To: yard_man who wrote (2238 ) 3/8/2022 6:02:58 PM From: Tweets Boar Hog Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4446 CEI, a log chart for you and Birdie. It may be breaking up just came across it today. Looks like it is being bot. Volume just recently exploded. The pattern over the last few years 'could' be an ending pattern. Into small distributed power and some oil and gas. A cousin to CGRN. camber.energy Evaluating for a small position specer. I may explain more later on, I know turbines and power plants. I think the bigger long term problem for industry and consumers is not necessarily price of oil, but maybe natural gas. Least equal problems. Most of the grid power is now from natty gas, and replacing old inefficient power with more efficient gas turbine power is not an option, that ship has sailed. And if we need more power (and we do) we are likely going to have to continue to install more gas turbine power over the intermediate term. Nuc takes years. Coal unlikely and look at the price of coal lately. Renewables cannot cover it. So wait until natural gas prices explode and go up by 3X. Utilities will have to increase rates in concert to cover their fuel bills. Small users of power can put in small CHP plants, and significantly reduce their power bills. Or solar or wind turbines or pay the bills .... The heat is about to be turned off for this year, but next year BOIL will likely percolate, then eventually boil. Grid power in my neck of the woods has been expensive for a long time, because it is oil based. But L48 has been living on cheap power and heat for quite a while. On a BTU basis natty gas is way underpriced, or oil over priced. Probably the former. TweetsUp until 2009, the average price relationship between natural gas and crude oil was around the 10 to 1 level. Oil trades in barrels. Natural gas trades in millions of BTUs (British thermal units or MMBtu). The ratio translates to 10 MMBtu of natural gas per one barrel of oil. For instance, if the ratio was still 10 to 1, and the price of crude oil was $40 per barrel, natural gas would be priced around $4 per MMBtu. Current price ratio is about 27. Crude is blue, nat gas orange.