Euless, TX: 11°F. Wind chill worse.
First twelve hours of this 60-hour polar vortex: ERCOT - 1; Mother Nature - 0.
Euless, TX: 11°F. Wind chill worse.
First twelve hours of this 60-hour polar vortex: ERCOT - 1; Mother Nature - 0.
Link here.
I was fascinated by these data points regarding Canadians:
WASHINGTON—Senators passed a $1.65 trillion spending bill just ahead of the Christmas holiday and a gathering winter storm, after breaking an impasse related to immigration policy and racing through more than a dozen amendments.
The bipartisan bill was approved in a 68-29 vote. The legislation will now go to the House, where it is expected to pass, before heading to President Biden’s desk.
The omnibus legislation includes $858 billion in military spending, $45 billion more than the White House had requested and up about 10% from $782 billion the prior year. It also includes $772.5 billion in nondefense discretionary spending, up almost 6% from $730 billion the prior year. The overall discretionary price tag works out to about $1.65 trillion, compared with $1.5 trillion the prior fiscal year.
For retirees, link here:
Tucked into the $1.7 trillion government spending bill for 2023 lawmakers unveiled Tuesday are a range of significant reforms to help Americans save more for retirement.
These include increasing the age for required minimum distributions from retirement plans to pushing businesses to get more employees enrolled in plans. The bill also includes ideas that may help younger people save more earlier in life.
The measures — which begin on page 2,046 of the massive 4,155-page bill — mean that long-delayed retirement reform legislation known as SECURE 2.0 is now likely on a path to becoming law as soon as this weekend and would start to address what is becoming a retirement savings crisis in the U.S.
In a note Tuesday morning, Stifel Chief Washington Policy Strategist Brian Gardner explained how “the bill would expand retirement saving options by allowing a deferral on mandatory withdrawals, an increased catch-up contribution to 401(k) plans, and provide new options for small businesses to offer retirement plans to employees.”
Another key part of the bill would change the age when people must start taking mandatory distributions from their private retirement plans.
The SECURE Act increased the required minimum distribution age to 72 from 70.
Now, under the spending bill introduced Tuesday, the age requirement would raise again to 73 starting on January 1, 2023 and then to 75 by 2033.
This is a Madison well.
The well:
Greenbush oil field is 35 miles northwest of Minot:
Active rigs: 45.
WTI: $78.26.
Natural gas: $5.098.
Three new permits, #39520 -- #39522, inclusive:
Six permits renewed:
Twelve producing wells (DUCs) reported as completed:
Coal: EU, Turkey only major energy users set to boost coal imports.
Japan: pivots (back) to nuclear power.
Russia's only aircraft carrier: on fire again --
Russia: D5S + 17, link here --
Covid-19: China pivots --
Merchant ships: pivot to renewable energy --
Tesla: pivots to discounts --
Tesla Inc. has doubled the discounts offered on its Model 3 and Model Y electric vehicles delivered in the U.S. this month, according to its website, fueling concern demand for autos from Elon Musk’s car company may be softening.
“Take delivery of a new Model 3 or Model Y between December 21 and 31, 2022 for a $7,500 credit and 10,000 miles of free Supercharging,” the EV maker says on its website.
The charging credits also apply to the Model S and Model X vehicles, according to the company’s website, but not the $7,500 discount.
A Christmas story:
Lego: epic models -- link here.
Peter Zeihan: a seven part series. From 2018, it begins:
U.S. President Donald Trump made a… let’s call it a splash, at the G7 summit in Canada June 9. The G7 comprises the seven largest industrialized democracies – the United States, Canada, Japan, Germany, the United Kingdom, France and Italy – who also form the core of the entire American alliance network. Their leaders and finance ministers meet regularly to discuss challenges to the global order. Normally, the G7 is a bit of a lovefest with leaders agreeing to push this bit of financial stability or that bit of poverty reduction.
This time was different. The Trump administration is busy belittling and/or wrecking parts of the international order, and a mere week before the summit the United States levied steel and aluminum tariffs on nearly all the G7 members themselves. As such the summit was preceded and followed by quite aggressive statements out of most of the G7 members, most notably from Canada and France, about how American tariffs would not be allowed to stand in specific and a general dissatisfaction with the position of the White House on global affairs in general.
In essence, ahead of the summit the G7 leaders were showing concern that Trump’s rhetoric wasn’t simply rhetoric. And in the summit’s aftermath the emotion could best be summed up as defiant despair that Trump really, truly, means what he says.
I can see why they’re all pretty bummed.
Bozeman, Montana, broke a daily record low Tuesday morning, with temperatures plummeting to -43 degrees, while Helena, Montana, tied its daily record, at -35 degrees.
The temperature in Lincoln, Montana, also set a daily low at -49 degrees.
The coldest recorded wind chill (how cold it feels outside when considering wind speeds) was in the town of Malta, Montana, where it dropped to an astounding -72 degrees on Tuesday.
Nearly all of Montana, Wyoming, Nebraska and Kansas, as well as eastern Colorado and northern North Dakota, Oklahoma and Texas are under wind chill warnings from the National Weather Service, while blizzard warnings extend through the North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa and Minnesota and winter storm warnings are in effect around the Great Lakes and Missouri.
Forecasts show extreme low temperatures in southern states, as well: On Wednesday, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp (R) declared a state of emergency, saying the state will see “temperatures that they haven’t experienced in a decade or more.”
Locator: 10010Westberg.
Updates
July 14, 2024: updated maps -- were Ovintiv's -- now Grayson Mill --
Original Post
I could have this wrong, but if I'm reading this correctly, there will be a total of nineteen wells in this drilling unit, as well as an additional two wells in a neighboring drilling unit.
Spacing:
Case, not a permit, from the NDIC December, 2022, hearing dockets:
Existing wells:
The graphics:
The NDIC hearing dockets are tracked here.
The usual disclaimer applies. As usual this is done very quickly and using shorthand for my benefit. There will be factual and typographical errors on this page. Do not quote me on any of this. It's for my personal use to help me better understand the Bakken. Do not read it. If you do happen to read it, do not make any investment, financial, job, relationship, or travel plans based on anything you read here or think you may have read here. If this stuff is important to you, and I doubt that it is, but if it is, go to the source.
Wednesday
January 18, 2023
Seventeen pages
The cases. These are cases, not permits:
Thursday
January 19, 2023
Thirteen pages
The cases. These are cases, not permits:
Jobs:
GPD: 3Q22 estimates revised up
Fed: more people need to lose their jobs
D5S: tag.
December 5, 2022, Russian sanctions tracked here.
EU: update on Russian economy from three days ago (~ December 19, 2022 -- D5S +14)
The wells (permitted December 16, 2022):
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Back to the Bakken
Active rigs: 45.
WTI: $78.97.
Natural gas: $5.262
Two new permits, #39518 - #39519, inclusive:
Four permits renewed:
Seven producing wells (DUCs) reported as completed:
TNF: wow, this is Thursday -- Thursday Night Football!
So much news, it's going to be hard to get to it all!
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Back to the Bakken
The Far Side: link here.
Active rigs: 44.
WTI: $79.10.
Natural gas: $5.263.
Friday, December 23, 2022: 61 for the month, 170 for the quarter, 714 for the year.
38485, conf, Hess, GO-Johnson-156-98-2635H-3,
38410, conf, Whiting, Kannianen 11-5TFH,
37698, conf, BR, Ole 4-1-29MBH,
Thursday, December 22, 2022: 58 for the month, 167 for the quarter, 711 for the year.
38986, conf, CLR, Kiefel 3-36H,
37892, conf, Enerplus, Brass 147-93-17B-20H,
37699, conf, BR, Ole 5-1-29TFH,
RBN Energy: FERC's new Spire STL decision helps secure future of key gas infrastructure.
On December 15, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) issued a permanent certificate authorizing the Spire STL natural gas pipeline serving the St. Louis area to continue operations. Spire STL had been on a treacherous legal roller-coaster, wherein its owner got a FERC certificate in 2018, built and started operation of the 65-mile pipeline in 2019, then in 2021 saw its certificate “vacated” — wiped out — by a U.S. Court of Appeals. Then, during the white-knuckled tail end of the ride, with the winter of 2021-22 looming, Spire STL got emergency/temporary authorization from FERC to keep operating while a brand-new application for a certificate was being considered. In today's RBN blog, we discuss the case — in which RBN played a part — and what it means for upcoming midstream projects.