শুক্রবার, ৯ নভেম্বর, ২০১২

US Shale Gas Supplies won't Last Ten Years: An Interview with Bill ...

The shale gas "miracle" is overhyped and bound to disappoint. That's what energy expert Bill Powers argues in his upcoming book. But Powers tells The Energy Report that this could be a very good thing for oil and gas companies and their shareholders, and he is placing his bets accordingly.

The Energy Report: Bill, you have a new book coming out next spring entitled "Cold, Hungry and in the Dark: Exploding the Natural Gas Supply Myth." What is your basic argument?

Bill Powers: My thesis is that the importance of shale gas has been grossly overstated; the U.S. has nowhere close to a 100-year supply. This myth has been perpetuated by self-interested industry, media and politicians. Their mantra is that exploiting shale gas resources will promote untold economic growth, new jobs and lead us toward energy independence.

In the book, I take a very hard look at the facts. And I conclude that the U.S. has between a five- to seven-year supply of shale gas, and not 100 years. That is far lower than the rosy estimates put out by the U.S. Energy Information Administration and others. In the real world, many companies are taking write-downs of their reserves.

Importantly, I give examples of how certain people and institutions are promoting the shale gas myth even as they benefit from it economically. This book will change a lot of opinions about how large the shale gas resources really are in the U.S. and around the planet.

TER: How did you obtain your information?

BP: I spent three years doggedly researching this book. Most of the information came from publicly available sources. I used a fair amount of work done by Art Berman, who has written the forward for the book. Art is a leading expert on determining the productivity of shale gas plays. I contacted a lot of other geologists and petroleum engineering professionals and had them review my conclusions about declining production.

Put simply: There is production decline in the Haynesville and Barnett shales. Output is declining in the Woodford Shale in Oklahoma. Some of the older shale plays, such as the Fayetteville Shale, are starting to roll over. As these shale plays reverse direction and the Marcellus Shale slows down its production growth, overall U.S. production will fall. At the same time, Canadian production is falling. And Canada has historically been the main natural gas import source for the U.S. In fact, Canada has already experienced a significant decline in gas production?about 25%, since a peak in 2002?and has dramatically slowed its exports to the United States.

TER: What does this mean for investors?

BP: The decline is a set-up for a gas crisis, a supply crunch that will lead to much higher prices similar to what we saw in the 1970s.

Interestingly, during the lead-up to that crisis, the gas industry mounted a significant advertising campaign trumpeting the theme, "There's plenty of gas!" Now, it is true that there was a huge ramp-up for gas during the post-World War II period that lasted through the late 1960s as demand for gas for the U.S. manufacturing base grew rapidly. But we hit a production peak in the early 1970s during a time of rapidly growing demand. This led to a huge spike in prices that lasted until 1984.

It was very difficult to destroy demand, so the crisis was resolved by building hundreds of coal-fired power plants and dozens of nuclear power plants. But today, gas-fired plants are popular as we try to turn away from coal. This time around, those options are no longer available. Nuclear plants are still an option, but the time and money involved in keeping our aging nuclear power plant fleet operational, let alone building new plants, will be quite significant.

TER: How will the contraction of the natural gas supply affect its price?

BP: We will see a new equilibrium price for gas at much higher levels than the present. I vehemently disagree with industry observers who say that the U.S. is the next big exporter of liquefied natural gas (LNG). I believe that the U.S. will soon be increasing LNG imports, and that U.S. prices will move back to world levels.

We are currently seeing between $13 per thousand cubic feet (Mcf) and $15/Mcf in South America as Brazil and Argentina import LNG. We're seeing $17/Mcf in Japan and similar prices in Korea. The only place that is not increasing its LNG imports right now is Europe, and that is being made up for by increasing demand in Asia.

TER: How will a contracting supply affect the prospects of companies that are exploring and developing gas fields in North America today?

BP: The companies that can find new reserves of oil and gas will enter a golden era as prices skyrocket. There has been a lot of consolidation in the industry over the last five years. In Canada, very few juniors have started up since 2007. This is the fifth anniversary of the Halloween Massacre, when the Canadian government changed the laws regarding trusts, which really shrank the amount of capital going into junior companies.

The bigger North American companies are consolidating, because it is harder to acquire prospective land. Plus, the cost of drilling wells has gone up. But juniors that can find new reserves and that can increase production per share and cash-flow per share will have a wonderful rise over the next three to five years. Companies are helped by the upward trend of ever-higher oil prices and we will soon see much higher gas prices. And remember, all of this is happening at a time of historically low interest rates. So companies that can get to critical size and borrow money at today's low rates have a chance to deploy that capital into some very high-return projects. Good companies are trading at historically low multiples of cash flow or multiples of NAV (net asset value). So there are some great values out there that really make the energy sector attractive.

TER: What names do you like in the shale oil and gas space?

BP: Among larger U.S. companies, I like a $7 billion ($7B) company called Denbury Resources Inc. (DNR:NYSE). It is the second-largest producer of carbon dioxide (CO2)-flooded oil?or enhanced oil recovery using CO2. Denbury just sold its Bakken assets to Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM:NYSE) for $1.5 billion (B). It has a very, very large resource base and growing production from its CO2 fields. It is very well managed and well capitalized.

Oil sands producers will benefit, such as MEG Energy (MEG:TSX), which is ramping up production. There has not been a lot of interest in the oil sands over the last couple of years because of the price differential between what the oil sands producers are getting and the higher price of WTI or Brent. But the differential has started to narrow during the last few weeks, and that is really going to benefit oil sands firms.

Another company that is very well positioned in the process of splitting itself apart is Petrobank Energy & Resources Ltd. (PBG:TSX). It is divesting ownership of its Petro Bakken assets to shareholders. Petro Bakken has a very unique set of assets. Even though it has had operational issues over the last couple of years, it will still be producing over 50,000 barrels a day going into year-end. It also pays a very substantial dividend, so investors in that company are getting paid to wait.

On the gas side, Advantage Oil and Gas Ltd. (AAV:NYSE; AAV:TSX) is very well managed and has a fine asset base. It is a very low-cost producer, and has a lot of room to grow profitably in a higher gas price environment?which is where we are headed.

PetroQuest Energy Inc. (PQ:NYSE) has good assets in the Mississippi Lime and significant offshore assets with high-production wells. Management has done a good job during a period of low gas prices by bringing in partners and hedging their risks. The company has kept its balance sheet intact and is well positioned to take advantage of a turn in gas prices.

TER: Does your analysis about the looming contraction in the supply of shale gas apply to shale oil?

BP: Shale oil is a significant resource, of course, but it is not a "game changer." It is in the same category with shale gas. The Bakken is a very material resource and it will provide decades of production. However, Bakken production has peaked in Saskatchewan. It has peaked in Montana. It is approaching its peak in North Dakota. This does not mean that we are running out of drilling locations, or that production is going to fall off a cliff tomorrow. However, I expect production to plateau before long. Something similar is happening in the Eagle Ford in Texas. A lot of the wells there have extremely high decline rates and production may be hitting a plateau. In the overall context of the United States, we see a continuous decline in the Gulf of Mexico and California. There is significant decline in Alaska. Those producers are struggling to keep up the flow through the Alyeska pipeline without having to do a major retrofit of the pipeline to put in more pumps due to the low throughput pressure. We are seeing a decline in California of about 15,000 barrels every year. The overall increase in oil production in the U.S. in the last few years has been wonderful, but many oil fields are getting long in the tooth, and I would expect a plateau to soon emerge.

TER: Will decline spur investment in alternative energy sources?

BP: Yes, absolutely. Electricity prices are often set by the highest-cost producer. Until recently, those electricity producers used natural gas as their feedstock. Low natural gas prices have depressed electricity prices in some areas. This makes the economics of a lot of alternative energy projects very difficult. But as gas prices rise, electricity prices will also rise. This will make solar and wind projects more viable. For example, in California, electricity prices rose significantly over the last decade despite falling gas prices. But as the efficiency of solar panels has improved, solar costs have declined and reached grid parity. Residential solar makes a lot of sense in California. And as solar efficiencies continue to improve, costs will continue to fall.

TER: Let's talk about shifting patterns of supply and demand for natural gas around the world. How will this impact the North American producers?

BP: Let's start by looking at Trinidad and Tobago, which supplies the United States with 50% of its LNG imports. The country has taken huge write-down of its gas reserves. Production declined in 2011 and will likely decline again in 2012. The country has only nine years of proven reserves left. Trinidad and Tobago needs to find new sources of gas to feed the very large fertilizer plants operating on the island and maintain exports.

Another example of declining gas exports is Indonesia. Historically, Indonesia has been the largest exporter of LNG in Asia. In 2006, the Indonesian government changed the law to focus more on internal consumption and to create jobs for 200 million (200M) people. It cut down on LNG exports beginning in 2007. I expect that trend to continue as the country switches from being an oil exporter to an oil importer.

In the Middle East, the United Arab Emirates was an exporter of LNG for decades; it is now an importer. Dubai imports LNG. Fujairah will soon become an importer. Kuwait now imports LNG. Oman has reduced exports to focus on building its steel industry. The trend of decline is happening everywhere. I discuss this quite a bit in my book.

TER: Do you think that international markets pay enough attention to finding and developing new oil and gas resources?

BP: It's a very difficult thing to explore as the world becomes more and more resource mature and resource nationalism rises. It is very difficult to explore off the coast of Nigeria or in Russia or in Iraq, where the political situation is very unstable. Fifteen years ago, Exxon Mobil was divesting its onshore U.S. assets. Now, Statoil ASA (STO:NYSE; STL:OSE) has come to the United States in a significant way for the Bakken. BHP Billiton Ltd. (BHP:NYSE; BHPLF:OTCPK) is buying into the shale gas and shale oil business in the United States. Frankly, onshore in North America is not the easiest place to operate. But there are not a lot of other options available right now.

TER: What are the likely impacts in industrial and residential demand in oil and gas prices for North America during the next decade or so?

BP: Efficiency will improve. The U.S. has already dropped its demand for oil by about 2M barrels from its peak in 2007. Part of this was due to the recession; part of it is due to an increase in the miles-per-gallon standard. The trend will continue as it becomes more and more unaffordable for people to drive cars.

And we will see efficiencies in the structure of the electricity grid. The U.S. currently wastes around two-thirds of the consumable electricity that goes into the power grid through line loss. I envision a trend toward distributed energy production. People will put solar panels on their rooftops and sell sun power to their neighbors. The big utilities are fighting this tooth and nail in California. But there is a movement toward electricity co-ops. As electricity becomes more expensive, people will find other ways to conserve. Demand will increase for residential geothermal heating and cooling; the economics of geothermal home heating and cooling systems have improved drastically in the last 20 years, and it continues to get better. We will also see the emergence of an electric car industry. It's had a rocky start, but it will move forward as gas prices in the U.S. go north of $5 per gallon.

TER: How much weight do you suggest that investors put on gas shares in their portfolios?

BP: It depends upon the individual investor's profile. Everybody is different. But there are some great gas companies that are fairly cheap. Ultra Petroleum Corp. (UPL:NYSE) is a very inexpensive well run, low-cost producer. The bottom line is that investing in things that are out of style at the moment are often the greatest investments.

TER: It's been a very interesting talk, Bill, thank you.

BP: You are quite welcome.

By. Peter Byrne of The Energy Report

Bill Powers is the editor of Powers Energy Investor and is also the author of the upcoming book "Cold, Hungry and in the Dark: Exploding the Natural Gas Supply Myth." Powers has devoted the last 15 years to studying and analyzing the energy sector, driven by his desire to uncover unrecognized trends in the industry and identify outstanding opportunities for retail and institutional investors.

Source: http://oilprice.com/Finance/investing-and-trading-reports/US-Shale-Gas-Supplies-wont-Last-Ten-Years-An-Interview-with-Bill-Powers.html

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ৮ নভেম্বর, ২০১২

How to Become a Programmer - Computers, Math, Science, and ...

Hey! As a newbie, I don't know if I'm posting in the completely wrong forum, please correct me if I am.

I'm an NT lab assistant for my university's computer science department. I've become friends with an aspie learning Java who, unfortunately, has a reputation among the lab assistants for being highly dependent on our help. The prof's at a loss, and I've sort of taken up the task of figuring out how to help him pass the class.

What I really, really need to hear from other brilliant aspies is how you learned to program, particularly the abstractness of it all. He claims that he himself is a computer that must be programmed; he can only reproduce what he has seen before and cannot problem-solve. If a lab assistant tells him how to solve a problem or exercise, or gives him an algorithm, he can hack it out?right now this also takes a lot of help, but I think he could get to the point where the syntax and coding was simple. He just can't get his mind around translating logic to code, or writing one method that applies to all situations instead of just a sample situation. The result is that without a lab assistant feeding him the logic bit by bit, he's incapable of writing a program.

Java and all object-oriented programming is founded in abstraction and reusability. From what I understand, this is exactly what challenges aspies; and yet Google, IBM, Intel, etc. are overridden with aspies. Clearly I'm missing something magical. Please help!!!!!!! Smile

Source: http://www.wrongplanet.net/postt214733.html

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Nicki Minaj To Appear On Ciara's 'One Woman Army': Morning Mix ...

Did You Hear?

:: Nicki Minaj?s Roman Reloaded ? The Re-Up features a Ciara guest spot on new track ?I?m Legit,? and now Ciara is returning the favor. Minaj will appear on Ciara?s forthcoming album One Woman Army. We?re sure they?ll make a great two-woman army. [MTV]

:: Michael Jackson?s brother Jermaine has filed legal papers to change his last name to Jacksun for ?artistic reasons.? This would be strange?if he hadn?t already named one of his children Jermajesty. [WENN]

:: Think you?re done exercising your civic duty? Not so fast! Brandy has posted a Facebook poll for fans to choose her next?Two Eleven single. Hurry up and vote before the polls close! [Facebook]

:: Sadly, the death toll from Hurricane Sandy has reached 110 in the US, and one of the casualties was?Cyndi Lauper?s 90-year-old uncle George Stathis from Queens, NY. Lauper performed at the Lenox Hill Hospital?s Autumn Ball, which raised over $2 million for Sandy victims, and dedicated her classic ?Time After Time? to her late uncle. [Spinner]

After the jump, find out which music acts you can find on the tube today.

Music on TV:

:: Late Show with David Letterman (CBS) ? Lianne La Havas
:: Tonight Show with Jay Leno (NBC) ? Lord Huron
:: Jimmy Kimmel Live (ABC) ? Tyler Bryant and the Shakedown
:: Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson (CBS) ? LL Cool J
:: Late Night with Jimmy Fallon (NBC) ? Carrie Underwood
:: Last Call with Carson Daly (NBC) ? Grimes, RZA
:: Conan (TBS) ? Brandi Carlile
:: Ellen DeGeneres Show (syndicated) ? Miley Cyrus

Source: http://idolator.com/7258422/nicki-minaj-ciara-one-woman-army-morning-mix

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Personal Desktop Computing may have More Resilience Against ...

If the value of cloud computing options will be diminished as the result of a natural disaster like Hurricane Sandy, then personal desktop computing will be more resilient than previously expected.

We think it makes sense to consider the latest cloud computing imperative, which we have characterized as largely driven by Enterprise IT ISVs, within an historical context. In the mid 1980s computing options included lots of reliance on ?time sharing? systems. In effect, these ?time shares? were precursors of today?s cloud computing, but with a twist. Of course, web browsers were not yet available, therefore, customers of these ?time shares? required terminals in order to access these services.

These terminals were, at the outset, actual hardware devices built to connect to mainframe computers, or ?mini? computers over data communications protocols delivered over a modem session conducted over a dedicated, or shared, telephone line.

By the mid 1980s, these ?time sharing? systems had been around for at least 5 to 10 years. Despite the benefits they delivered ? including access for smaller businesses to the same quality software applications used by much larger peers ? there was, nevertheless, an emerging interest in ?personal? computing. ?Personal? computing promised to deliver a wide, and quite flexible, capability to customers to custom fit software applications to highly specific requirement with precisely the user interface required to ensure popularity and high rates of usage.

We don?t think that now, almost 20 years later, the situation has changed that much. In fact, as we see it, the misunderstood market place message is that cloud computing is capable of delivering an even more flexible, attractive user experience than would otherwise be the case with personal computers. How else would one interpret the attractiveness of a service like Facebook, which is really little more than homestead.com on ?steriods.?

It is worth taking a moment to look a bit deeper into the Facebook phenomenon. We think that one of the features that Facebook users really like is the promise of invisibility. After all, Facebook maintains a minimal, rather useless search feature. Therefore, Facebook pages can be built for a private audience of ?friends.? This privacy is, of course, great for users, but a highly detrimental feature for potential advertisers.

The bottom line, however, as we see it, is that this extensive flexibility purported to be only available through cloud computing options, is, in fact, a ruse. Cloud computing is designed to service multiple users, simultaneously. Therefore, cloud computing is little more than the 2012 version of ?time sharing.? True, hardware terminals have been replaced with web browsers, but the inevitable need for a highly custom, flexible, truly personal alternative in the form of a desktop or hand held device still exists.

? IMB Enterprises, Inc. & Ira Michael Blonder, 2012 All Rights Reserved

Source: http://www.imbenterprises.com/product-marketing/personal-desktop-computing-may-have-more-resilience-against-cloud-options-than-previously-expected/

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বুধবার, ৭ নভেম্বর, ২০১২

Moscow holds vintage military parade in Red Square (PHOTOS ...

Moscow celebrated the 71st anniversary of the legendary Soviet war parade today. The festivities had a historic twist: 6,000 people gathered to march in Moscow?s Red Square, dressed in both Napoleonic-era clothing and Red Army military uniforms.

?This year?s version of the annual parade paid tribute to the bicentenary of the Battle of Borodino. In a history-meets-vintage-fashion display, the march spotlighted soldiers wearing uniforms from 1812, followed by a company of drummers and servicemembers dressed in the vintage uniform of 1941.

Wearing World War II-era uniform of the Red Army troops Russian soldiers take part in a military parade on the Red Square in Moscow on November 7, 2012 (AFP Photo / Natalia Kolesikova)
Wearing World War II-era uniform of the Red Army troops Russian soldiers take part in a military parade on the Red Square in Moscow on November 7, 2012 (AFP Photo / Natalia Kolesikova)

?Those who helped reenact the historic part of the parade included servicemembers from the Moscow garrison, the cavalry group of the Presidential Regiment and troops from the Interior Ministry.

Wearing World War II-era uniform of the Red Army troops Russian soldiers take part in a military parade on the Red Square in Moscow on November 7, 2012 (AFP Photo / Natalia Kolesikova)
Wearing World War II-era uniform of the Red Army troops Russian soldiers take part in a military parade on the Red Square in Moscow on November 7, 2012 (AFP Photo / Natalia Kolesikova)

?Military hardware dating back to 1941 was also in the limelight during the parade, including the legendary T-34 and amphibian T-38 tanks, also known as the T-60. The hardware was on public display in the square an hour after the march finished as a temporary open-air museum.

Wearing World War II-era uniform of the Red Army troops Russian soldiers take part in a military parade on the Red Square in Moscow on November 7, 2012 (AFP Photo / Natalia Kolesikova)
Wearing World War II-era uniform of the Red Army troops Russian soldiers take part in a military parade on the Red Square in Moscow on November 7, 2012 (AFP Photo / Natalia Kolesikova)

?The march also involved representatives from Moscow?s children?s movement, members of military-patriotic clubs, cadets of the Moscow military and the Defense Ministry?s military music schools, among others.

Wearing World War II-era uniform of the Red Army troops Russian soldiers ride in tachanka, a horse-drawn machine gun wagon, during a military parade on the Red Square in Moscow on November 7, 2012 (AFP Photo / Natalia Kolesikova)
Wearing World War II-era uniform of the Red Army troops Russian soldiers ride in tachanka, a horse-drawn machine gun wagon, during a military parade on the Red Square in Moscow on November 7, 2012 (AFP Photo / Natalia Kolesikova)

?The military parade played a special role during World War II, as it boosted troop morale and helped lift the nation?s spirits in the push towards victory.

Wearing World War II-era uniform of the Red Army troops Russian soldiers take part in a military parade on the Red Square in Moscow on November 7, 2012 (AFP Photo / Natalia Kolesikova)
Wearing World War II-era uniform of the Red Army troops Russian soldiers take part in a military parade on the Red Square in Moscow on November 7, 2012 (AFP Photo / Natalia Kolesikova)

?A number of WWII veterans were present as guests of honor at the march; some came to salute their grandsons and great-grandsons parading across Red Square during the red-letter day.

Children crowd around World War II-era Red Army tanks and military vehicles after a military parade on the Red Square in Moscow on November 7, 2012 (AFP Photo / Natalia Kolesikova)
Children crowd around World War II-era Red Army tanks and military vehicles after a military parade on the Red Square in Moscow on November 7, 2012 (AFP Photo / Natalia Kolesikova)

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Source: http://endthelie.com/2012/11/07/moscow-holds-vintage-military-parade-in-red-square-photos/

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Photos: Obama's victory in the headlines

A look at the news headlines, both print and online, that accompanied President Obama's victory over Mitt Romney and re-election on Nov. 6, 2012.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/photos/elections-obama-s-victory-in-the-headlines-1352279303-slideshow/

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Fire station land swap deal dead - Winnipeg Free Press

Winnipeg Free Press - ONLINE EDITION

The new station on Taylor Avenue.

Enlarge Image

The new station on Taylor Avenue. (COLE BREILAND / FREE PRESS ARCHIVES)

The Winnipeg Fire Paramedic Service?s proposed three-for-one land swap is effectively dead, as city council?s property committee has voted to negotiate the purchase of the Taylor Avenue land below fire-paramedic Station No. 12.

Couns. Jeff Browaty (North Kildonan) Russ Wyatt (Transcona), Grant Nordman (St. Charles) and Mike Pagtakhan (Point Douglas) voted this morning to instruct property officials to negotiate the purchase of Station No. 12 from Shindico Realty, which owns the land.

Winnipeg Fire Paramedic Chief Reid Douglas had negotiated a deal to exchange this land for the old Station No. 12 on Grosvenor Avenue, the soon-to-be-decommissioned Station No. 11 on Berry Street and a vacant parcel of city land on Mulvey Avenue East.

But widespread council and real-estate industry anger over the deal ? which had not been disclosed to council -- led the city to place the deal on hold and eventually order up a review of a the construction of four new fire-paramedic stations in Winnipeg. A broader audit of city real-estate transactions is also in the works.

The property committee vote does not require council approval. It calls for Shindico and the city to hire their own real estate appraiser to determine the value of Station No. 12. If both parties agree, the city will purchase the land at a midpoint between the two appraisals, provided they fall within 10 per cent of the higher appraised value. Council must approve the purchase.

If the difference is greater than 10 per cent, both parties will hire an independent, third-party appraiser to audit the two previous appraisals and then determine a binding value. Again, council must approve the final purchase.

Shindico officials have been asked to comment. If they do not agree to the purchase plan, the city may be forced to expropriate the land, Browaty and Wyatt said. Expropriations can take years, city real estate officials said.

The property committee also voted to declare the old Stations No. 11 and 12, as well as the Mulvey Avenue East land, surplus to the city?s needs. Pending council approval, the three properties will be sold and the proceeds will go to Winnipeg?s land operating reserve.

The original $15.3-million plan to build four new fire-paramedic stations called for proceeds from the No. 11 and 12 sales to offset the cost of the project. That cost is now pegged at $17.8 million.

On Wednesday, city council?s executive policy committee will be asked to approve $2.5 million in additional spending, most of which will cover cost overruns at the new Station No. 11 on Portage Avenue.

Source: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/breakingnews/Firestation-land-swap-deal-dead-177510811.html

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