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Top producing oil counties in Montana...

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hypocritexposer said:
hopalong said:
Where is Valley county??


It's in Heaven, if you believe a certain poster on ranchers.

You are correct in the opinion of many locals-- not in the middle of the oil boom- and the rat race/negatives that goes with it-- but close enough to get all the benis coming from it like jobs and supplying oil industry logistics... :D
But I'm afraid our heaven may end as the field moves further west...
 
Oldtimer said:
hypocritexposer said:
hopalong said:
Where is Valley county??


It's in Heaven, if you believe a certain poster on ranchers.

You are correct in the opinion of many locals-- not in the middle of the oil boom- and the rat race/negatives that goes with it-- but close enough to get all the benis coming from it like jobs and supplying oil industry logistics... :D
But I'm afraid our heaven may end as the field moves further west...


Who told you the "field wass moving west"?


Maybe Heaven is in Ft. MacMurray, which is North of you. :lol:
 
hypocritexposer said:
Oldtimer said:
hypocritexposer said:
It's in Heaven, if you believe a certain poster on ranchers.

You are correct in the opinion of many locals-- not in the middle of the oil boom- and the rat race/negatives that goes with it-- but close enough to get all the benis coming from it like jobs and supplying oil industry logistics... :D
But I'm afraid our heaven may end as the field moves further west...


Who told you the "field wass moving west"?


Maybe Heaven is in Ft. MacMurray, which is North of you. :lol:

You must have been absent from school the day I posted the article on all the millions of oil leases they have bought up just west of the current sites....
 
Oldtimer said:
hypocritexposer said:
Oldtimer said:
You are correct in the opinion of many locals-- not in the middle of the oil boom- and the rat race/negatives that goes with it-- but close enough to get all the benis coming from it like jobs and supplying oil industry logistics... :D
But I'm afraid our heaven may end as the field moves further west...


Who told you the "field wass moving west"?


Maybe Heaven is in Ft. MacMurray, which is North of you. :lol:

You must have been absent from school the day I posted the article on all the millions of oil leases they have bought up just west of the current sites....


and you must have been absent the day that Alberta found more oil in one day, than your "west" found in a year.

YOu think you are the only one to see this type of "boom"? You seem to think that Montana is on the cusp of something great, which other regions of North America have been developing for decades.

Good luck with your new found "riches". I hope obama doesn't tax it all away.

If you get your wish of voting in more Dems. in Monatana, where do you think the income from your resources will end up?
 
Oldtimer said:
You must have been absent from school the day I posted the article on all the millions of oil leases they have bought up just west of the current sites....

Several things come to mind when leases start selling between They're either worthless or one party is hard up for money or both. However, sometimes, people come in and lease land up at bargain basement prices then sell them at a huge profit to the company that will actually develop the leases. Either way somebody get's screwed.
 
TexasBred said:
Oldtimer said:
You must have been absent from school the day I posted the article on all the millions of oil leases they have bought up just west of the current sites....

Several things come to mind when leases start selling between They're either worthless or one party is hard up for money or both. However, sometimes, people come in and lease land up at bargain basement prices then sell them at a huge profit to the company that will actually develop the leases. Either way somebody get's screwed.

Montana oil lease sale could mark Bakken expansion

2012-10-24 The Associated Press



BILLINGS — A Texas company has bought oil and gas leases on almost 75,000 acres in northeast Montana's McCone County in a move that could portend a significant westward expansion of the Bakken oil patch, government officials and a company representative said Wednesday.

San Antonio-based Donco Inc. paid more than $13.5 million for the leases in a competitive auction held Tuesday by the federal Bureau of Land Management. It marks one of the largest federal lease acquisitions by a single company in Montana in recent years, BLM spokesman Kristen Lenhardt said.

Donco is the parent company of Shale Exploration LLC.

Shale Exploration President Sam Tallis said Wednesday that the company aims to amass leases on roughly 200,000 acres in McCone and neighboring Garfield counties. He said drilling could begin next year.

The Bakken region of western North Dakota and eastern Montana has emerged in recent years as one of the most productive oil patches in the U.S. The area being targeted by Shale Exploration has seen only limited drilling to date, said Tom Richmond with the Montana Board of Oil and Gas.

"It's new interest in the area," Richmond said.

Tallis said his company is confident the McCone-Garfield area has other oil-bearing geological formations in addition to the Bakken, located at different depths beneath the surface.

"This is a step away from where most people believe the conventional Bakken is," Tallis said. "A lot of people call it the end of the road because it's the last possible place for the Bakken, to go that far. But we tend to like it because there are other formations."

The leases bought by Donco accounted for 153 out of 244 oil and gas parcels sold at Tuesday's BLM auction, Lenhardt said. Total proceeds from the sale topped $16 million. That included 7 parcels sold in South Dakota, with the remainder in Montana.

Shale Exploration previously has been active in other parts of Montana, including Daniels County, where it partnered with the much-larger Apache Corp. to drill on leases it amassed there.


Richmond said it's too early to say if the intensive drilling activity seen in Montana counties closer to the North Dakota border is repeated in McCone County.

For now, he said, it remains a "lease play," meaning companies such as Shale Exploration are scrambling to snap up leases on public and private land in anticipation of future development.

"Lots of time leasing plays get a life of their own," he said. "The leasing starts first, and at some point in time the assumption is that somebody's going to drill a well someplace, and prove or disprove the play."

Tallis, who works out of Billings, referred to Montana as "the best kept secret in oil and gas" and said he and majority owner Sid Greehey are in it for the long haul.

In April, Shale Exploration donated $130,000 to the Scobey Public Schools in Daniels County to purchase iPads — tablet computers made by Apple Inc. — for all the district's students. A month later, the company donated $20,000 to the Montana Rescue Mission Women's and Family Shelter in Billings.

Tallis said he hopes to establish a similar close relationship with residents of Garfield and McCone counties.

"Whether it's iPads or something else, we want to partner with the community," he said.

Ironically- this is this mornings local talk of the day on Face Book... Oil companies moving west- into more "dinosaur country"...These counties are also the counties where BNSF railroad owns or controls large sections of land that they have been looking at mining coal in and building a coal gasification plant...

This is the post that Hypocrit apparently missed... These were brand new leases just let... I don't know what the oil company plans are- but they are investing some fair amounts of money into the area...
 
Unless Donco Inc. is a major player in the Bakken they definitely bought them to resale. $180 an acre is basically nothing. Shows how stupid the gov't is too. Donco willl sit on them and wait for drilling to get hotter closer to the area.....when it does then they'll make 700-800% or more on the sale of the leases and probably retain a percentage of the royalties from any wells completed which will be their big money maker.
 
Where did I miss that post, OT?

If Montana is drilling more, I congratulate them. I believe in Alberta drilling and selling whatever they can too.

but what I dislike is you, OT, acting like this has never happened before, anywhere, except Montana, and giving obama credit for it.

obama is no friend of conventional energy sources. Just imagine if he had put as many $$ into oil/NG as he has bankrupt "green" companies.

It's like the stimulus. Instead of putting $$ into something that was goind to "pay back", he used much of the money for political payoffs, which he is now going to try to pay for with increased taxes, on those that make the capital investments in the Country.

He's stealing from the taxpayer on both ends. And you are too dense to realize it.
 
Continental Resources Completes Test Well, Boosts Bakken Estimate


December 4, 2012




Continental Resources Inc. (NYSE: CLR) successfully completed the initial test well in the third bench of the Three Forks zone in the Bakken field, the company announced from its headquarters in Oklahoma City, Okla.

Continental now estimates the field has 903 billion barrels of original oil in place, a 57 percent increase from an estimate of 577 billion barrels of original oil in place that was made in 2010.

The test well, Charlotte 3-22H, flowed 953 barrels of oil equivalent per day at 1700 psi on a 28/64 choke in ...
 
Trains Carry Baaken Oil Across Hi-Line To State Of Washington
Monday, November 26th 2012
TACOMA, Wash. — The oil boom in the Great Plains states is affecting refineries, ports and other businesses in Washington.

Oil trains are delivering crude to refineries in the state as Alaska's production falls. And there are proposals to export oil from the Port of Grays Harbor to West Coast refineries and possibly Asia.

A 103-car oil train that arrived from North Dakota last week was the first of what's expected to be weekly trains at a new $8 million rail yard at the U.S. Oil refinery in Tacoma.

Trains also are delivering oil from North Dakota and Montana to the Tesoro refinery near Anacortes, which recently completed a $55 million rail yard. BP has applied for permits for a $60 million rail yard at its Cherry Point refinery north of Bellingham.


The refineries still process crude oil from Alaska and other sources. The Tesoro refinery has the capacity to receive 50,000 barrels of crude oil a day by rail, but its total capacity is 120,000 barrels a day.

The BP refinery would receive about 20,000 barrels a day by rail, less than a tenth of its 234,000 barrel capacity.

"So North Slope and other crudes shipped by tanker will remain its primary source of oil," BP said in a statement.

U.S. Oil spokeswoman Marcia Nielsen said it's shifting some of its feedstock procurement to the Great Plains because of better availability and price.

Shipping oil on a 1,200-mile "pipeline with steel wheels" adds to the cost, but it would take years to build new pipelines and pumping stations.

Meanwhile, The Daily World in Aberdeen reported Monday that two companies want to export crude oil from the Port of Grays Harbor on the Washington coast.

Westway Terminals plans to build two more tanks at the port where it already exports methanol. Its permit application to the city of Hoquiam said it could handle near 10 million barrels a year, or about 128 trains a year.

Another company, US Development, is looking at the port's Terminal 3 to load oil from trains onto ships.

Both proposals have drawn opposition from citizen groups that were formed to oppose a coal export terminal.

Friends of Grays Harbor and Citizens for a Clean Harbor are concerned about the risk of spills and the impact of train traffic.

The Port of Tacoma also has received proposals for a bulk liquids handling facility on the former Kaiser aluminum smelter site on Blair Waterway.

Port spokeswoman Tara Mattina said she could not discuss proposals because of ongoing negotiations.

The new oil fields are affecting the Northwest in other ways.

The biggest beneficiary is Burlington Northern Santa Fe, which owns most of the rail lines across the northern United States between Puget Sound and Chicago.

The Port of Olympia has found new business importing oil field supplies, including special sand used in the hydraulic fracturing drilling process. The Bradken foundry in Tacoma is expanding to make large metal castings used in the energy industry.
 
Oldtimer said:
Continental Resources Completes Test Well, Boosts Bakken Estimate


December 4, 2012




Continental Resources Inc. (NYSE: CLR) successfully completed the initial test well in the third bench of the Three Forks zone in the Bakken field, the company announced from its headquarters in Oklahoma City, Okla.

Continental now estimates the field has 903 billion barrels of original oil in place, a 57 percent increase from an estimate of 577 billion barrels of original oil in place that was made in 2010.

The test well, Charlotte 3-22H, flowed 953 barrels of oil equivalent per day at 1700 psi on a 28/64 choke in ...

so why is gas still $3.50 a gallon?
 
Steve said:
Oldtimer said:
Continental Resources Completes Test Well, Boosts Bakken Estimate


December 4, 2012




Continental Resources Inc. (NYSE: CLR) successfully completed the initial test well in the third bench of the Three Forks zone in the Bakken field, the company announced from its headquarters in Oklahoma City, Okla.

Continental now estimates the field has 903 billion barrels of original oil in place, a 57 percent increase from an estimate of 577 billion barrels of original oil in place that was made in 2010.

The test well, Charlotte 3-22H, flowed 953 barrels of oil equivalent per day at 1700 psi on a 28/64 choke in ...

so why is gas still $3.50 a gallon?

I think much of it is because the infrastructure to obtain, transport, and refine that which they know is there is not yet available...Not enough correct type of drills- pipelines/train lines- and mainly because there are not enough new refineries....The logistics to handle much of this find are not yet in place....

The industry testified in the hearings that they have been reluctant to invest full speed until the government has a long term (10-85 years) energy policy on the books...And that has been an impossibility with the current dysfunctional Congress...
 
Oldtimer said:
Steve said:

so why is gas still $3.50 a gallon?

I think much of it is because the infrastructure to obtain, transport, and refine that which they know is there is not yet available...Not enough correct type of drills- pipelines/train lines- and mainly because there are not enough new refineries....The logistics to handle much of this find are not yet in place....

The industry testified in the hearings that they have been reluctant to invest full speed until the government has a long term (10-85 years) energy policy on the books...And that has been an impossibility with the current dysfunctional Congress...
and when is the last time that happened oldtimer? 86 years ago?
 
Lonecowboy said:
Oldtimer said:
Steve said:
so why is gas still $3.50 a gallon?

I think much of it is because the infrastructure to obtain, transport, and refine that which they know is there is not yet available...Not enough correct type of drills- pipelines/train lines- and mainly because there are not enough new refineries....The logistics to handle much of this find are not yet in place....

The industry testified in the hearings that they have been reluctant to invest full speed until the government has a long term (10-85 years) energy policy on the books...And that has been an impossibility with the current dysfunctional Congress...
and when is the last time that happened oldtimer? 86 years ago?

Not sure- I remember Carter trying to get one thru- failed--- and as the testimony sounded like no one since then has either tried or succeeded...
 
to blame this on congress is beyond stupid .. delusional?

why build more refinerie when we just closed a bunch of refineries

How much has the Obama energy department invested in failed green energy compared to natural gas or our oil infrastructure?
 
Steve said:
to blame this on congress is beyond stupid .. delusional?

why build more refinerie when we just closed a bunch of refineries

How much has the Obama energy department invested in failed green energy compared to natural gas or our oil infrastructure?

So are you saying that if the government and (without proper government direction ) the court driven EPA appear to be moving more to green and replaceable energy- that you as tycoon oil man are still going to invest your dollars into oil/natural gas infrastructure?

That uncertainty of where the country- the government- and especially the EPA which operates thru the courts- is what all the energy officials said is holding back any long term major investment in any forms of energy....


The next Congress, President and Courts could be much worse than what we have now.... Repubs found that out when they didn't reign in GW when he set precedents with mandates and signing statements-- so now since the precedent exists- all they can do is whine when Obama does the same...
 

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