OK Treasurer reports 2022 gross receipts are rising
Gross Receipts to the Treasury show Oklahoma’s economy is doing very well...
Gross Receipts to the Treasury show Oklahoma’s economy is doing very well at the start of the new year, State Treasurer Randy McDaniel announced.
January gross receipts of $1.5 billion are up by more than 27 percent compared to the same month of last year. Twelve-month receipts of $15.5 billion measure growth of more than 18 percent compared to the prior period.
The state’s oil and gas industry played a large role in boosting the amount of money as gross production taxes increased 149.5%. The total in collections increased $86 million to reach $143.5million according to the Treasurer’s office.
The Baker Hughes rig count report on Friday showed an increase of 3 to a total of 613 rigs running in...
The Baker Hughes rig count report on Friday showed an increase of 3 to a total of 613 rigs running in the U.S. while the number in Oklahoma dropped by one to 50 rigs.
Nationally, the count included two more oil rigs for a total of 497 nationwide while the number of gas rigs increased by one to 116. This past week’s count is 221 more than the 392 rigs reported a year ago. The increased numbers include 198 more oil rigs and 24 more gas rigs.
Texas remains highest with 287 rigs, an increase of 3 in the past week. New Mexico’s count slipped two to 92 while the number in North Dakota grew by 3 for a total of 30 active rigs.
Oil prices surged to seven-year highs on Friday, extending their rally into a seventh...
Oil prices surged to seven-year highs on Friday, extending their rally into a seventh week on ongoing worries about supply disruptions fueled by frigid U.S. weather and ongoing political turmoil among major world producers.
Brent crude rose $2.16, or 2.4%, to settle at $93.27 a barrel having earlier touched its highest since October 2014 at $93.70.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude ended $2.04, or 2.3%, higher at $92.31 a barrel after trading as high as $93.17, its highest since September 2014.
ConocoPhillips Putting Brand on Shell’s Former Permian Acreage
ConocoPhillips plans to keep the number of rigs steady on Permian Basin...
ConocoPhillips plans to keep the number of rigs steady on Permian Basin acreage recently acquired from Shell plc.
“We plan to continue running four rigs on that property, the same activity rate that Shell was running, through the remainder of this year,” Executive Vice President Tim Leach who oversees Lower 48 operations told analysts during the fourth quarter and full-year 2021 earnings call.
Cost of Net Zero? An Extra $9.5 Trillion Annually, Report Shows
Capital spending on physical...
Capital spending on physical assets for energy and land-use systems in the net-zero transition between 2021 and 2050 would amount to about $275 trillion, or $9.2 trillion per year on average, an annual increase of as much as $3.5 trillion from today.
“While these spending requirements are large and financing has yet to be established, many investments have positive return profiles and should not be seen as merely costs. Technological innovation could reduce capital costs for net-zero technologies faster than expected,” a report by consultancy firm McKinsey & Co. said.
The amount needed to reach net-zero is equivalent to half of the global corporate profits, a quarter of world tax revenues, and 7% of household spending. Additionally, McKinsey expects $1 trillion would need to be reallocated from high-emission to low-carbon assets. Credit ~ McKinsey & Co., via Hart Energy