Thursday, August 22, 2013

‘Peak Car’…It’s All Downhill From Here

There have been a number of recent research reports addressing the notion of ‘Peak Car’ – whether driving has peaked per person in the US. So here are a bunch of interesting tidbits and nuggets I have gleaned from the reports ‘A New Direction‘ and ‘Has Motorization in the US Peaked?’, as well as an update on miles driven….it’s all downhill from here.

Pedal to the Metal

–From the end of World War II to 2004 (known as ‘the Driving Boom’), Americans drove more miles nearly every year
–The driving boom coincided with the Baby Boom -  a bubble of those born between 1946 and 1964
–By 2004, the average American was driving 85% more miles than in 1970
–Between 1980 and 2010, freeway capacity (measured in lane-miles) expanded by 35%

Hitting The Brakes

–The peak driving age group is that of 35-54 year-olds
–The total number of 35-54 year-olds is set to tail off by the end of this decade
–Meanwhile, the share of the population of those 65 and older is set to increase dramatically by 2040


–In 1980, the age group of 65 and older made up 11% of the population. By 2040 this share is expected to reach 21%
–By 1992, 90% of the driving age population could drive, but by 2011 this had fallen to 86% – the lowest level in 30 years
–In 2011, 67% of 16-34 year-olds had a license, the lowest level since at last 1963
–Inflation-adjusted gasoline prices have doubled in the last decade
–Young people aged 16 -34 drove 23% fewer miles in 2009 than in 2001
–From 2001 – 2009,  the number of passenger miles traveled by those aged 16-34 on public transport increased 40%
–Americans took nearly 10% more trips via public transportation in 2011 than in 2005

Driving It Home

–The absolute number of cars peaked in 2008, at 236.4 million
–This translates to nearly 2 vehicles per household, over 1 car per licensed driver, and 0.75 vehicles per person

–Although ‘The Great Recession‘ is likely to blame for the drop-off in vehicles since 2008, a growing population (increasing 11% from 2011 to 2025) means we will likely see a higher number of vehicles on the road in the future

Conclusion

–Although we may not have peaked in terms of total vehicles in the US, we have likely peaked in terms of ‘Peak Car’ – aka miles driven per person
–Whether this slow-down is due to telecommuting, changing demographics, higher fuel costs, online shopping, or increased use of public transport, the evidence points to a turning tide in terms of miles driven:

Thanks for playing, and keep on trucking…or don’t, as the case may be…


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*Lead Software Testing Manager (El Segundo, CA)

Reply to: rwddf-3678680616@job.craigslist.org [?]

Line Cook (Valencia)

Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner Menu. You must have experience.

All candidates must be: friendly, outgoing, self-motivated and team players. Please have reliable transportation.

We are looking for long-term employment with future candidates with the opportunity to grow within the company.

Breakfast and dinner cooks needed! Must have endurance, the ability to move fast and experience in a fast-paced kitchen. We are looking for cooks with a passion for cooking and pride in presentation. We want our cooks to have free-range of making daily lunch and dinner specials... so be creative! There is plenty of room to grow in this company, so show us what you've got!

If you fit into the above positions by meeting the requirements we are looking for, and would like to join a fun team, send us over your resume. Please COPY AND PASTE your resume into your inquiry; we will NOT open any attachments. Only apply if you meet the above requirements.
California Food handling card is needed. Posting ID: 3679442377

Posted: 2013-03-13, 3:24PM PDT

Edited: 2013-03-13, 3:24PM PDT

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Coiled Tubing Service Operator - Cudd Energy Services - Robstown, TX

The primary role of the coiled tubing service operator is to help with the operation of coiled tubing equipment, rig up and rig down equipment, perform maintenance of equipment, maintain and submit drivers' logs and time sheets in a timely fashion, and follow required safety and operational procedures.
Responsibilities: Promote and participate in all required safety, compliance and certifications programs. Participate in rig up of connection hoses and high-pressure iron equipment. Maintain all required log books and inspection reports. Complete pre- and post-trip inspections, and fuel and service units. Maintain assigned equipment and perform daily inspections to ensure compliance with operational and safety requirements. Report all operational deficiencies to supervisor and maintenance personnel. Proficiently perform equipment inspection and maintenance as requested and complete paperwork. Operate equipment in accordance with company procedures. Monitor well control parameters and calculations before and during job applications. Follow proper rig-up and rig-down procedures. Maintains general housekeeping, clean up, repair, and preparation of equipment for the next job. Practice safe driving procedures when travelling to and from locations. Participate in required company training and service line career development training.

Qualifications:
Skills: Excellent communication, technical writing, and public speaking skills Able to be on call 24/7 when scheduled to work Willing to work long hours Able to pass DOT physical and drug screen Able to understand and carry out routine oral and written instructions Able to lift 50 pounds on a regular basis Safely operate, maintain, and perform minor repairs on equipment Maintain effective working relationship with other employees
Education: High School Diploma or equivalent General knowledge of the oil and gas industry
Certifications: Class "A" CDL license with hazmat endorsement, and a satisfactory driver record with no DWI convictions within the past three (3) years or current DWI charges
Environment: The coiled tubing service assistant will work in a physically demanding role, often under harsh environmental conditions.
Cudd Energy Services - 17 hours ago - save job - block

Energy is the key to growth for Key Energy Services, one of the US's largest well-servicing and workover companies. The company provide...

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Entry - Level Office Assistant (Inglewood, CA)

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Deep-water drilling expansion will strain workforce, study says

Chevron's Tahiti platform (Simone Sebastian/Houston Chronicle) Chevron’s Tahiti platform (Simone Sebastian/Houston Chronicle)

Global spending on deep-water wells will surge to $114 billion by 2022, compared to $43 billion last year, creating a critical need for offshore rig workers, according to a new analysis by Wood Mackenzie.

Deep-water markets are expanding rapidly, the research and consulting firm notes, projecting a 150 percent jump in the number of exploration, appraisal and development wells drilled by 2020. It also projects expansion of Arctic drilling by the end of the decade, though Arctic wells will remain a fraction of all wells drilled — just three percent through 2022.

Recruiting: Energy company hopes video game will help fill long list of job openings

“To meet the forecasted well demand, the fleet will require 95 additional deep-water rigs to be constructed between 2016 and 2022, representing $65 billion of investment,” Malcolm Forbes-Cable, senior management consultant at Wood Mackenzie and author of the study, in a written statement. “This will require the longest period of deep-water rig construction to date, representing a change for the deep-water sector from cyclical to sustained growth.”

The Future of Global Deepwater Markets report projects rig contractors will need to expand their payrolls by 37,000 workers over the next decade to meet demand for rigs. That’s an impossible target to meet under the current rate of recruitment, Wood Mackenzie says.

Subsea: Feds hope more rigs will become reefs with policy revisions

The analysis notes that deep-water projects have become central to growth plans for many international oil companies, but that creates challenges for budget constraints, risk management and human resources.

“Deepwater has accounted for most of the discovered volumes during this time, but this has not been without increasing technical and commercial challenges,” said Malcolm Forbes-Cable, Senior Management Consultant at Wood Mackenzie and author of the study.

Also on FuelFix:

Shell is moving mountains for deep-water Gulf oil

Shell's Olympus platform prepares for Gulf journey

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System Administrator (Security Expert)

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Methane scrutiny in Obama climate plan may cost drillers

Workers adjust piping during a natural gas hydraulic fracturing operation at an Encana Oil & Gas Inc. drilling site in western Colorado. (Brennan Linsley/AP)

Riding shotgun in a Toyota 4Runner rigged up with a carbon-fiber pipe and a spectrometer, Duke University researcher Rob Jackson trolled through Washington searching for evidence that natural gas is not quite the climate champion President Barack Obama claimed this week.

He was replicating a study he did in Boston, measuring leaks from creaky natural gas pipes. In addition to being a possible safety risk, methane, the key component of natural gas, is 25 times as potent a greenhouse gas as carbon dioxide. And leaks may undercut much of the climate benefits of gas.

“First and foremost this is a greenhouse-gas question,” Jackson said as he drove near the Capitol. “What we are trying to find out is how big a problem this is for cities.”

In a climate plan released with a speech at Georgetown University on June 25, Obama called for an accounting of leaks across the natural gas production and transport sector. The address was mostly upbeat for gas, highlighting the benefits of shifting from coal, and shares of gas companies such as Chesapeake Energy Corp. (CHK) and Cabot Oil & Gas Co. (COG) rose.

“We should strengthen our position as the top natural gas producer because, in the medium term at least, it not only can provide safe, cheap power, but it can also help reduce our carbon emissions,” Obama said. “It’s the transition fuel that can power our economy with less carbon pollution.”

Fine Print

Included in the fine print of the White House climate plan, however, are measures that could complicate the industry’s growth, such as a closer look at the scope of leaks from gas wells, pipelines and compressor plants. Depending on what it finds, new regulations could be imposed.

Obama also called for new and upgraded pipelines to reduce leaks. And an “interagency methane strategy” was announced to get a better handle on emissions data and identifying technologies and opportunities to cut them.

This comes on top of a proposal by the Environmental Protection Agency in April to change its calculation of methane’s climate intensity. The agency said it is considering raising the global-warming potential multiplier for methane to 25 from 21, a change that would increase the official estimate of U.S. emissions, which had been declining. Last year, they were down more than 12 percent from the peak in 2007, the steepest drop since the late 1970s.

100 Years

Critics such as Cornell University engineering professor Tony Ingraffea say that even at 25, the EPA is under counting the true threat.
“Any decrease in carbon-dioxide emissions is more than offset by the methane,” Ingraffea said. The EPA is looking at the impact of methane over 100 years, “but we don’t have a hundred years to do something about global warming.”

The issue has gained importance as natural gas production in the U.S. has soared, boosted by the expanding use of a drilling technique known as hydraulic fracturing that frees gas trapped in shale deposits deep underground. That boom drove prices to decade lows last year.

Burning coal produces twice the carbon-dioxide emissions as natural gas, and carbon dioxide remains in the atmosphere for up to 200 years compared with 12 years for methane, according to the EPA.

The scope of gas leakage is the key to determining what climate benefit natural gas delivers over coal, which accounted for 37 percent of electricity generation last year, down from 49 percent in 2007. As rules from the EPA curb coal use, determining where gas leaks are happening and stopping them is the key to making sure one climate pollutant doesn’t replace another, according to environmental groups such as the World Resources Institute.

‘Poor Benchmark’

“Given the support we’ve seen for natural gas in this administration and the way the industry has grown and is expected to grow, getting a handle on these emissions is really important,” James Bradbury, a senior associate in the climate program at the institute, said in an interview. “While natural gas is better than coal, coal is a very poor benchmark to use.”

The ISE-REVERE (FCGIV) Natural Gas Index (FUM), which includes securities for natural gas producers Chesapeake and Cabot, rose 2.4 percent this week, reversing what had been a more than 5 percent decline this month. Coal-related shares, such as Peabody Energy Corp. (BTU) and Arch Coal Inc. (ACI), have fallen. The Stowe Global Coal (COAL) index of companies that produce and sell coal, including Arch, fell this week to its lowest level since the depths of the recession in March 2009.

Industry Reaction

The gas industry responded largely favorably to Obama’s climate plan, saying it has an “incredible opportunity” to help meet the goals, a different response than coal producers and coal-state governors who trashed the plan as a job killer.

“We now have a great opportunity to explain the role natural gas can play,” Paula Gant, senior vice president at the American Gas Association, said in an interview. Gas is “part of the climate solution the president highlighted.”

The gas utilities are spending $7 billion a year upgrading their pipeline and delivery systems, and partnering with the Environmental Defense Fund on what else they can do to cut down on any methane losses, she said.

“We want to continue to find ways to drive down” emissions, she said. “Gas is the future.”

For many environmental groups, that’s just what they fear.

They warn that the short-term benefits of switching to natural gas may not be worth long-term problems, making it a poor “transition fuel.” On the local level, hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, is blamed for contaminating water by some citizens and activist groups.

‘False Step’

“The president’s ongoing infatuation with natural gas was one false step,” Stephen Kretzmann, executive director of Oil Change International, said in a statement that broadly praised Obama’s climate speech.

The climate impact of methane is another concern. In December seven states notified the EPA that it would sue the agency for failing to adopt curbs on methane from oil and gas drilling. And the scope of those emissions are a matter of dispute, with industry and critics awaiting a study by the Environmental Defense Fund that will serve as a new benchmark. It’s scheduled to be released in the coming weeks.

For Jackson, who funded his study through the Nicholas School of the Environment at Duke, his part of the equation is to find out how much methane is leaking out once the gas is being piped to homes.

In Washington, he is spending this week in a silver 4Runner, outfitted with the pipe sticking up eight feet to determine how high the flume of gas is rising, an anemometer on the roof to measure wind speed, and the spectrometer in the rear for methane readings. At spots with especially high readings, the researchers get out of the car to test inside manholes by hand.

In Boston, his team found 3,356 leaks with concentrations up to 15 times naturally occurring levels, according to the study published last year. In Washington, they have found the number of leaks are fewer per mile, but each one is bigger.

“So far the cities look leakier than people anticipated,” Jackson said.


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RN'S /PT/ OT (SANTA CLARITA AND PALMDALE/LANCASTER/ LA)

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NM farmers selling water to oil and gas developers

CARLSBAD, N.M. — With a scant agriculture water supply due to the prolonged drought, some farmers in Eddy County with supplemental wells are keeping bill collectors at bay by selling their water to the booming oil and gas industry.

The industry needs the water for hydraulic fracturing, known as fracking, the drilling technique that has been used for decades to blast huge volumes of water, fine sands and chemicals into the ground to crack open valuable shale formations.

In recent months, more legal notices have been appearing in the Current-Argus informing the public that a water-right holder with a supplemental well has submitted an application to the state engineer’s office seeking to change the purpose of use from agriculture to commercial, or transferring the right from one location to another.

“A lot of folks are doing that,” said New Mexico Interstate Stream Commissioner Jim Wilcox, an Otis resident and president of the Otis Mutual Domestic Water Association. “I can’t blame them. The Carlsbad Irrigation District doesn’t have the water the farmers need, and our farmers have to have some income coming in.”

Wilcox said farmers in the Carlsbad Irrigation District can’t sell their primary water source they receive via the irrigation system because the CID is a government project. However, if they have a supplemental well, they can apply for a change of use permit that gives them the right to sell their well water for commercial use.

“They can do a temporary or permanent move. But they have to go through the process with the State Engineer’s Office,” he said.

Jim Davis has been selling water commercially from his wells in Black River for about seven years and says he’s seeing more of his rural farming neighbors selling water to the oil and gas industry to keep financially afloat.

Davis said he sees no problem selling water to the industry, but the current drought conditions are having an impact on the amount of water that is being sold. He believes there has to be some personal accountability on how much is pumped out of the aquifer.

Davis alleges that some well owners are finding ways to apply for a commercial permit that allows them to pump up to 9 acre-feet for the year without advertising their change of use and advertising it in the legal section of the newspaper.

He said it is “grossly unfair” to those who follow the law.

“In some areas, we are over-appropriating. We are in a drought and the water table has dropped drastically and there is no recharge,” he said. “There are some people who have legal water rights and they are over-pumping. The public doesn’t know about it. As private individuals, we have to raise Cain about it.”

In Lakewood, north of Carlsbad, more than a dozen water well owners are seeking compensation from the state after their wells dried up. They claim the New Mexico Interstate Stream Commission’s augmentation wells nearby are the cause of the dry wells. But the state says only a handful of wells have been impacted by the augmentation wells. Many of the well owners in the area have been selling their water commercially and have over-pumped with no recharge in the aquifer.

The state built the augmentation wells under a settlement agreement that would provide CID farmers water in times of water shortage. But the wells, which pump into the Pecos River, have not been able to meet the demand due to the drought.

When Davis started selling water seven years ago, the going rate for a 42-gallon barrel was 25 cents. Today, the rate is $1 a barrel.

“The city of Carlsbad did the right thing. It raised its commercial rate to $3 a barrel. It cut down on the amount of water the industry was buying,” Davis said.

Davis, who has eight metered wells, said he works hard to follow the state’s water laws, as do his neighbors.

“Black River is at its lowest level ever. It’s lower than it was in the 1950s when we had a long drought. I make my living from selling water, but at the same time, I think it is important to protect our precious water supply. I try to do things the right way and above board,” he said.

As president of the Otis Mutual Domestic Water, Wilcox said the current trend to sell water to the oil and gas industry is causing its water managers some concern.

“Farmers right now are having to pump their supplemental wells, and we understand that. It’s their livelihood,” he said. “But the supplemental wells are drawing from the same water table we provide potable water to our customers (from).”

“The oil and gas industry is requiring a lot of water and our concern is the effect it’s having on our aquifer,” he added. “We are concerned about losing water that can’t be recovered. Hopefully, we will get through this drought and everyone will be intact.”


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Project Manager Doors, Frames Hardware

Reply to: qdssx-3678622066@job.craigslist.org [?]

Floorhand Trainee - Lewis Energy Group - Encinal, TX

Carries out variety of physical activities on rig floor under direct supervision of Driller.

Responsibilities

Assembles and disassembles casings and pipe sections.
Mixes drilling mud.
Repairs drilling machinery, slush pumps, and derricks.
Digs drainage ditches, racks tools, and cleans drilling floor around rig.
Requires strict adherence to safe work practices.

Qualifications

BASIC
Must have High School Diploma or GED.
Must be able to work up to 50 hours weekly.
Must have one year mechanical experience.
Must have Valid Texas Driver License.
PREFERRED
One year experience in Oil and Gas industry.
OTHER
Effective communication, interpersonal, organizational and time management skills.
Must be able to work in team environment.


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