274 comments on A Credible Threat?
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GAIA Host Collective
i guess also a)
definitely not c)
You were just a little bit too slow. The Oil CEO is quick.
Welcome back, your graphs were your ticket back
Welcome back, to the same old site that you laughed about
Well the names have all changed since you hung around
But those dreams have remained and they're turned around
Who'd have thought they'd lead ya (Who'd have thought they'd lead ya)
Here where we need ya (Here where we need ya)
Yeah we tease him a lot cause we've got him on the spot, welcome back,
Welcome back, welcome back, welcome back.
Truly, welcome back Stuart.
Just happened to be looking at North Sea rig count yesterday - was more than surprised at what this showed:
Good question.
- Are they being retired for age, rust, safety reasons, and unsuitability for ultra-deep exploration?
- Or are they being moved to the Mideast to help ramp up E&P there?
- Or are they just being mothballed for lack of any decent drilling propects at $60-75/barrel--Yikes!
Bob Shaw in Phx,Az Are Humans Smarter than Yeast?All the North Sea rigs are either semi-subs or jack ups - i.e. highly mobile. During down times, they get stacked up in an area called the Morray Firth - just north of where I stay - and go rusty. Then during boom times they come out of retirement. What seems to have happened during this "mega-boom" is that rigs have come out of retirement and been moved else where (I'd guess Africa). Simple case of companies drilling where exploration and production prospects are best.
I'll be writing a bit more on this next week.
Hard to sleep when the World appears to be going to Hell. It is 4am here, but I am kinda of a night owl anyways, but heading for some shuteye shortly. Looking forward to your future post.
Bob Shaw in Phx,Az Are Humans Smarter than Yeast?
Also: Entry level costs are higher, safety compliances, new kit, zero emissions / spillage compliance etc means that if you loose two rigs, only one may come back.
It has been the same throughout each boom - bust cycle since 1986. After each bust, fewer rigs in operation.
Swings and roundabouts
But the general trend has been down for a few years now.
But, the high rig rates may now offset the high entry costs.
Trouble is, high rates can mean fewer wells per Exploration budget.
We will see.
Stuart and I go way back. Way back before all of you.
I'll say what I want. I made my choice. 666.
MicroHydro's boring.