Research and Markets: Niobrara Shale in the US, 2012 – Oil Shale Market Analysis and Forecasts to 2020 (Sunherald)

From: SunHerald 

Research and Markets(http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/15c65679/niobrara_shale_in) has announced the addition of GlobalData ‘s new report “Niobrara Shale in the US, 2012 – Oil Shale Market Analysis and Forecasts to 2020” to their offering.

Niobrara Shale in the US, 2012 – Oil Shale Market Analysis and Forecasts to 2020 is the latest report from the industry analysis specialist GlobalData to provide insight into oil and gas exploration, production, and development in the Niobrara shale play. The report highlights the oil and gas exploration potential of the Niobrara shale play, providing details of the key exploration areas and major exploration companies in the US. The report also provides an understanding of the essential parameters for leasing in Colorado and Wyoming states.

Oil shale, tar sands meeting disappoints both sides

Energy • BLM says gathering was meant to be informational, not for public comments.

By Brandon Loomis

The Salt Lake Tribune

Oil shale and tar sands mines were the threats some came to protest at a U.S. Bureau of Land Management meeting on the Utah resource potential.

For others, it was the agency itself, and what they saw as an overly restrictive approach to developing energy on public lands.

People on both sides were disappointed in a forum not designed for them to speak openly — instead it sought to inform comments that they could submit later — and with a Grand America Hotel meeting room that was too small for the 100-plus participants to move freely.

Gauging the Prospects of a U. S. Oil Shale Industry (Rand)

From: Rand

Since the early 1980s, oil shale — sedimentary rock that contains solid bituminous materials that are released as petroleum-like liquids when the rock is heated — has not been on the U.S. energy policy agenda. But with oil prices hovering above $60 per barrel and the demand for oil continuing to grow, interest in oil shale is also growing. In particular, oil shale is explicitly addressed in the Energy Policy Act of 2005. But the prospects for a viable oil shale industry are unclear; what knowledge we have is based on assessments that are clearly dated.

Public meetings begin on federal oil shale plan (CBS)

From: CBS

SILT, Colo. — The federal government is holding the first of several public meetings on plans for oil shale development on public lands that would keep activity off thousands of acres of environmentally sensitive areas in three Western states.

Under the proposal, new leases initially would be issued strictly for research on how to commercially produce oil from oil shale in Utah, Wyoming and Colorado.

The first meeting is being held Monday in Silt to discuss the environmental impact and the different options that have been announced.

Uintah County takes lead in public land use

From: Vernal Express

The Uintah County Commission voted unanimously last week to create a countywide Energy Zone and develop plans for oil shale and oil sands extraction.

“We are updating (the county’s) general plan and upon approval will simultaneously be combined in the state legislature with Energy Zones to be discussed elsewhere in Utah,” said Mike McKee, county commissioner.

The vote added two general plan amendments, both intended to maximize efficient energy development in the county.

The Energy Zone overlaps township and range boundaries from south of the Green River to the Grand County line and east to west from the Colorado state line to Duchesne County.

Shell beginning first project on federal shale R&D lease

From: The Daily Sentinal (Grand Junction, CO)

By Dennis Webb

Shell has broken ground on the first project on any of its three federal oil shale research and development leases, a company representative said today.

Carolyn Tucker told the Northwest Colorado Oil and Gas Forum in Rifle that the company continues to make “significant progress” on its oil shale project, which until now has occurred only on Shell land. She said she wanted to provide the update partly in light of Chevron’s announcement a few days ago that it is divesting itself of its oil shale R&D lease in Colorado. Chevron said it wanted to focus on other priorities.

Big Oil Heads Back Home (Wall Street Journal)

From: The Wall Street Journal
By GUY CHAZAN

Big Oil is redrawing the energy map.

For decades, its main stomping grounds were in the developing world—exotic locales like the Persian Gulf and the desert sands of North Africa, the Niger Delta and the Caspian Sea. But in recent years, that geographical focus has undergone a radical change. Western energy giants are increasingly hunting for supplies in rich, developed countries—a shift that could have profound implications for the industry, global politics and consumers.

Jordan – the timely necessity of exploiting shale oil (Industrial Fuels and Power)

From: Industrial Fuels and Power

By: 

 

Power is the lifeblood on any modern nation and Jordan has suffered more than a few disruptions of the natural gas that has been its fuel of choice for its power stations. The kingdom has relied heavily on natural gas via the Sinai pipeline from Egypt that also supplies Israel. Jordan currently imports around 98% of its energy needs with around 80% flowing through the Sinai Peninsula gas pipeline. Or rather 80% of Jordan’s natural gas would be flowing through the desert to its power stations if the pipeline stayed open long enough.

Shale gas, tight oil, oil sands – welcome to the new game

From: Alberta Oil

BY DARREN CAMPBELL

 

Dan Allan is bullish when asked about the impact unconventional oil and gas will have on the Canadian and North American supply picture. “I don’t see any indication that the train is going to stop,” says the chairman of the Canadian Society for Unconventional Resources (CSUR). “Unconventional will become conventional and it will be the dominant force for the foreseeable future.”

Lamborn oil-shale bill a political move, critics charge

From: The Gazette (Colorado Springs)

November 23, 2011 5:15 PM

THE GAZETTE

As part of the national Republican agenda to create jobs and stir the economy, Congressman Doug Lamborn introduced a bill on Nov. 14 to open up more Western land for oil shale development. But critics say oil shale is miles away from being useful as an energy source, and that the bill is a calculated political move.

Oil shale is a natural resource found in abundance throughout the West, equaling as much as 2 trillion barrels of oil, according to the Bureau of Land Management.