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"Oil sits because refineries are full" I'm guessing that is local refineries as it doesn't pay to ship oil by truck to distant refineries. We have very few refineries left in the area so it wouldn't take much oil production to hit capacity.
Which brings up an interesting issue. If CHK is right about the Utica being a huge oil play, what will they do with it? Will pipelines be built to ship it south for refining or will refineries be built/expanded here? Either option will take time, money, and people to get it done. That brings opportunities for some but will delay the reward for landowners.
It is going to be several years, probably a decade or more, before the infrastructure is ready to handle any large oil production out of the Utica.
Probably not a normal oil refinery but a fractioning facility for processing natural gas ("wet" gas from the Utica).
Dominion to Begin Construction on New Natural Gas Processing, Liqui...
From the article:
"The Natrium site is an ideal location," said Gary Sypolt, chief executive officer of Dominion Energy. "We will have the capability to access production in both the Marcellus and Utica Shale regions, and ship products via barge, rail, truck and pipe, thus offering significant value to producers."The Bakken field in the Dakotas was an old field that had much of the infrastructure already there. It just became much more productive after the new technologies were developed. There are pipelines running from the Dakots to Ok City but even they are now inadequate to handle all the oil coming out of the Bakken. But at least the right-of-way is there to allow for more lines to be installed.
Ohio and Pa are very different, with hundreds of towns and tens of thousands of landowners that all have to give permission for pipeline right-of-ways. There will be court fights over right-of-ways.
And building refineries will take a lot of governmental redtape. All the NIMBY"s will be out in full force when a company proposes a new refinery.
Barges are a good alternative for the first production near the Ohio River. But any large scale oil production will need a lot of capacity, especially further from the river system.
Just saying this is gonna take some time to crank up. Some will happen in a few years. But the big production will take many years. And it will change the economy of the entire region.
I think you may be onto something. If you look at the satellite view of the well location in August twp in Carroll County you'll see RR tracks to the South. And get this, a Marathon petroleum pipeline that goes where? To the Marathon Refinery in Canton about 20 miles away.
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