Thoughts & prayers to those in the path of this storm. 80)
http://www.api.org/news-and-media/news/newsitems/2012/oct-2012/api-...
Any thoughts on supply & demand, exploration/drilling & production?
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Glad you started this thread. I was getting ready to start one. One one hand, with so much devastation from the storm, you will have reduced nat gas consumption; on the other hand there will be lots of new construction going on for commercial and residential and they will probably utilize nat gas. Opinions??
EIA is back up and running, the report will come out tomorrow. Should break 3900 in storage.
Way back in the 70's I argued for underground utility lines in new development and after any destruction. I was repeatedly told I was up my tree that it was simply too expensive.
I wonder how many dollars would have been saved to date if they had listened to me?
Originally my idea for underground lines was simply b/c I thought those brown poles were ugly. I note that its not too expensive for them to bury that orange line all around here for the fiber optics. So why is it too expensive to bury electrical lines?
Wonder if people on the East coast now wish they had those underground lines?
Also after some natural gas leaks exploded a couple of houses in Arlington I questioned why they didn't install shut of valves in neighborhoods. Again, those shut offs would have saved some people from fires during this storm. Some of the gas lines around here are over 100 years old.
Oh well..all that was too expensive wasn't it?
But then I have to confess I didn't think ripping up the trolly and streetcar rails was a good move.
The news today on Fox about situations in NYC are dire. Think about this..two women from right here in East Texas were in NYC for a holiday and they were not able to call home until late yesterday. And they have not been able to get home. Figure they will be on local TV telling us about it when they return home.
In researching the decades-old Tuscaloosa Trend and the immense wealth it has generated for many, I find it deeply troubling that this resource-rich formation runs directly beneath one of the poorest communities in North Baton Rouge—near Southern University, Louisiana—yet neither the university ( that I am aware of) nor local residents appear to have received any compensation for the minerals extracted from their land.
This area has suffered immense environmental degradation…
ContinuePosted by Char on May 29, 2025 at 14:42
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