Big Find Spurs California Dreaming. Occidental's discovery could kick off an era of exploration.

A few years ago, Occidental Petroleum Corp. executive Stephen Chazen sounded like a cryptologist out of a Dan Brown novel as he told investors that an oil bonanza awaited any outfit that could “crack the code” of California's seismically fractured underground.

Occidental's engineers may have done it.

The Los Angeles-based company revealed in July that it had found 150 million to 250 million barrels of oil and natural gas in an undisclosed part of Kern County using techniques that the oil company's executives would rather not talk about. It was California's biggest find in 35 years.

Some experts say it could herald a period of new exploration in California and the U.S.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/business/energy/6638215.html

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http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/ene_oil_con-energy-oil-consumption

Sounds like a lot but it's not even a month's supply in the U.S.
That may be true, but as someone from LA and TX who now lives in CA for the last couple of years, I can tell you that if it is 200 million barrels at an average of $75/barrel, that is revenue of $15 billion, royalties probably around $3 billion and that is just for Kern County.

If it is bigger, a big if, but the HS was a big if at one time that only got bigger, then the impact on tax revenues for the state and counties and personal incomes for royalty owners is significant.

Wouldn't it be ironic if there are large fields of oil/gas found in CA that could substantially alleviate the budget problem this state has, but, because of the environmental movement, etc., they don't allow drilling?
Pipeliner, most of the news articles have confused people. The Oxy find is 150 to 250 million barrels of oil equivalent. The discovery was actually natural gas with associated condensate so not an oil discovery.
I have taken the "Oil" out of the title. I agree the base article is a bit confusing, but that is how it was written. You seldom see gas wells or gas fields listed as so many "barrels of oil equivalent".

There are well known, historically-known large natural crude oil seeps off the coast of Santa Barbara that are causing air quality pollution in Santa Barbara 10 times higher than the level of air quality that is found in Los Angeles, Drilling is forbidden, even though this is an area of producing platforms. Drilling new wells would act as "relief" wells to curb some of the seeps, but are not allowed to be drilled.

This is also where production facilities are disguised as sky-scrapers and as fake palm-tree lined islands. Go figure.
The people of California are plain crazy.

I have no pity on their budget problems, and find it funny when their NIMBY attitude creates high prices for fuel and electricity.
Pipeliner, gald you revised the title. It is clear from the Oxy presentation material that the new find is one or more conventional natural gas reservoirs.

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