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The North Dakota Man Camp Project is an interdisciplinary project aiming to document the crew camps of the Bakken Oil Patch, North Dakota.The project was founded by University of North Dakota (UND) scholar of social work Bret Weber and UND historian Bill Caraher, as well as historians Aaron Barth and Kostis Kourelis, archeologist Richard Rothaus and photographers John Holmgren and Kyle Cassidy.
Richard W. Lozier Jr. (born January 2, 1944) in Minneapolis, Minnesota, is an American infrastructure and regulation lawyer.He worked for a lobby group representing Energy Transfer Partners interests in the application for the controversial Bakken pipeline.
Camps are part of an increasingly significant shift of global human population toward temporary or mobile housing in the 21st century. [1] Use of the term 'man camp' became popular during the Bakken oil boom, which began in 2006, peaked in 2012, and draws large numbers of workers—overwhelmingly men—into western North Dakota, creating a housing shortage. [1]
No doubt the Bakken has become a game-changer for U.S. energy production. But while the North Dakota oil boom gets referenced a lot, you may not know what's going on. Here are ten charts that tell ...
Finally, the rate of return, by shaving a million dollars off of well costs, improves from 50% to 60% at current oil prices, which really adds up. The Bakken can still produce solid returns even ...
It's hard to argue the fact that Bakken has become a game-changer for U.S. oil production. While it was discovered in the 1950s the play wasn't economically viable until more recently. Since ...
Patten has served on Natural Resources, Taxation, and Transportation committees. He was also selected to serve on the High-Level Radioactive Waste Advisory Council, a joint committee formed by legislators in North Dakota and Montana to discuss the disposal of waste material in the Bakken Formation. [2] [3] [4] Patten and his wife, Joy, have two ...
Oil production coming out of the Bakken was closing in on 800,000 barrels of oil per day as of this past March. This has some speculating that the play's production might be able to top more than ...