John P. Tretbar
Kansas Common crude at CHS in McPherson starts
the week at $47 per barrel after gaining another half dollar on Friday. That's
up more than three dollars a barrel on the week and the best price in McPherson
since January 22 of last year. U.S. crude futures prices topped $57 a barrel,
while the international benchmark London Brent rose above $60 per barrel.
The national average price for a gallon of gasoline had been cheaper
year-over-year for more than 340 consecutive days. But AAA says that trend is
likely to end soon. The auto club said regular gas is going for $2.27 a gallon
in Great Bend. We spotted it as low as $2.24 a gallon at several locations in
Hays. Your 15-gallon fill-up will cost you three dollars more than a month ago,
but about three dollars less than last year at this time. Mississippi boasts
the cheapest gasoline in the country, with an average price of just over $2.12
per gallon. California and Hawaii were the most expensive at $3.34 per gallon.
The average across Kansas was just over $2.21.
Operators in Kansas filed 79 intent-to-drill notices across the state last
month. The Kansas Corporation Commission reported one each in Barton, Ellis,
Russell, and Stafford counties. Operators last year filed just 560, continuing
a four-year stretch of declining intent notices.
Independent Oil & Gas Service says the rig count in eastern Kansas was down
one at seven active rigs, while the count west of Wichita was unchanged at
eight. They're about to spud one new well in Stafford County.
Baker Hughes says the national Rotary Rig Count through Friday was 392 active
rigs, an increase of four oil and four gas rigs. The count in Texas was up
seven rigs. Canada was down three at 171 active rigs.
Regulators okayed 13 new drilling permits in Kansas last week, 13 of them east
of Wichita and six in Western Kansas, including one new permit in Ellis County.
Independent Oil & Gas Service reports eight newly-completed wells across
the state, all of them in eastern Kansas.
The Energy Information Administration reported U.S. crude-oil inventories
dropped by one million barrels to just under 476 million barrels last week, but
remain about four percent above the five-year average for this time of year.
The government says U.S. crude-oil production dropped by a thousand barrels a
day and remained below 11 million barrels per day for the second straight week.
EIA said imports increased by nearly one and a half million barrels last week,
to 6.5 million barrels per day. Four-week average average imports are down 9.2%
from the same period last year.
The Association of American Railroads reports rail shipments of petroleum &
petroleum products in January were down 6,529 carloads or 12.1 percent from the
year before. Total rail traffic last month was up more than five percent.
Oil-by-rail totals for the week ending January 30 were down more than 14% year
over year. There were 11,291 tanker cars rolling the rails last week hauling
petroleum products, down more than 12-hundred cars from the week before.
Royal Dutch Shell Plc snapped up its biggest purchases of North Sea oil in over
a decade, underpinning signs of sharply tightening supplies. Europe’s biggest
oil company bought five cargoes last Monday (2/1) and made a further seven bids
that didn’t find sellers, according to reporting by Bloomberg.
American oil exports from Louisiana’s offshore supertanker port jumped to a
record in January as Asian buyers are stocking up on U.S. crude for what they
see as a post-pandemic rebound in fuel consumption. Eight vessels set sail last
month from the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port, the nation’s only facility that can
fully load supertankers. Bloomberg reports they're carrying nearly 15 million
barrels of crude to South Korea, China and India. That’s double the previous
month’s volume and an all-time high for LOOP, as the terminal is known.
The Biden Administration went to court last week in an attempt to seize two
million barrels of oil that it claims came from Iran. Court filings accuse the
Islamic republic of using ship-to-ship transfers to disguise the origin of the
oil on board a Greek-owned tanker, and provided a false bill of lading to
deceive the owners of the tanker. The owner alerted U.S. authorities to the
possibility that it had unknowingly taken on Iranian crude, after initially
thinking it came from Iraq, according to reporting by Bloomberg last month.
Washington ordered the ship to sail to the U.S.
Canceling the Keystone Pipeline expansion could also wind up costing us money.
The Premier of Alberta Province in Canada believes he has a good claim for
damages under provisions still in place under the NAFTA treaty. The province
spent $1.2 BILLION to help jump start construction, and Premier Jason Kenney
says President Biden removed the regulatory approvals that were the basis of
that investment. Kenney says his claim for damages is, in his words, a slam
dunk.