Locator: 48709B.
Tag: Stellantis $25,000
Boeing: machinists' strike over.
Aramco: spending $130 million per day that it does not have. Javier Blas.
Tesla: link here.
Stellantis, flashback, July 8, 2024:
Ford, link here:
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Back to the Bakken
WTI: $71.90.
Wednesday, November 6, 2024: 9 for the month; 69 for the quarter, 583 for the year
- 40310, conf, Hess, EN-Rice A-155-94-0310H-8,
Tuesday, November 5, 2024: 8 for the month; 68 for the quarter, 582 for the year
- 40639, conf, CLR, Vandeberg 6-35H,
- 40309, conf, Hess, EN-Rice A-155-94-0310H-7,
RBN Energy: PADD 3 exports surge as competition intensifies among major players.
The Gulf Coast is the engine of U.S. energy markets and its fiercely competitive. Over the past decade, monumental growth of crude oil and NGL production, predominantly from the Permian Basin, has led to a surge in exports, with more than 90% of these liquids departing from marine terminals along the Texas and Louisiana coasts. To facilitate that growth, the region has also experienced a tremendous buildout of gathering systems, pipelines, processing facilities, and especially export docks.
Major Gulf Coast market regions like Corpus Christi, Houston, Beaumont, Lake Charles and Baton Rouge all have unique advantages and disadvantages. And the companies that operate in those regions have strategic motivations for where they would like to see new volumes go. As the Gulf Coast energy sector presses on to a new horizon, competition for market share among major players is intense, impacting producers, midstream operators, downstream consumers and exporters alike. That was the focus of our recent NACON: PADD 3 conference and it’s the subject of today’s RBN blog.
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