Friday, February 26, 2010

PropheticPerspective: When Prophecy Scholars Fail- Who Suffers?

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·        In the Prophetic Perspective:

We all make mistakes. God calls it sin. In Prophecy it is often irresponsibilty of accontability when it is grossly exaggerated. Here are two stories. One is on a Popular Prophecy site, which people read expecting it to be true.

The other is on a “liberal News Service” (washington Post) that is expected to be not read by most Christians.

The Issue is The Author and the site blew it.

The points made are invalid and false.

When there is No accountabilty it is deception and we suffer. God will judge and in the meantime, we must, we will, we have to,

“Prove ALL things”

If we don’t, it just might be your favorite site or favorite leader misleading you and perhaps inadvertently.

That is the cost of Tabloid Christianity

-The Prophetic Perspective

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·        FEBRUARY 26, 2010

Oil Industry Booms -- in North Dakota

State Is Riding High as Firms Develop Better Ways to Tap Huge Bakken Shale Deposit, Raising Hopes for U.S. Production

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By BEN CASSELMAN

KILLDEER, N.D.—A massive oil reserve buried two miles underground has put North Dakota at the center of a revolution in the U.S. oil industry, a shift that has radically altered the fortunes of this remote area.

Associated Press

Harold Hamm, chief of Continental Resources, one of the biggest producers at the Bakken Shale in western North Dakota. He is pictured in April at an oil rig near Watford City, N.D.

The Bakken Shale deposit has been known and even tapped on occasion for decades. But technological improvements in the past two years have taken what was once a small, marginally profitable field and turned it into one of the fastest-growing oil-producing areas in the U.S.

The Bakken Shale had helped North Dakota oil production double in the past three years, surging to 80 million barrels in 2009—tiny relative to the more than seven billion barrels consumed by the U.S. every year, but enough to vault the state past Oklahoma and Louisiana to become the country's fourth-biggest oil producer, after Texas, Alaska and California. If current projections hold, North Dakota's oil production could pass Alaska's by the end of the decade.

"Most people felt like they could kind of write off the oil industry in the U.S., and that's just a long way from the truth," said Harold Hamm, chairman and chief executive ofContinental Resources Inc., one of the biggest Bakken producers. "The fact of the matter is that a lot of people quit looking for oil." Continental reported Thursday that its North Dakota oil production doubled in 2009 and would continue to grow rapidly this year.

The Bakken Shale could contain up to 4.3 billion barrels of recoverable oil, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. That would make it the biggest oil field discovered in the contiguous U.S. in more than 40 years—and many in the industry believe the amount of recoverable oil could be even greater as new technology allows companies to tap more of it.

U.S. oil production has fallen by nearly 50% since its peak in the 1970s. Even with the Bakken Shale, U.S. oil production isn't expected to ever return to 1970s levels, and even the most optimistic projections of production from the North Dakota field don't account for more than a small fraction of total U.S. oil demand. But new production from the Bakken Shale, combined with other big oil discoveries in California and the Gulf of Mexico, helped U.S. oil production rise last year for the first time since 1991, according to U.S. government figures.

 

News Hub: North Dakota's Oil Boom

2:12

WSJ's Ben Casselman joins the News Hub to discuss North Dakota's oil boom. Known as the Bakken Shale, the field could contain up to 4.3 billion barrels of recoverable oil. That would make it the biggest oil-field discovery in the U.S. in more than 40 years.

Production has grown so rapidly here, 100 miles south of the Canadian border, that companies had to build a rail line to transport their oil to market, since there wasn't a big enough pipeline in the state to handle the oil. Companies have scrambled to find labor in a state with fewer than a million people, and to keep drilling rigs running when the wind chill pushes temperatures to 50 degrees below zero. Booming Bakken oil production has helped North Dakota escape the worst of the economic downturn. The state's unemployment rate was 4.3% in December—more than five percentage points below the national level—and the state government projects a surplus for the current budget cycle.

The impact has been especially notable in the oil-producing western part of the state, making millionaires of local ranchers who sell access to oil beneath their properties. Oil-field workers have flooded the western city of Williston, leaving it with a chronic shortage of hotel rooms and making housing scarce. In Dickinson, three hours to the south, a labor shortage has the local McDonald's offering $300 signing bonuses. And here in nearby Killdeer, a town of 700 people that lies in the heart of oil country, oil workers jockey with locals for lunchtime tables at the Buckskin Bar & Grill, which serves burgers made from locally raised buffalo.

"Who expected oil? It's just, 'oh, gee whiz, oil!'" said Pam Reckard, 66 years old, as she waited for lunch at the Buckskin on a recent Thursday.

Ms. Reckard and her husband, Ben, said many locals, having seen past booms and busts, are taking a cautious approach to the region's newfound oil wealth. The Reckards are still driving their 1990 Dodge pickup despite having two successful oil wells drilled on their 1,120-acre ranch, which Mr. Reckard's family has owned since 1915. But they have noticed the changes. "There are a lot of people that were not from North Dakota," Ms. Reckard said.

The industry hopes the Bakken's significance could extend far beyond North Dakota. The Bakken formation stretches into Montana and across the U.S. border into Saskatchewan. Other oil-bearing shale formations exist in Colorado, Texas, California and other states.

"It's a true game-changer," said Jim Volker, chairman and CEO of Whiting Petroleum Corp. a Bakken oil producer. "We still think there's a significant amount of oil reserves in the United States left to be discovered."

The field also could have global implications. Besides small producers such as Continental and Whiting, the Bakken has drawn companies like Marathon Oil Corp. that hope to use what they learn in North Dakota to produce oil and gas overseas. "It's been a great laboratory for us," said Dave Roberts, who heads exploration and production for Marathon.

Oil companies have known about the formation, and the oil trapped in it, since at least the 1950s. But they couldn't get more than a trickle of oil from the dense, nonporous rock.

That began to change in the early 2000s, when companies in Texas began using new drilling techniques in a similar formation near Fort Worth known as the Barnett Shale. They would drill down thousands of feet and then turn and go horizontally through the gas-bearing rock—allowing a single well to reach more gas. Then they would blast huge volumes of water down the well to crack open the rocks and free the gas trapped inside.

Several companies, including Houston-based EOG Resources Inc., thought the same techniques could work on oil formations. But oil molecules are larger than gas molecules, and they didn't flow as easily through the cracks. EOG's first several wells in North Dakota were failures.

"The first three or four wells, it was not clear that there would be a viable economic solution," EOG Chairman and CEO Mark Papa said. "But we just felt like, well, it's worth investing $20 to $40 million in this because if it works there's a huge upside."

By 2006, EOG was making money on wells drilled in a small corner of the Bakken that was particularly well-suited to oil production.

The real shift has come in the past two years as companies honed drilling techniques, leading to bigger wells, faster drilling and lower costs. Marathon, for example, last year took an average of 24 days to drill a well, down from 56 days in 2006.

That has opened up new areas that weren't previously worth drilling in and made wells profitable at prices as low as $50 a barrel, down from $80 three years ago, according to analyst Mike Jacobs of investment firm Tudor Pickering Holt & Co.

Drilling for the Truth

By Hal Lindsey
The Hal Lindsey Report

You know, it's funny that I've heard very little from the mainstream media and even less from the Obama administration about a Department of the Interior/USGS report that was released in April of 2009. In the report, the United States Geological Survey (the government's official estimator of recoverable oil and gas resources) revised its 1995 estimate of the oil capacity of the Bakken Formation.

The Bakken Formation is a crude oil deposit that lies under portions of North Dakota and Montana. In 1995, the USGS estimated that there were 151 million barrels of oil in that deposit. However, due to improved forecasting techniques and recovery equipment, and the increased market value of crude oil over the last 15 years, the USGS re-evaluated the data and revised its estimate. It now says that the Bakken Formation will yield 3.65 BILLION barrels of oil - a 25-fold increase! And with the 1 to 2 TRILLION potential barrels of shale crude from the Green River Region of Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming, some experts say that America's energy independence would be assured for the next two centuries!

So why is the government and its media allies sitting on this information? Why are they allowing our nation to stay under the thumb of Saudi Arabia and other hostile oil-supplier regimes in the Middle East? Why is President Obama guaranteeing $2 billion to a Brazilian oil company to develop off-shore wells to recover oil to sell to China, yet not spending a penny to develop our own domestic resources? (The answer to the latter question may be obvious: George Soros, who poured $120 million into Democratic campaigns in 2008, is a major shareholder in the Brazilian company.)

Let me give you a hint: so the chill of global warming will linger until a new crisis can be developed to drive us to our knees and make us ready to join a one-world government.

 

 

 

 

 

The Prophetic Perspective

Prove All Things knowing that all Prophecy is about Jesus and God revealing His Son…To us..for our…Salvation. We post material that is questionable, objectionable, and in the opinion of the Editor of the Prophetic Perspective, valid to use as God chooses to. Sometimes that is highly suspect as material setting “dates” of the Rapture is, but often these posts, may have pieces that are correct to futher study.  

“Rarely is anyone ALL RIGHT or ALL WRONG”

Michael James Stone

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