blogwriter's blog

15th November 2011

OIl Prices Drop After a Brief Rally

Posted by blogwriter

Oil prices retreated on Monday November 14, 2011 after a short rally as traders reacted to a changing political landscape in Italy and tensions in the Middle East.

New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in December, fell 65 cents to $98.34 a barrel after reaching a near four-month high of $99.69 earlier in the day.

Brent North Sea crude for December shed $1.10 to $113.06. Read more »

11th November 2011

Group formed for Marcellus Shale Formation

Posted by blogwriter

A group has been formed in support of the development of the Marcellus Shale Formation with hydrofracking.

The organization is calling itself Clean Growth Now, and comes as the debate over hydrofracking is heating up in Albany.

A formal roll out of the group is expected Thursday November 10, 2011.

It comes as the Department of Environmental Conservation is reviewing whether to allow permits for hydrofracking, a natural gas extraction process that involves blasting a mixture of chemicals, sand, and water underground in order to access the gas. Read more »

9th November 2011

Oil Prices Flirt Around $100 per Barrell

Posted by blogwriter

Oil prices hit the highest level since July as a pending United Nations report on Iran's nuclear weapon ambitions raised the possibility of new trade sanctions on the oil-rich country.

Here's how energy prices traded on Tuesday November 8, 2011.

On the New York Mercantile Exchange:

Benchmark crude rose $1.28 to end at $96.80 per barrel.

Gasoline fell 2.18 cents to finish at $2.7064 per gallon.

Heating oil lost less than a penny to end at $3.1161 per gallon.

Natural gas fell 4.9 cents to finish at $3.745 per 1,000 cubic feet. Read more »

8th November 2011

Barnett Shale and Mineral Rights Sale

Posted by blogwriter

The Barnett Shale, one of the largest gas fields in the country, is slowly but surely being developed to provide an abundant supply of natural gas.

If you own property in the field, in most circumstances you also own the mineral rights. If, however, a previous landowner reserved the minerals rights -- or even a portion of them -- your share is diminished or nonexistent. Read more »