What we'll be talking about today:
- Japan: Covid-19.
- China: re-opening.
- announces massive oil import quotas
- coal from Australia
- WTI / Brent surges
- no looking back
- Warren Buffett's commodity buying: historical
- Russian sanctions
- TSMC: Buffett again
- airline travel now greater than records set in 2019
- laser-focused on dividends: EPD raises "dividend"
- New England: powering up with most expensive energy on earth
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Back to the Bakken
The Far Side: the far side.
Active rigs: link here.
WTI: up 3%; up $2.22; trading at $75.99.
Natural gas: up 11%; up 40 cent; trading at $4.114
Monday, January 9, 2023:
37566, conf, Petro-Hunt, Johnson 158-94-14A-23-1HS,
Sunday, January 8, 2023:
38197, conf, Hess, EN-Rehak A-155-94-1423H-6,
36180, conf, BR, George 2B TFH,
Saturday, January 7, 2023:
38918, conf, Rampart Energy Company, Coteau 4,
36181, conf, BR, George 2A MBH,
RBN Energy: Tallgrass bid breathes new purpose into languishing Ruby Pipeline. Archived.
Tallgrass Energy last month snagged an early Christmas present: It won a bid for Ruby Pipeline, the beleaguered Rockies-to-West Coast natural gas system that has long been underutilized and cash-poor.
In doing so, it beat out one of the largest midstream companies in North America and a long-time co-owner of Ruby — Kinder Morgan.
Ruby may be a languishing asset, but for Tallgrass it’s more like a crown jewel in its quest to be the only transcontinental header system in the country that would connect trapped Appalachian gas supply with premium West Coast markets
Tallgrass’s Rockies Express (REX) pipeline is already moving Marcellus/Utica molecules west to the Rockies — the opposite direction than it was originally built for in the pre-Shale Era
The Ruby acquisition, which has yet to close, would allow Tallgrass to extend its reach farther west, directly into the premium West Coast markets. The Ruby deal comes at a time when California’s aggressive decarbonization goals are leading to gas shortages and exorbitant fuel premiums out west, and there’s an immediate need to debottleneck routes to get gas there. In today’s RBN blog, we begin a series delving into how Ruby fits into the Western U.S. gas market and what the acquisition would mean for Tallgrass.
We’ll start with the deal itself. On December 16, Tallgrass announced that it had reached an agreement to buy the Ruby Pipeline out of bankruptcy for $282.5 million.
Ruby Pipeline, a joint venture of Kinder Morgan and Calgary-based Pembina, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on March 31 as the financially struggling pipeline was approaching debt repayment obligations that it could not meet. Tallgrass entered its bid in a court-ordered auction held on December 13, beating out a bid of $276 million from Kinder Morgan’s EP Ruby LLC, which also made the initial stalking-horse bid of $236 million.
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