Saudi:
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Back to the Bakken
Far Side: link here.
WTI: $95.59.
Natural gas: $8.815.
Active rigs: 46 rigs or thereabouts.
Thursday, July 28, 2022: 28 for the month, 28 for the quarter, 367 for the year
- 38667, conf, CLR, Bang 4-4H,
Wednesday, July 27, 2022: 27 for the month, 27 for the quarter, 366 for the year
- 38614, conf, CLR, Bang 13-4H1,
RBN Energy: The Houston area's care for becoming a DOE-backed hydrogen hub.
It took many decades to build out the U.S.’s natural gas production,
processing and transportation infrastructure, and just as long to
develop demand for natgas — the many millions of residential,
commercial, industrial and power-generation customers that now depend on
U.S. gas, both domestically and, more recently, internationally as
well. Now, with action on both climate change and energy security top of
mind, there’s a big push to add clean hydrogen to the energy mix as
quickly as possible, as evidenced by the Department of Energy’s plan to
invest up to $8 billion in the development of four or more “hydrogen
hubs.” This time, we won’t have decades to build out the clean hydrogen
supply, demand and infrastructure that will be needed to make a real
difference — and that’s precisely the point being made by the folks in
and around Houston, who assert that the region has just what it takes to
get a consequential hydrogen hub up and running. In today’s RBN blog,
we continue our look at the federal government’s push to advance clean
hydrogen and the Houston-led effort to make the western Gulf Coast a
center of hydrogen-related activity.
As we said in Part 1,
it’s clear by now that the transition to a lower-carbon economy will be
an “all of the above” kind of thing, involving everything from wind,
solar and nuclear power to battery storage, electric vehicles and fuel
cells. And hydrocarbons, whose climate impacts can be reduced by
blending with renewable fuels or other means — or mitigated (partially
or even fully) with carbon offsets and carbon sequestration. Then
there’s clean hydrogen, the focus of this blog series,
whose development the DOE has deemed crucial to meeting the Biden
administration’s goals of a 100% clean electric grid by 2035 and
net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.