Innovation: Making Energy Production Cleaner, More Efficient

When we wrote last week about technologies to mitigate water demands during hydraulic fracturing, we knew we’d find more examples of energy innovation for the simple fact that there’s a lot of innovating going on. Here’s a little bit about two other advances in the area of fracking waste water, as well as another company’s initiative to make the development of Canada’s oil sands cleaner and greener.

Halliburton says it has a suite of solutions to reduce the demand for fresh water in hydraulic fracturing operations, called H2-Forward. You can read more about it, here. Basically, it’s a process that allows drillers to reuse fracturing fluid. Halliburton:

"The service includes new technologies such as CleanWave service that is used to process fracturing flowback and produced water, r... more »

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The Administration’s Flawed Five-Year Offshore Plan

Words matter. But actions matter more, and the Interior Department’s final five-year offshore oil and natural gas leasing plan shows that while the administration trumpets an all-of-the-above energy approach, it falls short of providing the bold leadership needed to fully deploy our country’s ample resources.

You can read Interior’s statement on the plan here. Basically, Secretary Ken Salazar says the strategy includes areas with the “highest-known resource potential.” Sounds good, but it took industry exploration for those areas to gain that designation. Only through exploration can we learn the resource potential of other areas. Loudly, misguidedly, the administration is saying “no” to that.

Its plan omits areas off both coasts and in the Eastern Gulf of Mexico that are believed to... more »

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Energy’s Game-Changing Face

A Wall Street Journal report [subscription required] quotes energy analysts who say America will cut its Middle East oil imports in half by the end of the decade and could become oil-independent by 2035, thanks to North American production. 

To those who see the unique chance for the United States to increase domestic oil and natural gas production and fundamentally change this country’s energy equation, we say welcome to the fold. The Journal’s sources are saying things similar to what others have said, including Wood Mackenzie’s analysis last fall, Citi’s 2020 Energy Outlook released this spring and this week’s study by Harvard’s Kennedy School. Of course, along with the energy, there’s job creation and tax revenue generated for government treasuries. All good.

Look at the analyses... more »

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Well-Paying Jobs…Like Ours!

We like talking about our industry’s job-creating ability – how, with the right policies America’s oil and natural gas companies could create a million new jobs before the end of the decade.

Some industry opponents dismiss the assertion by deriding the number of wage positions supported by oil and gas activity. We don’t. Every job means a paycheck for an American who’s glad to have it, especially in this economy.

But guess what? Our industry supports well-paying jobs, too. Payscale.com’s list of high lifetime-earnings jobs is topped by two from oil and natural gas – petroleum engineer and landman/senior landman.

Payscale.com says the typical earnings total for a petroleum engineer over a 45-year career is nearly $6.3 million. The average starting pay is more than $84,000, and at 20... more »

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Another Fracking Strawman, Up In Smoke

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, telling Reuters on Monday that state regulation of hydraulic fracturing isn’t enough:

"There are some who are saying that it's not something we ought to do, it should be left up to the states. That's not good enough for me because states are at very different level, some have zero, some have decent rules."

Bold, to be sure. So we wonder about the “some who are saying” in Salazar’s comment. Who’s he talking about? Perhaps EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, who said this in an interview last fall:

"The vast majority of oil and gas production is regulated at the state level. There are issues of whether or not the federal government can add to protection and also peace of mind for citizens by looking at large issues like air pollution impacts, which... more »

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