Locator: 48541B.
Gabbard confirmation! Wow, that was fast. Reported at 12:18 p.m. CT, February 12, 2025. Yesterday, it was reported the vote would be held this evening. The RFK, Jr., nomination moves forward. Only Mitch McConnell broke ranks with the GOP. JD Vance not even in town to provide the tie-breaking vote if needed. That's how sure John Thune was about the vote.
Cbevron to slash employee count! Wow.
Doing less with less. Link here. I don't think I've heard of a 20%-cut -- ever. Something tells me the Hess deal isn't going to close. Could be wrong. Chevron has 45,600 employees. Does this give Chevron an opening to leave California completely? Maybe the Hess deal is working out perfectly and Chevron no longer needs California. LOL!
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Back to the Bakken
WTI: $72.03.
New wells:
- Thursday, February 13, 2025: 22 for the month, 67 for the quarter, 67 for the year,
- 40843, conf, CLR, Catron 3-26H,
- 40398, conf, Grayson Mill, Alfred North 17-15 3H,
- 39842, conf, CLR, Harms West Federal 7-32H1,
- Wednesday, February 12, 2025: 19 for the month, 65 for the quarter, 65 for the year,
- 40852, conf, CLR, Taney 3-23H,
- 39956, conf, Hess, EN-Heinle-LE-156-94-2536H-1,
- 39952, conf, Hess, EN-Heinle-156-94-2536H-5,
- 39843, conf, CLR, Harms West Federal 8-32H,
RBN Energy: Guyana may have a head start, but Suriname making strides with its offshore blocks. Archived.
Suriname has been a very minor crude oil producer over the past few
decades, with minimal output from its onshore reserves. But with more
than a dozen offshore blocks already awarded for development and
production set to spike in the coming years, the small South American
nation looks primed to follow in the footsteps of its next-door
neighbor, Guyana, which is amid an oil-production boom. In today’s RBN
blog, we’ll look at the status of Suriname’s offshore developments, the
major players involved, and what we know about the crude grades to be
produced there.
In the first blog in this mini-series, Wouldn’t It Be Nice, we highlighted how Guyana has been a rising star (see Break My Stride and My Guy)
in the global crude market, even if it’s only a recent entrant. The
offshore Stabroek block (gold-shaded area in Figure 1 below) is churning
out more than 650 Mb/d of oil from three projects in the reserve-rich
Guyana-Suriname Basin (area within dashed-green line), with the
possibility that production in Guyana’s territorial waters (area within
dashed-purple line) could double by the end of 2027. But Guyana isn’t
the only country planning to develop the basin’s reserves.
Figure 1. The Guyana-Suriname Basin and the Stabroek Block. Source: RBN
Note: Map does not reflect disputed onshore border areas
The Guyana-Suriname Basin stretches across three countries on the
Atlantic coast of South America: Guyana, Suriname and French Guiana.
Suriname has been extracting crude oil from the onshore portion of the
basin since the 1980s but the former Dutch colony wants to raise its
profile as a petroleum supplier, mirroring its neighbor’s success.
According to Suriname’s state-owned Staatsolie, authorities struck oil
in 1965 but commercial oil production only began 17 years later, in
1982. Flows of the country’s Saramacca grade started at 200 b/d and now
stand at about 20 Mb/d.
Offshore E&P activity in Suriname perked up after ExxonMobil made
a significant find in 2015 in Guyana’s portion of the Guyana-Suriname
Basin. Five years later, joint-venture partners TotalEnergies and APA
Corp. (owner of Apache Corp.) made an extensive deepwater discovery in
Suriname’s territorial waters (area within dashed-pink line of Figure
1). That same year (2020), Staatsolie created a subsidiary, Staatsolie
Hydrocarbon Institute (SHI), to steer coastal E&P activities like
setting up policies and procedures for acreage development, negotiating
with oil and gas companies to unearth deposits, evaluating resource
potential, and getting independent evaluations of hydrocarbon
potential.