Locator: 47039B.
Big story today: SLB. Link here.
Gasoline demand, link here:
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Back to the Bakken
WTI:
Sunday, April 21, 2024: 46 for the month; 46 for the quarter, 245 for the year
39883, conf, Whiting, Van Buren Federal 5103 42-36 4B,
39580, conf, Hess, CA-Anderson Smith-155-96-2635H-9,
Saturday, April 20, 2024: 44 for the month; 44 for the quarter, 243 for the year
40142, conf, CLR, Veigel 9-9H1,
39882, conf, Whiting, Van Buren Federal 5103 42-36 3B,
Friday, April 19, 2024: 42 for the month; 42 for the quarter, 241 for the year
40151, conf, Armstrong Operating, Harkness 2,
37517, conf, BR, Mazama 1D MBH,
RBN Energy: renewable diesel boom sets off aftershocks in soybean oil, used cooking oil markets.
The boom in renewable diesel (RD) production has triggered a race to
secure the dozen different bio-feedstocks suitable for refining into
diesel fuel. It’s an interesting story that impacts both the oil and
agriculture industries, with twists and turns that will take years to
play out. In today's RBN blog, we describe the current state of the
market and highlight recent happenings in supply chains for two of those
increasingly important bio-feedstocks — soybean oil and used cooking
oil.
There are two types of biomass-based diesel, commonly called fatty
acid methyl ester (FAME) biodiesel and hydrogenated RD. Both are derived
from oxygen-containing organic compounds called triglycerides that make
up bio-feedstocks like vegetable oils and animal fats. The triglyceride
molecule resembles a three-legged barstool. If you detach the legs from
the stool, you get three very good diesel fuel molecules, which is why
these bio-feedstocks are good raw materials.