Showing posts with label Stabilizers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stabilizers. Show all posts

Thursday, November 13, 2014

North Dakota To Require Producers To Treat Crude Before Shipping -- WSJ; November 13, 2014

The Wall Street Journal is reporting:
North Dakota plans unprecedented steps to ensure crude pumped from the state’s Bakken Shale oil producing region is safe enough to be loaded into railroad tank cars and sent across the country.
In the first major move by regulators to address the role of gaseous, volatile crude in railroad accidents, the North Dakota Industrial Commission, which regulates energy production in the state, said it would require Bakken Shale well operators to strip gases from crudes that show high vapor pressures.
Those changes could make the new rules more costly for the state’s smaller producers. Jack Ekstrom, vice president of government affairs for Whiting Petroleum Corp. said the rules don’t appear to be “a major material cost” he said. “This is perhaps more of a concern to a marginal or smaller operator.”
The state expects to issue final rules by December 11th.
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Just When You Thought It Was Safe To Go Home Again

Nebraska hospital prepares for new Ebola patient -- surgeon from Sierra Leone being brought back to the US for treatment. 
A surgeon infected with Ebola will be transported from Sierra Leone to The Nebraska Medical Center for treatment, a U.S. government official familiar with the situation said.
The doctor, a Sierra Leone national and legal permanent resident of the United States, is expected to arrive this weekend, most likely Saturday, the official said.
The official said it's not known whether the doctor was working in an Ebola treatment unit or some other type of hospital. The surgeon is married to a U.S. citizen and has children, the official said.
The Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha is one of four hospitals in the United States that have biocontainment units and years of preparation in handling highly infectious disease such as Ebola.

Monday, July 7, 2014

Five (5) New Permits -- The Williston Basin, North Dakota; BR, Halcon Each With One "High IP" Well; 3/3 Bakken Wells Go To "DRL" Status -- July 8, 2014

Wells coming off the confidential list Tuesday:
  • 26063, drl, MRO, Swift Eagle USA 31-15TFH, Moccasin Creek, no production data,
  • 26856, drl, Hess, EN-State D-154-93-2635H-6, Robinson Lake, no production data,
  • 27064, drl, Hess, EN-KMJ Uran-154-93-2734H-8, Robinson Lake, no production data,
  • 27211, 51, Legacy Oil, Legacy Et Al Berge 8-11 2H, Red Rock, a Spearfish well, t2/14; cum 4K 5/14
Active rigs:


7/7/201407/07/201307/07/201207/07/201107/07/2010
Active Rigs189188213166132

Five (5) new permits --
  • Operators: Newfield (3), Whiting, Enduro
    Fields: Sand Creek (McKenzie), Stoneview (Divide), Green River (Stark)
  • Comments:
Wells coming off the confidential list over the long weekend were posted earlier; see sidebar at the right.

Six (6) producing wells completed:
  • 24372, 2,995, Statoil, Broderson 30-31 2H, Banks, t6/14; cum --
  • 25090, 1,352, Statoil, Edna 11-2 5TFH, Camp, t5/14; cum 2K 5/14;
  • 25898, 1,846, MRO, Azure USA 31-15H, Moccasin Creek, t5/14; cum 7K 5/14;
  • 26118, 2,023, HRC, Grev 157-100-30B-31-2H, Marmon, t5/14; cum 6K 5/14;
  • 26961, 1,204, KOG, P Moen 155-99-14-11-2-3H3, East Fork, t5/14; cum 7K 5/14;
  • 27017, 993, Whiting, Bartleson 44-1TFH, Sanish, t5/14; cum 4K 5/14;
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Stabilizers To Remove Volatile Gases Before Shipping CBR
From SeekingAlpha

  • Energy companies invested hundreds of millions of dollars when they started extracting oil from shale formations in south Texas a few years ago to make the volatile crude was safer to handle, but the failure to do so at the Bakken shale is coming back to haunt the oil industry as the U.S. government seeks to prevent fiery accidents of trains containing North Dakota oil.
  • Only one stabilizer, which can remove the most volatile gases before transport, has been built in North Dakota and it hasn't begun operation, according to a WSJ review; if the government mandates the use of stabilizers, companies would have to make big investments in equipment which could slow Bakken's development.
  • Oil producers are fighting the perception that the biggest risks come from Bakken crude, almost all of which is moved by rail, but safety officials and lawmakers say the dangers extend far beyond North Dakota.
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Improving The Odds: Why Shale Oil Really Is Different
From Rigzone

Critically, the source rock, migration pathway, reservoir rock, and trap, must be found together and in the correct geological sequence. This combination of circumstances is extremely rare. 
But shale is both the source of the petroleum and the trap (because it is so impermeable). Rather than hunting for small pools of oil and gas trapped by faults or rock seals, shale producers can go straight to the source.