blogwriter's blog

21st April 2011

Fayetteville Shale is Booming

Posted by blogwriter

Southwestern Energy Company discovered the economic viability of the Fayetteville Shale and was the first company to drill and successfully produce its natural gas. At December 31, 2010, Southwestern held leases for approximately 915,884 net acres in the Fayetteville Shale play area (367,206 net undeveloped acres, 423,692 net developed acres held by Fayetteville Shale production, 123,442 net developed acres held by conventional production and an additional 1,544 net undeveloped acres in the traditional Fairway). Read more »

20th April 2011

Oil Rises Above $110 per Barrel

Posted by blogwriter

Oil is climbing above $110 per barrel as the dollar weakened and the government reported an unexpected drop in U.S. crude supplies.

Benchmark West Texas Intermediate oil for June delivery gained $1.89 at $110.16 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Meanwhile, retail gasoline prices increased slightly to $3.84 per gallon.

Oil rose early in the day as the dollar dropped relative to other major currencies and made crude cheaper for investors holding foreign currency. Read more »

20th April 2011

Drilling up From 2010

Posted by blogwriter

US oil and gas drilling in this year’s first quarter climbed 29% from a year earlier but remained below the first-quarter 2009 level, the American Petroleum Institute said in its latest quarterly well completion report.

An estimated 10,431 oil wells, natural gas wells, and dry holes were completed in the first quarter of this year, down almost 8% from first-quarter 2009, API said. Read more »

18th April 2011

Oil Falls Two Dollars

Posted by blogwriter

Oil prices fell more than $2 a barrel on Monday April 18, 2011 to under $122 a barrel after OPEC ministers said high oil prices could place a major strain on consumer countries, and S&P revised its U.S. outlook to negative.

Leading OPEC member Saudi Arabia on Sunday confirmed it had cut output by more than 800,000 barrels per day (bpd) in March because of weak demand. Read more »