My hardback copy for $28.99 arrives tomorrow. Thanks a lot Grumble for picking the non paperback book.
Ha, whoops.My hardback copy for $28.99 arrives tomorrow. Thanks a lot Grumble for picking the non paperback book.
Ha, whoops.My hardback copy for $28.99 arrives tomorrow. Thanks a lot Grumble for picking the non paperback book.
OK, we'll push it another week. Of the handful of people doing this, most haven't finished the book.
My hardback copy for $28.99 arrives tomorrow. Thanks a lot Grumble for picking the non paperback book.
My hardback copy for $28.99 arrives tomorrow. Thanks a lot Grumble for picking the non paperback book.
Lol...Amazon just dropped my hardback off a couple hours ago. I’ve got some catching up to do.
My hardback copy for $28.99 arrives tomorrow. Thanks a lot Grumble for picking the non paperback book.
Lol...Amazon just dropped my hardback off a couple hours ago. I’ve got some catching up to do.
I just got mine off the front porch.
My hardback copy for $28.99 arrives tomorrow. Thanks a lot Grumble for picking the non paperback book.
Lol...Amazon just dropped my hardback off a couple hours ago. I’ve got some catching up to do.
I just got mine off the front porch.
Who's porch?

One of my beard's beast friends has colon cancer, and she ordered this masterpiece for her as a gag gift. Remember, this is "The Trilogy," so it's three books bound into one.
It's like 40 pages. Total. I've seen bigger instruction manuals for computer motherboards.
I'll cut to the chase: If this isn't next month's HCH book club book, I'm gone, just gone.
View attachment 38525
Book delivered. Gonna need a week or two to get through it.
1. The US shale gas & oil revolution.[/b]
Obviously this one of main thrusts of the book, and one of my big takeaways. I consider myself decently well-read about US news at the topline. I cannot recall reading much if anything about this separate from a partisan view. Plenty of "shale gas will poison water" or "greens are trying to kill jobs." Not much about how impactful this was domestically and internationally. This was a huge eye-opener.
A close corollary to this point, eye-opening reading just how good[/i] the US economy was pre-Vid. Wow, just wow.
Question for my oil & gas guysm: The book makes mention of the short-cycle nature of fracking wells, versus the long-cycle of conventional wells like in Middle East or South America. Out of the scope of the book is the pros and cons of that. Anyone care to expound?
Another related anecdote from the: In 2015 (I think? maybe earlier), Venezuela proposed in an OPEC meeting to push propaganda in the US about the environmental horrors of fracking. Fuck those guys.
Refining guy, so oil and gas adjacent, I guess. My insight into your question comes from both what we see coming into our plant, the difficulties in running it, and also anecdotal insight from my brother in law.
1.) You are correct that the Dakota shale gas is way too light to run at a high percentage of crude diet. We call it "black IPA" because it's basically naphtha with some black dye added. The "environmentalists" are not wrong in that shipping that shit by rail across the country with our current rail infrastructure (a lot of single-wall cars, for example) is incredibly irresponsible and dangerous. We're rolling giant bombs around the country on old, rickety rail infrastructure. The only other crude I've seen that's in the same ballpark as bakken shale is that Russian Vityaz shit. In both cases, it's basically crude in, naphtha out.
Interestingly, though, refineries all over are reconfiguring to handle lighter crude diets. We did so in 2017, with a pretty massive capital project. We can run WAY lighter than we used to be able to. Mostly, though, this is to be able to run lighter Canadian pipeline crudes that we get on the relative cheap. Huge moneymaker. We only run domestic shale if it's at a price we can't refuse, as it's still pretty difficult to run. Which leads to...
2.) Yes, I can totally see that fracking wells are more susceptible to price fluctuations than traditional, large wells. For starters, they're just more expensive to operate. I mentioned ERoEI in another thread. Fracking wells are much lower ERoEI than traditional wells. When margins are lower, it's really boom or bust. Another example of this that I've experienced is Alberta tar sands crude (wanna talk about an ecological disaster...). When oil peaked at over $140 per barrel in 2008 or so, tar sands crude was all the rage, and we were running (PAINFULLY) as much of it as we could. Again, though, I believe this peaked at our plant at something like 17% of diet, as this shit gave us trouble in exactly the opposite direction: all bottoms. When crude is $140 per, and you can get tar sand crude for $90, it's a no-brainer. Then oil drops to normal price. Funny, we don't see much Albian heavy in the diet anymore. I've often wondered how they're doing up there.
3.) The second anecdotal evidence I have to support the boom or bust theory for fracking wells is the actual boom and bust that my brother in law experienced in North Dakota. He followed the black gold rush over there, worked a pressure testing rig for a while, then borrowed some money and started his own pressure testing business. At his peak, he was rolling five rigs and was killing it, then the Saudis opened the faucet and his business went TU. After selling all of his equipment at a decent discount, he was able to pay off all of his creditors and get out with low six figures to show for his five years over there. Sad story.
At this point, I can't even remember what question I'm supposed to be answering here, so I'm just going to leave it at this.