invest $3.6 billion in Kia Motors;
- hires former Porsche chassis vice president for car project;
- US senators urge White House action on auto chip shortage;
Mideast:
Covid-19:
- How the EU tripped; why is this not surprising?
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Back to the Bakken
Active rigs:
$55.33 | 2/3/2021 | 02/03/2020 | 02/03/2019 | 02/03/2018 | 02/03/2017 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Active Rigs | 15 | 54 | 64 | 58 | 40 |
Rigs by operator:
- MRO: 4
- CLR: 2
- Hess: 2
- WPX: 1
- Slawson: 1
- Whiting: 1
- Petro-Hunt: 1
- Oasis: 1
- Ovintiv: 1
- BR: 1
Hess, drilling:
- EN-Joyce-LE
- CA-Russell Smith
No wells coming off the confidential list today.
RBN Energy:Canadian refiners grappling with morphing market realities, part 1.
Canada may be the land of backyard hockey, lacrosse, and loonies, but Canadians have many similarities to folks in the U.S. The same holds true for Canada’s refining sector, which like its American counterpart has been adjusting to big changes in domestic crude oil production, a declining need for imported oil, and, most recently, a period of severe refined-product demand destruction caused by the pandemic.
What Canadian refiners lack, though, is the attention they deserve. After all, nearly 2 MMb/d of crude oil flows through their 17 refineries. And, by the way, they now turn to U.S. producers for virtually all their oil imports — a far cry from where things stood before the Shale Era. Today, we kick off a three-part series that examines Canada’s refining sector in greater detail.
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