May 25, 2013

*Big Oil* tosses coal under the bus in favor of profits

We all know one of the few promises Obama kept in his 2008 campaign was he would bankrupt coal. We’ve all heard his words, but they should be ingrained in our minds so here is the video once more:

We all know about all the new regs from the EPA which has caused many coal plants to shut down, three in my area alone. We know about all the new coal plants which were planned years ago but plans have been scrapped because of the cost. We know about all the layoffs in the coal industry. We know the United Mine Workers did not endorse Obama for re-election. We know about all the miners in southeast Ohio who rallied in support of Romney’s pro-coal stance. We know that Murray Coal just threw up their hands and closed a mine in Ohio. We know Mike Bloomberg gave $50 million out of his own pocket to the Sierra Club in an effort to “dump coal.”  This is just the tip of the iceberg.

And we know that Obama and the Dept. of Interior is after not only coal, but natural gas and oil in favor of failed wind and solar energy. We are frustrated because Interior after the Gulf BP spill shut down the majority of drilling in federal offshore areas. We watched Shell Oil struggle to get a permit for drilling in Alaska’s Beaufort Sea and never got started this year because of equipment failure.

We were elated that cap and trade was never passed. But just as ACORN has rebranded itself and is still out there like cockroaches hiding from the daylight, so has cap and trade “rebranded itself” into a proposed “carbon tax.” From Bloomberg:

A carbon tax would force electricity producers, refiners and manufacturers to pay a fee for the greenhouse gases they emit. It is gaining interest as lawmakers and President Barack Obama pledge to simplify the corporate tax code and raise revenue to narrow the deficit. The devastation from superstorm Sandy following the wildfires and drought of this summer have also increased concern about global warming.

And guess who some of the major players are who have signed on to this proposal? None other than RoyalDutchShell, ExxonMobil and BP. And why?

The most obvious reason why big oil and gas companies would support a huge new tax on their own products is that it would kill coal first. Burning coal emits roughly twice as much carbon dioxide as producing the same amount of energy by burning natural gas. A $20 a ton of CO2 tax would roughly double the current price of coal used for producing electricity. That would provide a huge incentive for utilities to switch to natural gas. Exxon Mobil owns the world’s largest privately-owned reserves of natural gas. Shell and BP also own huge gas reserves.

Shell has it’s HQ in the Hague, BP in the UK, but even though Exxon is headquartered in the U.S. most of it’s drilling is done internationally. And it might surprise you who the “leader” is in this international effort to impose a *carbon tax*: none other than Prince Charles, The Prince of Wales:

You can scroll through all the signatories on his site, one other major player is Norway’s StatOil, and of course all the environmentalists.

“The source hit hardest is coal,” David Kreutzer, a research fellow in energy economics at the Heritage Foundation in Washington who opposes the tax, said in an interview. “The biggest substitution for coal is going to be natural gas.”

Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) admits getting a carbon tax through Congress will be difficult, however we all know Obama’s propensity for back-door Executive Orders like amnesty and welfare DE-form.

So just like almost every other corporation, *Big Oil* is favoring “profits” over “principle.”

Crossposted at Unified Patriots and Grumpy Elder

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Dance with Chavez and you take your risk

Venezuela ChavezH/t Kenny Solomon who is watching out on the international front.

Looks like Chavez has recovered or is in remission cuz he is back to his old dictator self.

Many of the world’s most beautiful and luxurious destinations are in Third World countries or places who don’t like the U.S. very much. Do we want to go there? Yea, fate tempts us but reason should make us think twice cuz:

Chevron is dealing with an almost 20 year fight with socialism and a dictator in Ecuador. So are any of you guys surprised about this one? In Venezuela?

When you Dance with the Devil either one of two things will happen: you’ll make a lot of money and become immortal or you’ll get your eyebrows singed or worse. Such is the experience of ExxonMobil who has done business with the Devil in Venezuela whose name is Chavez. I won’t go into Chavez’ track record as a “Dictator for Life” but I am guessing that Exxon is ruing the day they did biz with him. Maybe not. Depends on how much they are paying the lawyers.

In a nutshell Exxon made a ton of money in Venezuela but then Chavez nationalized their oil project in 2007 along with a ton of others. Yea, Chavez offered to compensate ExxonMobil for their initial investment but then that is sort of like putting a lot of money in the stock market, earning a bunch and then having them say we won’t recognize your interest and dividends.

But so goes the way of banana republics. Just sayin’.

Yea, Chavez says he is gonna give the World Bank’s decision the bird on this:

I tell you now: we will not recognize any decision by ICSID, [International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes]” Chavez said during a televised speech. He has repeatedly accused the U.S. oil major of using unfair deals in the past to “rob” the South American OPEC member of its resources.They are immoral … How much could they steal in 50 years? Who would dare launch this madness without any foundation? They wanted $12 billion. From where, compadre?” he said.

I still want to go to Santa Margarita island one day. About 10 miles off the coast of Venezuela. One of the most beautiful islands in the world I am told. Yea, you can see it from Aruba on a clear day and you need a Venezuelan visa to go there.

Crossposted at Unified Patriots

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BOEMRE on the move, 4 new permits issued for drilling in the Gulf

Offshore oil rig

The Bureau of Ocean, Energy Management Regulation and Enforcement (BOEMRE) has recently approved four new drilling permits in the Gulf of Mexico since the Deep Water Horizon spill last April.

BOEMRE director Michael Bromwich announced Royal Dutch Shell has received approval of its proposal to drill three new exploratory wells using Noble Energy’s Jim Thompson rig. From Barrons:

This is significant, as the government had previously only approved plans that utilized wells that were already in operation or under construction before the moratorium on drilling, explains Citi analyst Robin Shoemaker.

After the completion of a site environmental assessment, this from the Department of the Interior website:

“The successful completion of this environmental assessment, and the resulting approval of Shell’s exploration plan, unmistakably demonstrates that oil and gas exploration can continue responsibly in deep water,” said BOEMRE Director Bromwich.

Houston-based ATP Oil and Gas has received  a permit to resume drilling the Mississippi Canyon Block 941 #4 well in the deep water of the Gulf of Mexico. This will be the first stationary deep water facility since permits began to be issued last month. This well, in 4,000 feet of water, in 2009 was successfully drilled to 12,000 feet.

ExxonMobil has also received permission for a new well, this will be in the Keathley Canyon Block about 240 miles off the Louisiana Coast in 7,000 feet of water.

ExxonMobil, Shell, Conoco/Phillips and Chevron were part of a coalition which pooled assets for a Marine Well Containment System unveiled back in February which would assist in containing any future spills in the Gulf.  BP has now also joined the group. The system is a “rapid-response” system which is highly superior to any previous for emergencies in the Gulf.

The first company to receive approval to resume drilling in the Gulf was Houston-based Noble Energy. Noble’s application was for a permit to bypass for Well No. 2 in Mississippi Canyon Block 519 about 70 miles southeast of Venice, La. It will be for resumption of drilling its Santiago well.

Interestingly enough, BP owns 46.5% of that well however Noble will be the operator.

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Four large oil companies announce new spill containment system

In the aftermath of the BP Gulf spill which happened last April, four oil industry giants today unveiled a new system for containing future spills in the Gulf.

Last July ExxonMobil, Shell, Chevron and Conoco/Phillips promised and has since pooled $1 billion in assets to form a new company called The Marine Well Containment Company which will be available for any company in its pool in the event of an emergency in the Gulf of Mexico. BP has now also joined the group.

The marine well containment system is an advanced, rapid-response system that will significantly exceed current U.S. Gulf of Mexico response capabilities.

Below is their press release:

Marine Well Containment Company Launches Interim Containment System

Of key note is:

The initial response system includes a subsea capping stack with the ability to shut in oil flow or to flow the oil via flexible pipes and risers to surface vessels . The system also includes subsea dispersant injection equipment, manifolds and, through mutual aid among members, capture vessels to provide surface processing and storage. The company has consulted with the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement (BOEMRE) to ensure the system is designed to meet the government’s requirements as outlined in NTL No. 2010-N10.

The new company has had months to perfect the new system said Exxon spokesman Alan Jeffers. Houston will be the base for the equipment which can be dispatched and sent to the spill location within 24 hours notice. This new system can respond to spills up to 8,000 ft. in depth [ABC says 10,000 ft, but the document above says 8,000 ft.] and will be able to process up to 60,000 barrels of liquid per day.

Any member company will have access to the equipment, those who are not members will need to have a service agreement and will be charged a fee. The management team was also announced today:

  • Marty Massey as chief executive officer. Formerly U.S. joint interest manager for ExxonMobil Production Company, Massey will lead the management team and operations of the Marine Well Containment Company, with headquarters in Houston.
  • Dan Smallwood, formerly operations manager of Gulf of Mexico and Louisiana for ConocoPhillips, has been named chief operating officer for the company.
  • Astley Blair, formerly division finance officer for Chevron Global Supply and Trading, has been appointed as chief financial officer.
  • Charles Miller, formerly vice president production, Shell Brazil Ltda., has been named chief technology officer.
  • Carmine Dulisse, formerly security and emergency preparedness and response manager, ExxonMobil Development Company, has been named health, safety, and environment officer.

One large company, BP slipped through the cracks. The Industry has been ‘responsible’ by responding to one company’s misguided safety culture with the most expensive well capping system on earth. Now, it is the regulator’s turn to be responsible and put the thousands waiting idly in the Gulf back to work.

More information can be found at Marine Well Containment.

Crossposted at Red State

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