Oil produced from oil shale rock fragments
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Matthew J. Hatami is an engineer and entrepreneur, with a degree in Petroleum and Natural Gas Engineering from West Virginia University and an MBA from Columbia University. He is a licensed Professional Petroleum Engineer in the State of Oklahoma. Matthew started his career 24 years ago as a field engineer in the Permian Basin. He has worked in the oil and gas industry across multiple basins in the United States and overseas, primarily focusing on shale development. He has worked on the oilfield services side of the industry and the operating side, including positions working with geology, land, drilling, completions, production, reservoir, regulatory, legal, accounting, finance, and corporate strategy. Before venturing into the entrepreneurial arena, Matthew was the Vice President of Resource Development for American Energy Partners and American Energy Global Partners. He also worked as a Senior Asset Manager at Chesapeake Energy Corporation, as a Financial Analyst in Corporate Strategy and Planning at Hess Corporation, and as an Engineer at Halliburton Company. His book is for everyone from CEO to field hands, to all the vendors who contribute to the operation and team. Maximize Cash Flow. Reduce Cost. Improve Safety. Create Value. Take your operation to the next level and buy this book for every person at your company. It takes 350 people to drill, complete, and produce one horizontal well in the United States. This book is designed to maximize the efficiency, enhance the intelligence, and increase the abilities of every oil and gas worker, from the office to the field. With over 700 actions to maximize cash flow, this book attacks operational costs from every possible angle. Many cost reduction actions are introduced by the author for the first time and cannot be found anywhere else. The book - Shale Oil and Gas Operations: Maximize Cash Flow with Cost Reduction It's impressive, impactful, and important. Read it then send him a thank you for his genuine mission to support our industry and our capabilities to ensure we continue providing abundant, reliable, and affordable #energy Get it easy here - https://a.co/d/eOCqtwx #oilgas #leadership #riskmanagement #costreduction #cashflow #oilandgas #oilfield #book #education #networking #ai #artificialintelligence #management #petroleum #engineering #drilling #completions #production #production #reservoir #geology #petrophysics #facilities #transportation #regulatory #finance #land #legal #accounting #roi #efficiency #strategy #investing #privateequity #entertainment #entrepreneur
Shale Oil & Gas has turned the US into an energy power house over the last 15 years. Will it disappear as quickly as it arrived or will it set to US apart for years to come? Within its short life, it has evolved quickly and our guest Matthew Bernstein now characterizes it as Shale 4.0. What were the previous iterations in participants, economics and output and what does the future hold? Matthew Berntstein is the Manager of Shale Analytics at Rystad Energy, the independent energy data and analytics firm.
Tom Murphy, CEO of Capital Cities/ABC excelled at capital allocation. Following the example set by Mr. Murphy, Don Burnette, Founder & CEO of Kodiak is implementing his version of Capital Cities/ABC capital allocation strategy as he grows Kodiak. Don Burnette joined The Road to Autonomy Founder Grayson Brulte on Autonomy Insights to discuss Kodiak's focus on growing long-term profitable revenue and achieving industry best EBITA margins. Mr. Burnette is keeping a keen eye on expenses and ensuring that capital is allocated to growing the business, not frivolous expenses. By keeping costs low and offering valuable solutions to customers, Kodiak was able to expand into Defense and off-road autonomy in a deal with Atlas Energy in the Permian Basin. The deal with Kodiak is potentially profitable enough to sustain Kodiak as a business even without its other business lines (defense and on-road trucking). Kodiak is in the process of transforming from a R&D-focused company to an operations company. In the mold of Capital Cities/ABC, Kodiak implementing a capital allocation strategy that ensures long-term growth.Recorded on Friday, July 26, 2024Episode Chapters0:00 Kodiak's Expansion into Off-Road Autonomy 2:39 The Decision to Diversify 5:02 EBITA Margins 6:42 Capital Cities/ABC of Autonomy 10:06 Core Pillars of Kodiak's Business 11:32 What's Next For Kodiak--------About The Road to AutonomyThe Road to Autonomy® is a leading source of data, insight and commentary on autonomous vehicles/trucks and the emerging autonomy economy™. The company has two businesses: The Road to Autonomy Indices, with Standard and Poor's Dow Jones Indices as the custom calculation agent; Media, which includes The Road to Autonomy and Autonomy Economy podcasts as well as This Week in The Autonomy Economy newsletter.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
THIS IS A REBROADCAST OF TMI for 5/10/2024 Today on TMI: John Fugelsang, host of "Tell Me Everything" on SiriusXM Channel 127 and proud co-founder of the Sexy Liberal Tour right here in Madison, Wisconsin twelve years ago talks to us about the return of the Tour to the Barrymore on Saturday, May 11, 2024, how Jesus was everything your stereotypical right-wing Christian loves to hate, and much more! Don't miss this amazing conversation! Next, we dive deep into the clandestine world of oil markets, revealing how U.S. shale oil companies and OPEC engaged in a covert price-fixing scheme that reverberated across global economies, a collusion that fueled the sharp inflation surge of 2021-2022. Finally we look at Natural gas — the supposed “bridge fuel” to a cleaner future. But recent revelations from a congressional report have shattered the illusion. All this and more on TMI for Friday, May 17, 2024 - listen in for YOUR Cure for the Common Media!
Today on TMI: John Fugelsang, host of "Tell Me Everything" on SiriusXM Channel 127 and proud co-founder of the Sexy Liberal Tour right here in Madison, Wisconsin twelve years ago talks to us about the return of the Tour to the Barrymore on Saturday, May 11, 2024, how Jesus was everything your stereotypical right-wing Christian loves to hate, and much more! Don't miss this amazing conversation! Next, we dive deep into the clandestine world of oil markets, revealing how U.S. shale oil companies and OPEC engaged in a covert price-fixing scheme that reverberated across global economies, a collusion that fueled the sharp inflation surge of 2021-2022. Finally we look at Natural gas — the supposed “bridge fuel” to a cleaner future. But recent revelations from a congressional report have shattered the illusion. All this and more on TMI for Friday, May 10, 2024 - listen in for YOUR Cure for the Common Media!
The threat of a wider Middle East war is increasing. Over the past weekend, Iran attacked Israel with missiles and drones in retaliation for Israel's suspected strike on Iran's embassy in Syria. This week, our guest, Raoul LeBlanc, Vice President, Energy, S&P Global Commodity Insights, explains why oil prices have increased over the past few months, including the impact of the growing conflict in the Middle East, OPEC+, and US shale oil growth. Jackie and Peter also asked Raoul about recent research by Prof. Robert Howarth from Cornell University. The paper, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, concludes that US LNG could be comparable to, or even worse than, coal from a GHG emissions perspective when methane leaking is considered. A BNN article reported that Howarth's paper influenced President Biden's pause on LNG approvals. Finally, Raoul explains the drivers for US oil and gas producers' recent mergers and acquisitions (M&A) and if this trend could come to Canada. Content referenced in this podcast: How One Scientist Influenced Biden's Pause on LNG Approvals (BNN Bloomberg, Feb 29, 2024) The Greenhouse Gas Footprint of Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) Exported from the United States by Robert W. Howarth, Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University (version is not final and it is currently in a peer review process; original version submitted October 2023, revised version submitted March 2024) Please review our disclaimer at: https://www.arcenergyinstitute.com/disclaimer/ Check us out on social media: X (Twitter): @arcenergyinst LinkedIn: @ARC Energy Research Institute Subscribe to ARC Energy Ideas Podcast Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Amazon Music Spotify
Bitcoin & Markets: Macro, money, geopolitics and news LIKE AND COMMENT!! This is a replay of a fun after Christmas live stream. Topics of discussion were Bitcoin price and some macro charts (see YT and Rumble for video), mempool and ordinal/inscription stats, problems with AI and why it won't takeover, and lastly, I read through and discuss by recent shale oil post. Enjoy. Links Youtube link AI tweet Shale oil post Thanks for listening. If you are reading this, hit the like and subscribe button in your podcast app or on Youtube or Rumble! Links Full write up and charts https://bitcoinandmarkets.com/e380 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@btcmarketupdate Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/BTCandMarkets Twitter https://twitter.com/AnselLindner Telegram https://t.me/bitcoinandmarkets FREE weekly newsletter https://tinyurl.com/2chhbnff Value 4 Value: Fountain app: https://www.fountain.fm/show/vDnNMS9zY6Ab2ZAMsMJ2 Strike: https://strike.me/ansellindner Cash App: https://cash.app/$AnselLindner --- Disclaimer: The content of Bitcoin & Markets shall not be construed as tax, legal or financial advice. Do you own research. https://bitcoinandmarkets.com/disclaimer/ #bitcoin #macro #geopolitics
On this episode, Arthur Berman returns to unpack the complexity underpinning the oil trends of the last 75 years and what new data can tell us about availability in the coming years. After decades of declining oil production in the United States, the past decade of rising oil extraction has eased many worries about peak oil. But the past few years of continued growth have been obtained by using “a larger straw”, merely delaying the inevitability of the depletion of a finite resource. Art presents recent data on well productivity in US shale plays indicating we are much closer to ‘the slurping sound'. How does technology hide the declining availability of oil reserves, causing us to extract and use them faster without creating any new resources? Going beyond geology, how do geopolitics, finance, and social opinion affect oil availability? Where do we go when economically viable oil isn't available anymore - and will we have the prudence to make the cultural shifts necessary before we have no other options? Have we now passed ‘peak oil'? About Arthur Berman Arthur E. Berman is a petroleum geologist with 36 years of oil and gas industry experience. He is an expert on U.S. shale plays and is currently consulting for several E&P companies and capital groups in the energy sector. Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/qqTh2nBEcCs Find out more, and show notes: https://www.thegreatsimplification.com/episode/101-art-berman
Shale oil drilling is decreasing at the same time oil prices are climbing, america consumes over 20 million barrels of oil a day --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/david-nishimoto/message
A war over resources control causes economic hyperinflation and impoverishment. Contention over limited resource leads to war. Unlimited energy dissolves the contention for resource and creates a proliferation of productivity. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/david-nishimoto/message
In this podcast David Ledesma talks to Trisha Curtis, CEO of PetroNerds, about US gas and oil production, transportation and markets. US gas production has performed well since COVID and additional supply growth is clearly possible, but investment in infrastructure will require consistent regulatory and political support. Technology is also key, with production rigs having […] The post OIES Podcast – US Shale Oil and Gas, continued growth or curtailment – can Europe rely on additional US shale for LNG? appeared first on Oxford Institute for Energy Studies.
This week on the podcast our guest is Dr. Bassam Fattouh, Director of the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies (OIES). OIES is a world leading independent energy research institute specializing in advanced research into the economics and geopolitics of energy. Dr. Bassam Fattouh is an expert on oil markets, including OPEC, the energy transition, and the economic environment of the Middle East. Here are some of the questions that Jackie and Peter asked Dr. Fattouh: What are the challenges of energy transition for oil producers in the Middle East? Are they diversifying into new energy types and Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS)? Were you surprised by the latest OPEC+ decision to cut production by 2 MMB/d when the US and Europe are acting to reduce oil prices? How does the Middle East view US shale oil now? Do you see a future for Russia in OPEC? The OIES publishes publicly available papers to help understand oil, natural gas, and energy transition including – solar, hydrogen, CCS, nuclear and much more. Please see their website: https://www.oxfordenergy.org/ Please review our disclaimer at: https://www.arcenergyinstitute.com/disclaimer/
Dans ce podcast, nous allons expliquer pourquoi il y a différents types de barils de pétrole et pourquoi certains ne sont pas au même prix que d'autres. Brent, WTI, Dubaï Light, Spread, API, pétrole de schiste, on vous dit tout.
Tom welcomes Brian Gitt to the show. Brian has a varied background as an Energy Entrepreneur, Investor, Podcaster, and Writer. Brian discusses the mistakes he made early in trying to build a business. This caused him to study how to think clearly and question one's beliefs. Many people believe that fossil fuels are running out, but they overlook the innovation and technology that drives the industry. We're constantly bombarded by the media that we are running out of these resources. We don't have scarcity, it's more about price and technology to obtain these resources. This narrative of energy scarcity has been part of the drive towards wind and solar. The energy return on energy invested with these are incredibly poor. However, alternatives like nuclear are far better. When people are given the flexibility to innovate, they can come up with some remarkable ideas. Commodities move in boom, bust cycles. As an investor, you need to know where you are at in the cycle. The biggest hurdle today for Nuclear is government over regulation. We need safety, but we've gone too far and made things incredibly hard to build. The nuclear regulatory agency has not licensed any new power plants since their founding. How can you improve safety if you don't work with new designs? He believes we've largely solved the problems of nuclear waste storage and transportation. Newer reactor designs are reusing these waste fuel products and thus reducing their radioactivity. Solar and wind power can't replace large scale power plants because they are intermittent sources. We have yet to solve the storage problems for energy. He contrasts the amount of land needed for nuclear with that of wind and solar. There is a convergence of factors impacting carbon output in Europe and globally. We are continuing to rely on coal. The recent events in Europe have already wiped out all the gains from wind and solar. America doesn't have an energy plan, we just have corporate welfare and special interests feeding at the trough of special interests. Talking Points From This Episode The importance of questioning ones beliefs.Why the energy scarcity narrative is flawed.The importance of nuclear energy and why it's safe.Why solar and wind can only supplement existing grid solutions. Time Stamp References:0:00 - Introduction4:13 - Fossil Fuels7:07 - Incentivizing Production10:00 - Shale Oil & Credit11:30 - Nuclear Hurdles18:08 - Waste Remediation22:18 - Nuclear Innovation27:32 - Energy Densities32:44 - Land Use & Environment40:53 - Waste Production44:32 - First Principals47:57 - Electric Vehicle Concerns52:00 - Global Carbon Levels56:37 - Marketing Terms57:50 - Fracking Thoughts1:00:14 - Optimal Countries?1:07:13 - Wrap Up Guest Links:Website: https://briangitt.com/Books: https://briangitt.com/books/Twitter: https://twitter.com/BrianGitt Brian Gitt is an Energy Entrepreneur, Investor, Podcaster, and Writer. He led business development at Reach Labs to deliver long-range wireless power in industrial, asset management, and supply chain applications. He also founded UtilityScore a software company which provided homebuyers with estimates for their utility costs. Their product brought a new level of transparency to the process of buying, renting, and renovating housing. He was the CEO of a consulting firm later acquired by Frontier Energy specializing in clean energy to commercialize new technology in buildings, vehicles, and power plants. He was the Executive Director of Build It Green, where he built up a network of 2,500 building industry stakeholders. Brian loves the outdoors and has led mountaineering expeditions in Alaska, spent months backpacking in the Rockies and climbed in various national parks across the U.S.
China has claimed its first offshore shale oil and gas discovery in the South China Sea. After years of disappointment developing shale onshore, we talk about why this matters for geopolitics. -------------- Submit a question for The New Next: https://www.matthewadjensen.com/podcast Connect with Matt on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthewadjensen Connect with Mike on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mike-mcvey-308aa326
1. India is not producing Shale Oil at this time. 2. Shale oil reserves in India are estimated at 15 billion tons: Assam and Arunachal Pradesh deposits 3. Potential findings include Naga Schuppen Belt and Assam-Arakkan Fold Belt 4. MECL of India will partner with BRGM (France) and DGH (India) to assess oil shale resources in three adjacent blocks 5. Retort structures be formed by a combination of explosive fracturing and mining. Hot air or gases and steam cause shale oil to be collected at the bottom of the in-situ retort where it can be pumped to the surface. 6. India will create projects that extract coal and oil shale deposits at the same time. Coal is found in the Barail Formation. Shale and coal have been found together. Rock-Eval pyrolysis has been used to produce oil from coal and shale, a scaled down retort process. Rock-Eval yields for coal and shale indicate the potential of 280 kgs of hydrocarbons per ton of rock. US technology is needed to create the retort. Currently, the shale is dumped as a waste product. (Reference Link) 7. Shell used in-situ process to heat rock temperatures producing shale crude. 8. Joshi Oil is evaluating developing K-4 Shale zone in well DK-19 in the Dholka Field. JTIs oil production is about 700 barrels of oil per day. 9. Early estimates indicate that there is 137 billion tonnes of shale oil in the north-eartern states of India. (Reference Link) 10. Reliance Industries acquired a 40 percent stake in Atlas Energy's Marcellus Shale Acreage. 11. BP estimates conventional oil resources amount to 1.2 trillion barrels. Oil shales in over 600 deposits total 500 billion tonnes or 3.2 trillion barrels. Global Annual consumption of oil is 31 billion barrels. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/david-nishimoto/message
1. The Piceance Basin has 300 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, 25% of the liquid rich natural gas can be recovered. Mancos shales are located in the Piceance Basin. 2. The Dollar is a commodity and its value is determined by its strength of demand against other currencies. For example, as the dollar gains in strength over the euro then more investors take their euros and buy dollars. The demand for the dollar increases. 3. The high cost of gasoline make the extraction of shale possible. Horzontal drilling and shale oil extraction technology have increased the supply of oil to market. 4. China will develop localized shale oil extraction to meet their energy needs 5. Congress is supporting more development of synthetic oil from shale 6. The high price of oil has caused Shale oil too boom . As a result , the price of oil drop below $50 a barrel . The falling oil prices have strangled Russian oil profits 7. New Mexico is the largest oil and natural gas producer, generating over $15 billion in oil and natural gas production and generating 18% of the state and local government revenue. (http://amigosbravos.org/oil-gas) 8. Shale production from fields like Marcellus, Haynesville, and Eagle Ford are projected to account for 49% of US gas production by 2035. (http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php/Shale_formations_in_the_United_States) 9. Economic wells of shale are 300 to 600 feet thick. Barnett shale of Texas is 100 to 1000 feet thick at a depth of 8000 feet. 10. The Antrim Shale deposit appears to be biogenic generated from the deep earth biosphere --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/david-nishimoto/message
2:36 - Where is shale oil and why isn't it more impactful in the U.S. energy mix?U.S. shale oil production transformed global energy markets when it helped U.S. oil production go from just under 4mbd in September 2008 to 13.1 mbd in February 2020. And, despite rapid depletion rates, shale oil production is cheaper and faster to bring online than traditional methods of oil production. By 2014 U.S. oil – specifically shale oil – was widely viewed as the ‘swing producer' – a role OPEC and specifically Saudi Arabia had held for decades.By 2014 U.S. shale oil set the ceiling for global oil prices leaving OPEC to try to maintain the floor as best it could.Still, U.S. Shale Oil won't be saving the day any time soon. The hosts explore why this is and talk about what might be next for energy markets and U.S. energy policy.26:05 - A recent study by Uber in Saudi Arabia reveals that female participation in the labor force keeps climbing - and is ahead of schedule for Vision 2030. Between 2018 and 2021 - female participation in the labor force grew from around 22% to almost 36%.The increase means that the country has met its Vision 2030 target of 30% female labor force participation almost 10 years ahead of schedule.32:00 - Dr. Mark Thompson, Senior Research Fellow at the King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies (KFCRIS) and author of the book, Being Young Male and Saudi: Identity and Politics in a Globalized Kingdom (Cambridge University Press) joins The 966 to talk about his research and experiences in Saudi Arabia. Mark also has a new book forthcoming, Governance and Domestic Policy Making in Saudi Arabia: Transforming Society, Economics, Politics and Culture.The hosts talk with Mark about his methodology, and what it's like to engage with Saudi youth to find out what they want and see for the future. They also discuss educational reforms in Saudi Arabia, Vision 2030 progress, and much more.
Flux aims at delivering a new take on the Oil market by sharing views on topics such as digitisation, modern challenges & trading financial oil markets. Follow us! Linkedin: @flux-liveInstagram: @fluxliquidityhub
DAILY NUGS: Damion explains why the Starbucks board hates unions, Matt gives Starbucks some non-union labor solutions, and Emma missed the Starbucks boat... so she talks about shale oil
Tom welcomes back Steve St. Angelo of the SRSrocco Report. Steve discusses how energy is the main driver of the economy and we are now entering an energy crisis. This crisis will affect everything in the economy. Steve explains how energy issues have historically impacted civilization. When a peak is reached the system becomes increasingly unstable. The system isn't designed to run at a high level and we are in a declining energy environment. It isn't easy to fix the energy problems because everything depends on fossil fuels which are becoming increasingly scarce. Many countries are considering returning to coal because of the lack of alternatives. Green energy is not providing sufficient energy than was expected when it was designed. If the wind stops blowing or the sun stops shining then there are issues, particularly in winter. At best we can only store a fraction of green energy in batteries. We simply don't have enough metals for massive batteries. It takes a lot of resources to create and maintain wind energy systems. Most of these renewables energy systems have finite lives. Steve argues that most of these green solutions are only exacerbating the problems. We're approaching the point of diminishing energy returns where every unit of energy costs a unit of energy to produce. Cheap and easy to obtain oil is becoming increasingly rare. We're seeing massive amounts of debt being created in an attempt to address these issues. It always comes down to energy and Steve argues that it was a key factor even in Rome's collapse. Talking Points From This Episode The Energy CrisisGreen Energy, Metals, and Fossil FuelsEROI and diminishing returns.Cause of Rome's Collapse Time Stamp References:0:00 - Introduction0:38 - Coming Energy Cliff2:58 - EROI, Gas, & Coal5:47 - Coal & China Brownouts7:47 - Green Energy Concerns14:38 - Impact on Markets17:22 - E.R.O.I19:36 - Shale Oil & Debt26:06 - Offlined Production27:06 - Energy Inventories31:18 - Gold, Bonds, & Input Costs33:39 - Crypto & Complexity39:08 - Energy & The Elite40:54 - LNG & Extreme Costs44:09 - Solutions?48:35 - U.S. Oil & WWII50:40 - The Fall of Rome52:36 - Technology Problems56:05 - Wrap Up Guest Links:Website: https://srsroccoreport.com/Twitter: https://twitter.com/SRSroccoReportYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCED7G7CZfqdSV9zttlr1M_gEnergy Cliff Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wwDQ5iorYxc&t Independent researcher Steve St. Angelo (SRSrocco) started to invest in precious metals in 2002. Later on, in 2008, he began researching areas of the gold and silver market that, curiously, most of the precious metal analyst community have left unexplored. These areas include how energy and the falling EROI – Energy Returned On Invested – stand to impact the mining industry, precious metals, paper assets, and the overall economy. Steve considers studying the impacts of EROI one of the most important aspects of his energy research. For the past several years, he has written scholarly articles on some of the top precious metals and financial websites. You can find many of Steve's articles on noteworthy sites, such as GoldSeek-SilverSeek, Market Oracle, Financial Sense, GoldSilver.com, SilverDoctors, TFMetals Report, Outsiderclub, SGTreport, BrotherJohnF, Hartgeld, Der-Klare-Blick, PeakProsperity, SilverStrategies, DollarCollapse, FurtureMoneyTrends, Sharpspixley, FinancialSurvivalNetwork, PMBull, Deviantinvestor, PMBug, Wealthwire, and ZeroHedge.
U.S. benchmark oil prices are up almost 50% this year, as global demand continues its pandemic recovery. In the States, rising demand and rising prices have led to production increases - but only modest increases so far. This week, Switched On speaks with Tai Liu and Anna Dialynas, U.S. oil analysts for BloombergNEF. They will tell us us about how most U.S. oil producers are choosing fiscal discipline over major production increases, and opting for debt reductions and shareholder paybacks over drilling new wells. This episode is based on a report titled U.S. Shale Oil Quarterly Outlook: 3Q 2021. BNEF clients can access this at BNEF on the Bloomberg Terminal, on bnef.com or BNEF Mobile. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
Benjamin Shattuck, a leading analyst of the U.S. upstream oil and gas industry reviews the wild ride that the market took in 2020 and into 2021, with prices plunging, drilling activity falling with it and then a late-year revival that took a lot of people by surprise. Companies are drilling again, but will it last?Apple PodcastSpotifyMore FreightWaves Podcasts
Benjamin Shattuck, a leading analyst of the U.S. upstream oil and gas industry reviews the wild ride that the market took in 2020 and into 2021, with prices plunging, drilling activity falling with it and then a late-year revival that took a lot of people by surprise. Companies are drilling again, but will it last?Apple PodcastSpotifyMore FreightWaves Podcasts
This week’s guest is Daniel Yergin, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author, and authority on everything energy. We discuss Dan’s new book “The New Map: Energy, Climate, and the Clash of Nations.” Here are some of the questions that Peter and Jackie asked him: How has the US shale revolution changed the global energy order? Is the […] The post Daniel Yergin on “The New Map: Energy, Climate, and the Clash of Nations” first appeared on ARC Energy Research Institute.
This week’s guest is Daniel Yergin, the Pulitzer Prize winning author and authority on everything energy. We discuss Dan’s new book “The New Map: Energy, Climate, and the Clash of Nations.” Here are some of the questions that Peter and Jackie asked him: How has the US shale revolution changed the global energy order? Is (more...)
Mike Lovitt is a Global Underground Technical Specialist for Orica. He is widely known as “The Global Mass Blasting Specialist”. In this Blasting marathon, we talked: – Mike’s early career as a Engineer and Manager – Old School Mass Blasting – Science behind pulling a cut – Emulsion vs ANFO – Mike’s role in the Beaconsfield rescue – Low voidage blasting – Mike’s funky designs for blasting Shale Oil development in Estonia – Upcoming Blasting automation Plus much more.
Mike Lovitt is a Global Underground Technical Specialist for Orica. He is widely known as "The Global Mass Blasting Specialist". In this Blasting marathon, we talked: - Mike's early career as a Engineer and Manager - Old School Mass Blasting - Science behind pulling a cut - Emulsion vs ANFO - Mike's role in the Beaconsfield rescue - Low voidage blasting - Mike's funky designs for blasting Shale Oil development in Estonia - Upcoming Blasting automation Plus much more.
Macro Crude: Understanding Finance and The Global Economy (Oil, Stocks, Commodities, Currencies)
Shocked by BP's $13 - $17 billion charge? Well, Deloitte expects the shale industry to impair/write-down the value of their assets by as much as $300 billion—with significant impairments expected in Q2 2020. One may argue against reading too much into this “noncash” impairment figure of companies. Yes, it is just an accounting adjustment. But it translates into writing off the invested shareholder's equity and carrying a debt that may have been taken to develop or acquire the impaired asset. The result: an immediate increase in the industry's #Leverage ratio from 40 to 54 % which can trigger many negative sequences of events, including bankruptcy bankruptcy.
Kia ora,Welcome to Thursday's Economy Watch where we follow the economic events and trends that affect New Zealand.I'm David Chaston and this is the International edition from Interest.co.nz.If you are one of the many new listeners who have joined us recently, welcome – we appreciate your company.Today we lead with news the US is moving aggressively to protect the tax strategies of the big tech companies.But first this morning however, the Fed boss is continuing his US Congressional testimony on monetary policy, but his comments are not market-moving.American homeowners are moving markets, moving in greater numbers to refinance their mortgages, aiming for lower risk and longer commitments from lenders. And they are doing it at lower interest rates.US building permit levels, and housing starts have stayed low in May with permits almost -9% lower than the same month in 2019 and housing starts down a very sharp -23% on that basis.In Canada, they are recording sharply lower consumer price inflation. They may be getting asset price inflation like everyone else, but consumer prices actually fell on May by -0.4% on an annual basis. Their core inflation was up +0.7% but that is a sharp decrease from th +1.2% rate in April.In China, the State Council, the country's cabinet, is telling commercial banks to sacrifice more than NZ$300 bln of their sector profits by lowering margins on loans to businesses, and making loan deferrals to aid their economy.Japanese exports fell -28% in May from a year ago, imports were down -26%, both all-time record declinesThe latest World Competitiveness rankings for 2020 are out and New Zealand has slipped further to #22 from #16 three years ago. We have held our economic performance, but slipped on the each of the Government Efficiency, Business Efficiency, and Infrastructure sub-categories. We now rank lower than China which also slipped, down -2 places over the same period, and the USA which slipped -6 places.And it appears that the US is walking away from the effort to forge an international agreement on tax cheating by the large US technology firms. Their defence of Facebook is a key motivator.Wall Street can't find any direction today, and is little-changed from yesterday's close. That is tamer than the +0.5% gains recorded in Europe overnight which were on top of the prior day's very strong rise. Yesterday in Shanghai, they closed up only marginally while Hong Kong rose +0.5%. Tokyo gave up -0.5% after the spectacular rise the day before. And speaking of spectacular rises, the NZX50 jumped a full +3.5% yesterday. The ASX200 gained +0.8%.The latest compilation of Covid-19 data is here. The global tally is now 8,261,300 which is up +177,000 in a day and a rising pace. Global deaths now exceed 445,000. Beijing city is reacting as though they have a full-blown emergency on their hands. And China has banned imports of fresh salmon, a move sure to hurt some New Zealand export trade. (Evidence is non-existent however.)Just on 26% of all cases globally are in the US, which is up +25,300 since this time yesterday to 2,148,400. Record high daily infections are now occurring in Texas, Florida, Arizona and California (ditto Oklahoma where a certain President is pushing ahead with a campaign rally). US deaths now exceed 117,300.In Australia, there have been 7370 cases (+23 since yesterday), 102 deaths (unchanged) and a recovery rate of just over 93% (unchanged). 16 people are in hospital there (-1) with 3 in ICU (unchanged). There are now 398 active cases in Australia (+9).The UST 10yr yield is unchanged at 0.74%. The gold price is little-changed today, down -US$1 to US$1,727/oz.Oil prices are just marginally softer today, slipping to just over US$38/bbl in the US. The Brent price is just under US$41/bbl. At these higher price levels, US shale producers are expected to restore roughly a quarter of what they shut recently by the end of June.The Kiwi dollar is a little firmer this morning at 64.8 USc. On the cross rates we are little-changed at 93.7 AUc. Against the euro we almost +½c higher at 57.6 euro cents. That means our TWI-5 is up to 69.6 and similar to where it was this time last week.The bitcoin price is still in its quiet phase at US$9,415 today. You can find links to the articles mentioned today in our show notes.If you enjoy this podcast, can we ask you to forward this episode to one person who you think, might like listening.Get more news affecting the economy in New Zealand from interest.co.nz.
Compared to other fossil fuels, natural gas is not so bad, right? WRONG. Natural gas, like all fossil fuels, are terrible for the environment. In this episode, I discuss what natural gas is, where it comes from, and why it is bad for the environment. Sources:National Resources Defense Council (NRDC)https://www.nrdc.org/stories/fossil-fuels-dirty-factsUnited States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)https://www.epa.gov/ghgemissions/overview-greenhouse-gasesStudent Energy· Natural Gas: https://www.studentenergy.org/topics/natural-gas· Unconventional Gas:https://www.studentenergy.org/topics/unconventional-gas· Conventional Gas: https://www.studentenergy.org/topics/conventional-gas· Fracking: https://www.studentenergy.org/topics/hydraulic-fracturing· Shale Oil:https://www.studentenergy.org/topics/shale-gas· Gas Hydrates: https://www.studentenergy.org/topics/hydrates· Coalbed Methane: https://www.studentenergy.org/topics/coal-bed-methaneEnvironment Impact Assessment (EIA)https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/natural-gas/Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI)https://www.eesi.org/topics/fossil-fuels/descriptionUniversity of Calgaryhttps://energyeducation.ca/encyclopedia/Tight_gas#:~:text=Hydraulic%20fracturing%20is%20one%20main,of%20high%20pressure%20fracking%20fluids.&text=In%20most%20tight%20gas%20formations,collect%20and%20make%20extraction%20difficult.Union of Concerned Scientists:https://www.ucsusa.org/resources/environmental-impacts-natural-gasNew York Times:https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/21/climate/methane-leaks.html Music:“News Theme” by Kevin MacLeod licensed under CC BY. Edited to be shorter but content was not changed. Link to Song Profile: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4122-news-theme/Link to Author’s Profile: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/artists/profile/9-kevin-macleod/Link to license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcod
In today's daily round-up of export, trade and commodity finance news, TXF's Max Thompson covers the latest stories and trends across the market: Natixis has announced that it will no longer finance projects dedicated to shale oil and gas exploration and production Traxys, the Luxembourg-headquartered metals and natural resources trader and merchant, has signed a $1.287 billion multi-currency syndicated revolving credit facility CDC Group, the UK’s development finance institution, has announced a record month for its trade guarantee programme Like what you hear? Hit subscribe to stay up to date and for all the latest news online visit www.txfnews.com today.
In January 2020 US president Donald Trump congratulated the oil industry for having made the country 'energy independent' American production crossed 12 Million barrels per day at the end of 2019. What would be the impact of Pandemic on Shale oil in USA.
Prosperous EP269 - ราคาน้ำมันต่ำทำให้ shale oil ลดลงจริงหรือ? Reference : https://finance.yahoo.com/news/opec-t-kill-u-shale-180000285.html
The police are set to enforce a UK lockdown, while in the US the full impact of the Coronavirus and the shutdown is starting to become clear. Plus history on oil production in the United States, and the series of events triggered by the dropping price of oil.
Shale oil reduces trade deficits, decreases inflation, increases tax revenues, and strengthens the dollar. The goal should be to increase oil production
Two Seeking Alpha analyses of the shale-oil industry, one from Kevin Wilson and the other from Andrew Butter, provide much insight and yet, one of them is quite grim and the other sanguine about the opportunities ahead. This podcast (7:19) suggests why it is that commodities investments that tend to long-term returns of zero are so tempting; why the success of such speculation is determined by timing, which is next to impossible to figure out; and what criteria investors should look for in a small, speculative play.
Sam is joined by Matthew Klippenstein this week to discuss fracturing of denominations, late dating of biblical texts, what an American has to learn from a Canadian, why the Dalai Lama might want to consider the lilies, and why ACTS might be the best book in the New Testament. Special Guest: Matthew Klippenstein.
Episode 226 of "In The Oil Patch" This week on "In The Oil Patch": host Kym Bolado welcomes David Dickert, Head of Field Operations for North America at Aggreko. Kym is also joined by David Blackmon, Editor of SHALE Magazine. Listen to In the Oil Patch on AM/FM following this schedule: Saturdays from 8am-9am KSIX 1230 AM, 95.1 FM & 96.1 FM Corpus Christi Saturdays from 1pm-2pm KWEL 1070 AM & 107.1 FM Midland / Odessa / Permian Basin Sundays from 2pm-3pm The Answer 930 AM San Antonio / New Braunfels / San Marcos / Austin Sundays from 8pm-9pm KTRH Newsradio 740 AM Simulcast on the iHeartRADIO app Houston / Worldwide Let us know what you think about our shows on our Facebook page - Facebook.com/intheoilpatch and be sure to share, follow and like us on Soundcloud, Twitter and LinkedIn too! "In The Oil Patch" is brought to you by SHALE Oil & Gas Business Magazine. Stay tuned for more great episodes every weekend! For our full schedule, please visit our Radio Show Schedule page and if you have any questions for our experts, please email them to radio@shalemag.com.
Episode 225 of "In The Oil Patch" This week on "In The Oil Patch": host Kym Bolado welcomes David Dickert, Head of Field Operations for North America at Aggreko. Kym is also joined by David Blackmon, Editor of SHALE Magazine. Listen to In the Oil Patch on AM/FM following this schedule: Saturdays from 8am-9am KSIX 1230 AM, 95.1 FM & 96.1 FM Corpus Christi Saturdays from 1pm-2pm KWEL 1070 AM & 107.1 FM Midland / Odessa / Permian Basin Sundays from 2pm-3pm The Answer 930 AM San Antonio / New Braunfels / San Marcos / Austin Sundays from 8pm-9pm KTRH Newsradio 740 AM Simulcast on the iHeartRADIO app Houston / Worldwide Let us know what you think about our shows on our Facebook page - Facebook.com/intheoilpatch and be sure to share, follow and like us on Soundcloud, Twitter and LinkedIn too! "In The Oil Patch" is brought to you by SHALE Oil & Gas Business Magazine. Stay tuned for more great episodes every weekend! For our full schedule, please visit our Radio Show Schedule page and if you have any questions for our experts, please email them to radio@shalemag.com.
-Originally aired on 11/17/19- Episode 224 of "In The Oil Patch" This week on "In The Oil Patch": host Kym Bolado welcomes Karr Ingham, Petroleum Economist with the Texas Alliance of Energy Producers, for a LIVE show. Kym is also joined by David Blackmon, Editor of SHALE Magazine. Listen to In the Oil Patch on AM/FM following this schedule: Saturdays from 8am-9am KSIX 1230 AM, 95.1 FM & 96.1 FM Corpus Christi Saturdays from 1pm-2pm KWEL 1070 AM & 107.1 FM Midland / Odessa / Permian Basin Sundays from 2pm-3pm The Answer 930 AM San Antonio / New Braunfels / San Marcos / Austin Sundays from 8pm-9pm KTRH Newsradio 740 AM Simulcast on the iHeartRADIO app Houston / Worldwide Let us know what you think about our shows on our Facebook page - Facebook.com/intheoilpatch and be sure to share, follow and like us on Soundcloud, Twitter and LinkedIn too! "In The Oil Patch" is brought to you by SHALE Oil & Gas Business Magazine. Stay tuned for more great episodes every weekend! For our full schedule, please visit our Radio Show Schedule page and if you have any questions for our experts, please email them to radio@shalemag.com.
-Originally aired on 11/16/19-11/17/19- Episode 223 of "In The Oil Patch" This week on "In The Oil Patch": host Kym Bolado welcomes Congressman Cloud. Kym is also joined by David Blackmon, Editor of SHALE Magazine. Listen to In the Oil Patch on AM/FM following this schedule: Saturdays from 8am-9am KSIX 1230 AM, 95.1 FM & 96.1 FM Corpus Christi Saturdays from 1pm-2pm KWEL 1070 AM & 107.1 FM Midland / Odessa / Permian Basin Sundays from 2pm-3pm The Answer 930 AM San Antonio / New Braunfels / San Marcos / Austin Sundays from 8pm-9pm KTRH Newsradio 740 AM Simulcast on the iHeartRADIO app Houston / Worldwide Let us know what you think about our shows on our Facebook page - Facebook.com/intheoilpatch and be sure to share, follow and like us on Soundcloud, Twitter and LinkedIn too! "In The Oil Patch" is brought to you by SHALE Oil & Gas Business Magazine. Stay tuned for more great episodes every weekend! For our full schedule, please visit our Radio Show Schedule page and if you have any questions for our experts, please email them to radio@shalemag.com.
In this Episode of Oil & Gas This Week: America's Great Shale Oil Boom Is Nearly Over, Enverus: Third-Quarter US Operator M&A Activity Surpassed $17 Billion, Sheridan energy fund aims to slash $900 mln in debt in Ch. 11, California governor signs bill limiting oil, gas development, Iran Oil Tanker Hit by Missiles in Red Sea, RigUp lands $300M to aid energy contractors, hits $1.9B valuation, The New Baker Hughes Goes From Blue To Green. Have a question? Click here to ask. Stories: America's Great Shale Oil Boom Is Nearly Over Enverus: Third-Quarter US Operator M&A Activity Surpassed $17 Billion Sheridan energy fund aims to slash $900 mln in debt in Ch. 11 California governor signs bill limiting oil, gas development Iran Oil Tanker Hit by Missiles in Red Sea RigUp lands $300M to aid energy contractors, hits $1.9B valuation The New Baker Hughes Goes From Blue To Green Weekly Rig Count As of 09/14/2019 - The American Rig count is 920 active rigs. IBM Giveaway Enter to Win Here! Sign-up for your chance to win a T-shirt with a unique serial number. This means each shirt is different making it an awesome collector's item! Plus it comes inside an official OGGN insulated tumbler. At the end of the year we will have a drawing to win our grand prize! This will be a pool of all of the serial numbers on the t-shirts! The grand prize will be announced a bit later in the year! Travel Sponsor BCD Travel – We simplify the conversation around managed business travel, showing you how to combine capabilities and services to deliver or improve on your program goals. Review your current program or design what it might look like in the future. Focus on a single area or make plans across the entire program. Wherever you are today, there's a solution to help you get where you want to go tomorrow. Get started. Quarterly Happy Hour OGGN is always accepting Happy Hour sponsors. If you would like to get your company in front of our large young, professional audience, reach out to our Project Coordinator, Brooke Omachel by e-mail. Street Team
In this Episode of Oil & Gas This Week: No slumping in pumping despite strictures in Colorado's new oil and gas law, Lion's share of TechnipFMC split expected to remain in Houston, Alaska is the biggest bet yet for Texas' anti-shale oil billionaire, Mexico, Midstream Firms Reach Deal In Gas Pipelines Dispute, New Mexico's Oil Boom Is Under Threat, Tumbling Yuan Sends Ripples Through Petrochemical Market , take a fun test along with the live audience, and other oil & gas news. Have a question? Click here to ask. Stories: No slumping in pumping despite strictures in Colorado's new oil and gas law Lion's share of TechnipFMC split expected to remain in Houston Alaska is the biggest bet yet for Texas' anti-shale oil billionaire Mexico, Midstream Firms Reach Deal In Gas Pipelines Dispute New Mexico's Oil Boom Is Under Threat Tumbling Yuan Sends Ripples Through Petrochemical Market Funny test for audience Weekly Rig Count As of 09/09/2019 - The American Rig count is 951 active rigs. IBM Giveaway Enter to Win Here! Sign-up for your chance to win a T-shirt with a unique serial number. This means each shirt is different making it an awesome collector's item! Plus it comes inside an official OGGN insulated tumbler. At the end of the year we will have a drawing to win our grand prize! This will be a pool of all of the serial numbers on the t-shirts! The grand prize will be announced a bit later in the year! Travel Sponsor BCD Travel – We simplify the conversation around managed business travel, showing you how to combine capabilities and services to deliver or improve on your program goals. Review your current program or design what it might look like in the future. Focus on a single area or make plans across the entire program. Wherever you are today, there's a solution to help you get where you want to go tomorrow. Get started. Quarterly Happy Hour OGGN is always accepting Happy Hour sponsors. If you would like to get your company in front of our large young, professional audience, reach out to our Project Coordinator, Brooke Omachel by e-mail
Gordon Chang appears for the first time to tell why he is bearish on China while most of the world sees China as a major growth engine. His book, “The Coming Collapse of China” written in 2001 now appears to either be wrong or premature. Some think he is wrong. Other economists think his general thesis is correct but his predictions were early. China with its growing population would seem to have an insatiable desire for energy. Could the emerging U.S. technologies that are leading to an energy supply boom in the U.S. from shale oil and gas supply China with its need for oil and gas in the coming years? Keith Schaefer, an industry expert, will help us answer that question and provide some ways to profit from this energy boom. But what about the powers behind the throne? Dr. John Coleman will return to help us understand what kind of energy policies we might anticipate from a global ruling elite and how that may affect how you invest your money.
Gordon Chang appears for the first time to tell why he is bearish on China while most of the world sees China as a major growth engine. His book, “The Coming Collapse of China” written in 2001 now appears to either be wrong or premature. Some think he is wrong. Other economists think his general thesis is correct but his predictions were early. China with its growing population would seem to have an insatiable desire for energy. Could the emerging U.S. technologies that are leading to an energy supply boom in the U.S. from shale oil and gas supply China with its need for oil and gas in the coming years? Keith Schaefer, an industry expert, will help us answer that question and provide some ways to profit from this energy boom. But what about the powers behind the throne? Dr. John Coleman will return to help us understand what kind of energy policies we might anticipate from a global ruling elite and how that may affect how you invest your money.