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Strategies & Market Trends : John Pitera's Market Laboratory -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: nspolar who wrote (9004)3/16/2008 6:10:09 AM
From: Real Man  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 33421
 
This major field was discovered in 1951, FWIW. As oil prices
rise, so do US reserves -g-



To: nspolar who wrote (9004)3/16/2008 11:34:56 AM
From: Jon Koplik  Respond to of 33421
 
ALERT >>> READ the Bakken [Oil} Formation message I am replying to ............................................

This appears to be real.

Do a Google News search for "Bakken Formation," and you will come up with a whole bunch of news stories.

Here is one of them :

-------------------------------------------------------------------------

bismarcktribune.com

Mar 10, 2008 - 04:05:10 CDT

Water isn't everywhere

By LAUREN DONOVAN
Bismarck Tribune

KILLDEER - Some towns in the midst of an oil boom have a valuable commodity to sell.

Unfortunately, at $106 a barrel this past week, it isn't oil.

It's plain old, ordinary water.

Killdeer is on track to sell $250,000 worth of water this year to oil companies that inject it to fracture the oil formations two miles underground. That gush of revenue means the town has money to spend on improvements without increasing taxes.

City auditor Dawn Marquardt has thousands of reasons to like all the tankers lining up at the pumphouse at the edge of town. They wait a turn to load on 7,500 gallons, paying the city one penny for each gallon.

Greg Nordsven, Killdeer's water superintendent, said this water-selling is a brand new business for the town.

It's new at Parshall, too. Auditor Loren Hoffman said oil companies bought 6.3 million gallons last month, the most of any month so far. Parshall only has treated water for sale, and sells it at $10 per 1,000 gallons. Last month's take was $63,000.

Oil wells around Parshall and Killdeer are being drilled deep into the Bakken shale and require about 750,000 gallons of water to fracture the formation and release the oil from the rock.

That's a lot of water. And that's just for one well.

Marathon Oil, for example, has five rigs of the 13 rigs operating in Dunn County and can move each to a new drilling location in about six weeks. Mountrail County, where Parshall is located, has 22 rigs there now.

Last year, oil companies took out about 18 million gallons from Killdeer's pumphouse at less than a half-cent per gallon. Killdeer's water fund took in more than $100,000. One company in one month alone got a $9,000 water bill and paid it without blinking, Marquardt said.

Marquardt said she doesn't want the city budget to be too dependent on water revenue.

"Once they (the rigs) move on, that's it," Marquardt said. "We don't know how long this will last."

Killdeer increased its water rate from the pumphouse to a penny a gallon as of March 1 to keep in line with other towns in the oil patch. The city sunk a third water well last summer and now has about 1,000 gallons a minute capacity.

Marquardt said the water sales helped pay the cost of the new well, a new system to read meters and some will go toward the $450,000 it will cost to reseal all eight miles of the town's streets this summer.

The city's share of the oil extraction tax is another budget bonus. Killdeer can sell the water so cheap because it hasn't been run through the city's water treatment plant.

Parshall has only treated Lake Sakakawea water to sell, and the cost of chemicals, plus upkeep and other expenses at the water plant, is considerable, Hoffman said.

The amount of water used for oil drilling has been steadily increasing month by month. Hoffman said the city has occasionally had to quit selling water for oil production so the town's water tower can recharge.

Hoffman said unless there's more trouble with the lake level dropping, the town should have enough water even if the rig count goes from 22 in Mountrail County now to the 35 anticipated there this summer.

Nordsven said the town's wells are monitored and so far, the increased demand for water hasn't changed the aquifer levels at all.

"If it does, I'll shut them (oil companies) down," he said.

(Reach reporter Lauren Donovan at 888-303-5511, or lauren@westriv.com.)

Copyright © 2008 Bismarck Tribune, a division of Lee Enterprises.



To: nspolar who wrote (9004)3/16/2008 12:52:15 PM
From: Hawkmoon  Respond to of 33421
 
In the next 30 days the USGS (U.S. Geological Survey) will release a new report giving an accurate resource assessment of the Bakken Oil Formation that covers North Dakota and portions of South Dakota and Montana. With new horizontal drilling technology it is believed that from 175 to 500 billion barrels of recoverable oil are held in this 200,000 square mile reserve that was initially discovered in 1951.

WOW!!! Could this be why T. Boone Pickens stated he was going short oil?? 500 Billion barrels would be TWICE the proven reserves of Saudi Arabia!!!

The release of this report could be market signal that bursts the overt speculation in oil and reshifting the flow of capital back into the US dollar..

Might have to move back out west.. Definitely believe that N. Dakota/Montana would set up an equivalent to the Alaska Permanent Fund.. ;0)

Hawk



To: nspolar who wrote (9004)3/16/2008 1:00:46 PM
From: Hawkmoon  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 33421
 
Just found this report on the Bakken Formation..

undeerc.org

Falcon.. YOU DA MAN!!! I've been getting all kinds of spam about some major oil opportunity from these "analyst" newsletters, but you have to buy their report..

But now I see what they were talking about.. 30 days!!

Really thinking about some call options in DUG right now..

But who would be the primary plays for investing in this formation.. I see that Northern Oil (NOGS) has some concessions there..

northernoil.com

Hawk



To: nspolar who wrote (9004)3/16/2008 1:33:28 PM
From: Neeka  Respond to of 33421
 
Delete



To: nspolar who wrote (9004)3/16/2008 9:54:12 PM
From: Moominoid  Respond to of 33421
 
There must be peak oil eventually but no need for oil production to follow Hubbert's bell shaped curve.



To: nspolar who wrote (9004)3/16/2008 9:59:28 PM
From: Nicholas Thompson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 33421
 
I have been hearing about this for a month. is there really any truth to it?



To: nspolar who wrote (9004)4/10/2008 9:59:12 PM
From: nspolar  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 33421
 
The USGS Bakken assessment comes in at just under 4 billion barrels.

nextbigfuture.com

I agree with one of the comments.

Flows will continue to slowly increase, within a few years they are likely to hit 1 MMBPD and go up yet from there. The USGS estimates are likely to continue to increase as well, as technology continues to improve.

The latest USGS estimate which represents a huge increase over the previous is likely the start of new trend, of revised estimates, upward.

There is nothing like the oil patch, when profits are to be made. Expectations are more often than not exceeded.

The northern plains are gonna be hopping with oil field workers for years to come. Booms and mini-busts are all part of the oil patch game, so they should expect a few of the latter as well.



To: nspolar who wrote (9004)2/28/2010 10:59:05 PM
From: Jon Koplik  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 33421
 
WSJ on Bakken Shale Deposit / "Oil Industry Booms -- in North Dakota" ...............................

FEBRUARY 26, 2010

Oil Industry Booms -- in North Dakota

State Is Riding High as Firms Develop Better Ways to Tap Huge Bakken Shale Deposit, Raising Hopes for U.S. Production

By BEN CASSELMAN

KILLDEER, N.D.­A massive oil reserve buried two miles underground has put North Dakota at the center of a revolution in the U.S. oil industry, a shift that has radically altered the fortunes of this remote area.

The Bakken Shale deposit has been known and even tapped on occasion for decades. But technological improvements in the past two years have taken what was once a small, marginally profitable field and turned it into one of the fastest-growing oil-producing areas in the U.S.

The Bakken Shale had helped North Dakota oil production double in the past three years, surging to 80 million barrels in 2009­tiny relative to the more than seven billion barrels consumed by the U.S. every year, but enough to vault the state past Oklahoma and Louisiana to become the country's fourth-biggest oil producer, after Texas, Alaska and California. If current projections hold, North Dakota's oil production could pass Alaska's by the end of the decade.

"Most people felt like they could kind of write off the oil industry in the U.S., and that's just a long way from the truth," said Harold Hamm, chairman and chief executive of Continental Resources Inc., one of the biggest Bakken producers. "The fact of the matter is that a lot of people quit looking for oil." Continental reported Thursday that its North Dakota oil production doubled in 2009 and would continue to grow rapidly this year.

The Bakken Shale could contain up to 4.3 billion barrels of recoverable oil, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. That would make it the biggest oil field discovered in the contiguous U.S. in more than 40 years­and many in the industry believe the amount of recoverable oil could be even greater as new technology allows companies to tap more of it.

U.S. oil production has fallen by nearly 50% since its peak in the 1970s. Even with the Bakken Shale, U.S. oil production isn't expected to ever return to 1970s levels, and even the most optimistic projections of production from the North Dakota field don't account for more than a small fraction of total U.S. oil demand. But new production from the Bakken Shale, combined with other big oil discoveries in California and the Gulf of Mexico, helped U.S. oil production rise last year for the first time since 1991, according to U.S. government figures.

Production has grown so rapidly here, 100 miles south of the Canadian border, that companies had to build a rail line to transport their oil to market, since there wasn't a big enough pipeline in the state to handle the oil. Companies have scrambled to find labor in a state with fewer than a million people, and to keep drilling rigs running when the wind chill pushes temperatures to 50 degrees below zero. Booming Bakken oil production has helped North Dakota escape the worst of the economic downturn. The state's unemployment rate was 4.3% in December­more than five percentage points below the national level­and the state government projects a surplus for the current budget cycle.

The impact has been especially notable in the oil-producing western part of the state, making millionaires of local ranchers who sell access to oil beneath their properties. Oil-field workers have flooded the western city of Williston, leaving it with a chronic shortage of hotel rooms and making housing scarce. In Dickinson, three hours to the south, a labor shortage has the local McDonald's offering $300 signing bonuses. And here in nearby Killdeer, a town of 700 people that lies in the heart of oil country, oil workers jockey with locals for lunchtime tables at the Buckskin Bar & Grill, which serves burgers made from locally raised buffalo.

"Who expected oil? It's just, 'oh, gee whiz, oil!'" said Pam Reckard, 66 years old, as she waited for lunch at the Buckskin on a recent Thursday.

Ms. Reckard and her husband, Ben, said many locals, having seen past booms and busts, are taking a cautious approach to the region's newfound oil wealth. The Reckards are still driving their 1990 Dodge pickup despite having two successful oil wells drilled on their 1,120-acre ranch, which Mr. Reckard's family has owned since 1915. But they have noticed the changes. "There are a lot of people that were not from North Dakota," Ms. Reckard said.

The industry hopes the Bakken's significance could extend far beyond North Dakota. The Bakken formation stretches into Montana and across the U.S. border into Saskatchewan. Other oil-bearing shale formations exist in Colorado, Texas, California and other states.

"It's a true game-changer," said Jim Volker, chairman and CEO of Whiting Petroleum Corp. a Bakken oil producer. "We still think there's a significant amount of oil reserves in the United States left to be discovered."

The field also could have global implications. Besides small producers such as Continental and Whiting, the Bakken has drawn companies like Marathon Oil Corp. that hope to use what they learn in North Dakota to produce oil and gas overseas. "It's been a great laboratory for us," said Dave Roberts, who heads exploration and production for Marathon.

Oil companies have known about the formation, and the oil trapped in it, since at least the 1950s. But they couldn't get more than a trickle of oil from the dense, nonporous rock.

That began to change in the early 2000s, when companies in Texas began using new drilling techniques in a similar formation near Fort Worth known as the Barnett Shale. They would drill down thousands of feet and then turn and go horizontally through the gas-bearing rock­allowing a single well to reach more gas. Then they would blast huge volumes of water down the well to crack open the rocks and free the gas trapped inside.

Several companies, including Houston-based EOG Resources Inc., thought the same techniques could work on oil formations. But oil molecules are larger than gas molecules, and they didn't flow as easily through the cracks. EOG's first several wells in North Dakota were failures.

"The first three or four wells, it was not clear that there would be a viable economic solution," EOG Chairman and CEO Mark Papa said. "But we just felt like, well, it's worth investing $20 to $40 million in this because if it works there's a huge upside."

By 2006, EOG was making money on wells drilled in a small corner of the Bakken that was particularly well-suited to oil production.

The real shift has come in the past two years as companies honed drilling techniques, leading to bigger wells, faster drilling and lower costs. Marathon, for example, last year took an average of 24 days to drill a well, down from 56 days in 2006.

That has opened up new areas that weren't previously worth drilling in and made wells profitable at prices as low as $50 a barrel, down from $80 three years ago, according to analyst Mike Jacobs of investment firm Tudor Pickering Holt & Co.

Write to Ben Casselman at ben.casselman@wsj.com

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