Bakken Oil Fields: This Place Is
Booming!
The Dynamic Wealth Report
February 16, 2011
by Justin Bennett, Editor
There’s something big happening in North Dakota. Business is flourishing
in small towns across the Peace Garden State. Thousands of people are
descending on the northern plains and buying up supplies at a feverish
pace.
Why all the commotion?
It all has to do with a geologic formation called the Bakken. Oil
companies are employing thousands of workers to bring valuable resources
out of the Bakken’s tight shale formation.
-------------Sponsor-------------
Where Can You Turn $300 Into $1.3 Million Right Now?
Our own small-company specialist, Robert Morris, has found a
way to 'sniff out' tiny penny stocks on the verge of a major breakout. And
the timing for this has never been better.
You see, the system takes advantage of an obscure SEC regulation that
sends penny stock prices through the roof.
We've seen some stocks gain 852%... 5,450%... even 17,496% in no time
flat.
Click here
for the details...
-----------------------------------
There’s been a lot of talk about the Bakken in recent years…
what’s the real deal?
Well, as early as the 1950s, oil producers knew about the area’s oil
resources. But it wasn’t until the 1970s that oil and geology experts
agreed the Bakken held around 10 billion barrels of oil.
The problem was getting it out of the ground…
The oil was trapped within a tight shale formation. Drilling technology
at the time wasn’t capable of bringing the valuable commodity to the
surface.
But as drilling technology advanced, the area’s prospects began to grow. New drilling techniques made the once unreachable oil viable for
production.
Then in 2008, the United States Geologic Survey (USGS) dropped a
bombshell…
They estimated the Bakken held as much as 500 billion barrels of oil.
Oil companies (and investors) were giddy with excitement at the thought
of such a huge amount of crude under US soil. Reserves like that outpace
even the biggest oil producer in the world… Saudi Arabia.
While those numbers sound like a lot, a bit of perspective is needed…
Only 4.3 billion barrels were “technically recoverable” with drilling
technology available in 2008.
According to the CIA World Factbook, the US consumes over 18 million
barrels of oil per day. Which means (by 2008 estimates) there’s enough Bakken oil to supply the US for about
8 months if we could get all the Bakken oil out at once.
In other words, the Bakken’s recoverable reserves aren’t big enough to
bring down world oil prices.
Now this may sound weird…
But the relatively small amount of recoverable reserves is what makes
the Bakken investment opportunity so good.
Here’s why…
High oil prices are just what Bakken producers need. As Bakken explorers
perfect their shale drilling techniques, costs come down. And as long as
oil prices stay high, profit margins go up… just what investors want.
But here’s where it gets really interesting…
In recent months, many oil companies say Bakken’s recoverable oil is
higher than the USGS estimated 4.3 billion barrels… a lot higher. One
oil company executive said with 2011 drilling technology, producers may
be able to pull out as much as 24 billion barrels.
That’s 450% higher than the USGS estimate from just two years ago!
Clearly, Bakken producers are onto something big. As long as oil prices
stay high, many of them are going to see hefty profits in coming years.
The biggest hurdle the Bakken has right now is “take-away capacity”…
There simply aren’t enough pipelines in the area. More pipelines are
being built, but trucks and railroads are currently moving much of the Bakken oil.
However, once the infrastructure is in place, many oil companies see the
Bakken producing over 1 million barrels of oil per day. That’s pretty
amazing considering the oil in the area was once thought to be
unrecoverable.
Who are some of the big players in the Bakken?
Oil companies like EOG Resources (EOG), ExxonMobil (XOM), and
Continental Resources (CLR) just to name a few. Take a closer look at
these companies for your own portfolio. These large producers will no
doubt benefit from the Bakken’s growing potential.

• Random Length Lumber (Over $3.15 per mbf)
Many lumber mills were idled in 2009 due to the housing meltdown. But
with housing starts gaining steam, lumber prices are strengthening.
Since lumber production capacity is low, prices may see a spike in 2011
until capacity can be raised.
Print
Page
Bookmark Us