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 Message Boards » » ANWR drilling stopped Page [1]  
DirtyGreek
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OOOOOOOOH BURN

Quote :
"WASHINGTON - House leaders late Wednesday abandoned an attempt to push through a hotly contested plan to open an Alaskan wildlife refuge to oil drilling, fearing it would jeopardize approval of a sweeping budget bill Thursday.

They also dropped from the budget document plans to allow states to authorize oil and gas drilling off the Atlantic and Pacific coasts — regions currently under a drilling moratorium."


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9984545/

of course

Quote :
"Still, the Senate has included ANWR drilling in its budget bill and GOP leaders will push hard for any final House-Senate budget bill to include it.

If the House bill passes in a vote set for Thursday, the two chambers would appoint negotiators to work out differences between the bills. Senate Republicans could insist the ANWR drilling proposal be reinserted into the House bill, forcing a new vote by the full House."

11/10/2005 9:04:25 AM

Grapehead
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so they were already drilling?

11/10/2005 9:09:21 AM

abonorio
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This is good and bad... i mean, when the rest of the world runs out of oil, we'll have our little stockpile keeping us going. Then we'll wait for Japan and other technologically advanced countries to come up with new forms of energy and then we'll just buy it and it'll be all happy.

11/10/2005 9:10:45 AM

The Coz
Tempus Fugitive
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w00t.

11/10/2005 9:14:54 AM

spookyjon
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Cool.

I was just about to post it.

11/10/2005 11:33:08 AM

boonedocks
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And people were questioning my shit-conglomeration proclaimation.

11/10/2005 2:44:03 PM

skokiaan
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meanwhile, http://www.breitbart.com/news/2005/11/10/051110150119.4418n1qz.html

Quote :
"Appalachian mountains buzz with oil drilling
Nov 10 10:01 AM US/Eastern
Email this story
The Appalachian mountains are buzzing with the sounds of oil drilling.

Most of the 900 or so wells drilled in Kentucky this year won't produce more than a barrel or two of oil a day. But with prices around 60 dollars a barrel, those little wells are pulling in big profits, especially when they also pump natural gas.

With oil prices now double what they were two years ago, the US Congress has called hearings to address charges of "price-gouging."

The pinch at the pump is causing some economists to warn that consumers will have to reduce discretionary spending while the rising price of heating oil has raised concerns that some people won't be able to heat their homes this winter.

But for Kentucky cattle farmer Billy Carroll, 70, who has two oil and natural gas wells on his property that he leased out in exchange for an eighth of the profits, it means retirement is a lot easier than he had expected.

"The gas well sure has been good to me because I don't have to feed it," he said as he leaned against his truck parked beneath a mountain speckled with fall colors. "I don't do anything. Just get the check."


Two of Carroll's sons also have wells on their farms and many of his neighbors would like to get in on the boom. The problem is there aren't enough rigs to drill them.

"There could be more wells being drilled in Kentucky but because the industry has been depressed for so long there has been a lack of drilling rigs and a lack of skilled labor," said Brandon Nutall, a geologist with the Kentucky Geological Survey, a state agency charged with analyzing and cataloguing natural resources.

Nestled among Kentucky's famed coal mines are about five billion barrels of oil reserves, Nutall said. Most of the oil is in small fields that sit relatively close to the surface which makes for cheap drilling and long production cycles.

The fields are too small to interest big oil companies, but that hasn't stopped nearly 2,000 small ones from registering to operate in the state.

Drilling is hard in the mountains and the atmosphere can be reminiscent of a Wild West gold rush atmosphere, especially since many companies don't make it through the bust periods, Nutall said.


"The drillers are hardworking guys. They don't mind getting dirty. They play hard -- you'll hear a lot of cursing," he said. "Most of the people are fiercely independent. They don't want anyone telling them what they can and can't do."

Bill Daugherty runs one of the larger companies, NGAS Resources Inc., which was recently ranked the third fastest growing small business in the United States by Fortune magazine.

"We're risk takers as individuals -- how else would you describe people who like to look down 6,000 feet (1,800 meters) into the ground and see what's there?" Daugherty said.

"What you don't see are the wildcat guys with boots and hats and a cigar. We use technology like computer graphics and we monitor gas flows from our wells by satellite and we maximize production by projecting trends in individual wells. It's a very scientific business but it's also a lot of fun."

A southern gentleman and sharp businessman, Daugherty is in it for the long haul. His company has the mineral rights to 250,000 acres (101,000 hectares) and own 250 miles (400 kilometers) of natural gas pipeline that he won't share with other operators in order to lock up even more land.


He's drilling about three new wells every week and expects to get 170 online this year.

At a cost of about 350,000 dollars a well, it used to take about three years to pay off the investment. It's now taking about half that time, and Daugherty expects prices could go even higher.

The demand for natural gas has been increasing steadily over the past few years as electrical companies switched their power plants from dirty coal to clean-burning gas.

High heating oil prices have also prompted a rising number of homeowners to switch to gas-powered heat, a move that is going to hurt this winter now that natural gas prices are twice what they were in July.

For Daugherty, who ran the company out of his house for the first three years, the dividends are paying off in the form of a new house in the country where his drive to work takes him past thoroughbreds grazing on bluegrass.

"You gamble, but you're amply rewarded when you win," he said.

"

11/10/2005 2:45:45 PM

Mr. Joshua
Swimfanfan
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I'm glad that we're letting the caribou have their own state.

11/10/2005 8:47:52 PM

jackleg
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no shit...

11/13/2005 12:14:32 AM

AVON
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Native Americans can't have their own state...
Blacks supremacists can't have their own state...
White supremacists can't have their own state..

But by God! The caribou can!

11/13/2005 10:08:21 AM

Wlfpk4Life
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Caribou have feelings too

11/13/2005 12:50:34 PM

Luigi
All American
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waah! im paying too much to drive my suv right now, which i need to compensate for my small penis! waah!

11/13/2005 4:09:41 PM

AVON
All American
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^ actually... I drive a VW TDI Jetta that gets 55 mpg...

11/13/2005 5:11:03 PM

Luigi
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actually, that was moreso a jab at the neocon rah rah above me

and if anyone deserves their own state, its the wops

[Edited on November 13, 2005 at 5:16 PM. Reason : .]

11/13/2005 5:13:51 PM

boonedocks
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Quote :
"I'm glad that we're letting the caribou have their own state."


You are aware that there's already an ass load of drilling going on up there, right?

11/13/2005 5:39:28 PM

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