Newest #AGW victim: “Wolverines!” #rsrh

http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/07/14/study-wolverines-need-refrigerators/

“Because of their dependence on snow pack, wolverines were recently listed as warranted for protection under the Endangered Species Act due in large part to the threat of climate change reducing distribution and habitat connectivity. The authors say that a deeper understanding of how and why wolverines use snow pack the ways they do is critical to understanding how climate change will impact survival and reproductive rates.”

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Soft-shell Cicada?

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Viruses, not #AGW, may cause coral bleaching. #rsrh

http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/07/12/viruses-linked-to-coral-bleaching/

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Juche Mickey

http://www.inquisitr.com/273357/north-korea-spreads-unauthorized-disney-cheer/

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Proved Oil Reserves by Location, 2010

Source.

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World Oil Production Market Share, 2010

Source.

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Meeting Scout

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Natural Cypress Grotto

Pontiff Playground, Metairie

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New Devon completion in Tuscaloosa Marine Shale (LA)

Not to float a turd in the punchbowl, but I suspect it’s going to take double that rate before Devo gets excited.

Newest Successful Well Project Completed in Tuscaloosa Marine Shale

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

BATON ROUGE – Louisiana Department of Natural Resources (DNR) Secretary Scott Angelle noted today that Devon Energy recently completed its fourth horizontal well in the Tuscaloosa Marine Shale (TMS) and the initial production test figures submitted this week show the strongest oil production results of the company’s TMS wells drilled to date − at 384 barrels of oil per day (BOPD).

This newest well, located in northern St. Helena Parish, follows Devon’s successful drilling of two productive horizontal TMS wells in East Feliciana Parish and another in Tangipahoa Parish. Devon also has two other TMS well projects in progress – one in Tangipahoa and one in West Feliciana parishes.

“I want to thank Devon Energy for expressing its faith in Louisiana’s potential to provide energy and qualified workers, because I recognize that the company has a choice in where it invests its exploration funding,” Angelle said. “I hope to see Devon’s ongoing success in the Tuscaloosa Marine Shale repeated by the other operators who have begun to invest in the play, bringing the potential for economic development, jobs and new sources of domestic energy,” Angelle said.

The Tuscaloosa Marine Shale is believed to underlie much of Central Louisiana, with potential productive areas currently being explored from Vernon Parish to Tangipahoa Parish. The energy industry has been observing the development of the Tuscaloosa Marine Shale, believed to be primarily an oil-rich play. New processes and technology have led to rapid gains in domestic oil and natural gas reserves, making them recoverable from ultra-dense formations once thought uneconomical to produce.

We’ll see what kind of legs this baby has.

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Ice Pack Delays Shell’s Arctic Drilling Program #rsrh

About that disappearing ice cap…

Ice delays Shell Alaska drilling

HOUSTON — Heavier than expected ice in Arctic waters off Alaska will likely delay until August Shell’s long-anticipated exploration drilling in the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas, a company spokesman said on Friday.

Click to enlarge.

Shell, which wants to search for oil in what are considered remote but promising frontiers, had planned to start the wells this month, said Curtis Smith, a company spokesman in Anchorage.

Sea ice is “the number one reason we won’t be drilling in July,” Smith told Reuters. “At this point, we’re looking at the first week of August.”
While sea ice cover is sparse in most of the Arctic, ice off Alaska is thicker than in recent years, and that ice is melting fast, according to the US National Snow and Ice Data Centre.

Shell plans to drill two wells this year in the Beaufort at a prospect about 20 miles offshore, and three in the Chukchi about 70 miles offshore. Drilling must take place during the brief ice-free season, since federal approvals for the plans require that Shell cease all operations for the year by 31 October.

The schedule is especially tight in the Chukchi, where Shell must cease drilling into known hydrocarbon-bearing zones by late September, with top-hole drilling allowed after then, Smith said.

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