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LyrArc brings in selected articles from many of the world's top publications.

Articles are selected by experts and you can see the gist of the important articles.


Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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1. GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATIONS WHERE STEAM INJECTION IS BEING TRIED TO GET HEAVY OIL OUT. Chevron has a pilot project for heavy oil reserves in Wafra, in the neutral zone between Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. Saudis are considering the Manifa field which has a large heavy oil component. Occidental Petroleum is planning to spend $2 billion on a large scale steam injection project in the Mukhaizna field in Oman. Kuwait is planning a pilot project to exploit its northern heavy oil fields. Three years ago the Geological Survey estimated that the world has more than one trillion barrels of heavy oil, mostly in Canada, Venezuela, and elsewhere in the western hemisphere. The Middle East has large heavy oil reserves which have been underestimated. 2. STEAM INJECTION TECHNIQUES TO EXTRACT HEAVY OIL. Heavy oil can be sludge like or thick as molasses is tough to bring up to the surface. It also contains more contaminants like metals and sulfur than light oil, which means in addition to extraction costs for steam injection there are costs for special refineries that can process heavy oil. Without steam the recovery rates for heavy oil reserves run as low as 5% compared to 35% for conventional pumping of light oil deposits. At the Wafra field a Chevron oil recovery project with the Saudis only 3% could have been recovered of the heavy oil, with new steam techniques this figure goes up to 40%. Costs for similiar steam injection widely used by Chevron in its Bakersfield oil fields are about $14 per barrel which leaves a hefty profit margin at today's prices. The heavy oil in the Middle East is different from Bakersfield in that its locked inside carbonate formations of softer rock with fissures. If steam leaks through fissures in the rock then its harder to heat the heavy oil and would cost more in natural gas that makes the steam. At Bakersfield some reservoirs have seen recovery rates go upto as high as 80%. The Wafra project will move into its 2nd stage with 16 injection wells and 25 producing well as well as the installation of water treatment facilities and steam generation facilities. Once the molasses like heavy oil is heated it turns into watery syrup, the oil drains down with gravity and is pumped out from outlying producing wells....
DW.COM Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
This opinion in DW.com says modernization of Saudi Arabia will take many years and a different mindset from the ultraconservative nature of the country, and cannot be accomplished by a few megaprojects that are announced by Prince bin Salman. He says the 32 year old leader lacks experience. The cost of the new project of $500 billion he has announced to be built in the northwest of the country is extremely high with no clear source of investment funding. Efforts for a more moderate Islam are also seen with much skepticism as Wahhabism has dominated the region for many years with little change. Change from the ground up is needed more than top down says DW.com. This is particularly true for gains to be made in women's rights and other social issues.

Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Karen Elliott House, Pulitzer prize winning journalist and expert reporting from Saudi Arabia, in 2007. You can follow her reports in the Elliott House group and link.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Plans for an IPO by Saudi Aramco, and a WSJ interview with Aramco's chairman Khalid al-Falih in Jan. 2016.
WSJ Original article ›
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Russian seaborne crude shipments are up 18% as of June 11 over the prior year, Iran's shipments up even more by 45%. The result is increased supplies even though the Saudis tried to increase oil prices by limiting production. China's economy is slowing and faces headwinds that will not go away anytime soon of debt close to 290% of GDP higher than US or Europe. And lower imports by the US and EU as they correct the mistakes of overconcentration in China. The European Union faces high inflation and a mild recession. This is cutting demand as supplies increase. It will help the Biden administration as it seeks to give all Americans a fair chance to improve their standard of living, by reducing the cost of living and investing in the economic potential of the country in a way no other adminstration has done in the last 40 years.

NYTimes.com Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Unlimited water can be drawn from wells in Arizona. How this is affecting the state's water supplies under the ground is shown here in the NYT- with alfalfa grown to ship to Saudi Arabia.

WSJ Original article ›
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Saudis make only a modest increase in production of 200,000 barrels a day taking production to 9.7 million barrels a day for 2008. The global market is for 86 million barrels a day with 40% of production coming from OPEC. Saudis make plans to increase capacity from 11.4 million barrels a dya to 15 million barrels a day with increased investments but this is thought to be ambitious. One former president of Aramco the Saudi oil company Edward Price thinks there are resource limits even in Saudi Arabia, as he sees the big fields topping off at 12 million barrels a day.
WSJ Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
As part of the trade deal with the Trump administration China agreed to buy $54 billion of oil and liquified natural gas from the U.S. by the end of 2021. This is showing up in U.S. oil making up 7% of China's imports by mid September 2020 from 0.4% in January. By the endo of October forecasts show U.S. exporting 700,000 barrels a day to China. The U.S. is displacing Saudi and Middle East oil as Saudi exports now make up 15% of China's oil imports from 19%. This also shows that president Trump's trade deals are working to help balance trade with China and remove the disadvantageous position the U.S. was placed in by three previous administrations.

Wall Street Journal Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
The Saudi oil company is building a 400,000 barrel a day refinery at Jubail in the Persian Gulf in a collaboration with Total S.A. at a cost of $10 billion. Its also building a refinery in collaboration with Conoco on the Red Sea side of the Arabian peninsula which will be in production in 2013. This is part of the Saudi effort to buil 4 large refineries in Saudi Arabia.
WSJ Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Oil prices are at $73 a barrel in Jan 2025. DJT's goal for 2025 is for oil prices to drop to $45 to bring inflation down. To do this requires shale oil producers and Saudi Arabia to increase production. This report in WSJ says Saudis will have a hard time managing budget needs at this price and have indicated they will not increase production. Shale oil producers are also reluctant saying they are in a different phase in the production cycle and are not looking to expand production. 

Prices at the pump have dropped from $5.00 a gallon to $3.10. In 2024 per barrel prices were at $90. 

The new administration hopes that reducing regulations and speeding up the approval process, and new incentives would help increase production.

Wall Street Journal Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
The U.S. effort to protect the sea lanes in the straits of Hormuz as the Iranian backed Houthi rebels advance into the southern port city of Aden in Yemen. This involves support of Saudi airstrikes in Yemen and control of airspace over Yemen. In Iraq the U.S. makes airstrikes to support Iranian backed Shiite militias near Tikrit. The lack of a coherent policy and years of inaction by the Obama administration in the Middle East leads the U.S. into a situation where it is drawn into airstrikes on both sides of the Middle Eastern sectarian Sunni-Shiite conflict.
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Changes in Saudi Arabia's rigorous enforcement of Islamic laws with the appointment of Sheik Sheikh to oversee the religious police.
New York Times Original article ›
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Saudi Arabia announces increase of 200,0000 barrels a day which is considered not enough to make a difference for oil prices after the summit in Saudi Arabia. Energy Secretary Bodman says speculators are not a factor in oil price increases and the Saudi King says they are a reason for oil price increases and no new ideas or actions that would be meaningful come up in the meeting.
WSJ Original article ›
New York Times Original article ›
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
New York Times Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
After OPEC says in a joint decision that it will stick to strictly followin quotas set earlier this year which would mean a modest drop in production, Saudi officials spread the word that they will continue to pump out as much oil as the world needs. So what is the end result? The Saudis are saying they went along yet they will continue to pump oil like before. Part of the reason is the Saudi belief in their own argument that with high prices the world economy would be further affected resuklting in a possible collapse of demand and of prices something it seeks to avoid and is in everybody's interest. This makes sense if one looks at the deep financial crisis facing the US and which has ripples around the world, most recently in financial mmarkets the collapse of Fannie Mae and Freddie and the possible collapse or sale of Lehman Brothers. And as U.S. elections are up in a few weeks the Saudis do not want to anything that can be interpreted one way or the other, and also a wait and see attitude because a lot of information about the US and world economy is not yet in....
The New York Times Original article ›
WSJ Original article ›
New York Times Original article ›
NYTimes.com Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Saudi Investment Fund, the 10% owner of Electronic Arts (Madden NFL Battlefield video games), along  with Affinity partners (Kushner) and Silverlake Partners, takes Electronic Arts private with $20 billion loan from JP Morgan Chase. The deal is worth $55 billion and involves paying 25% premium on the going price of shares.

WSJ Original article ›
WSJ Original article ›
WSJ Original article ›

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