September 20, 2011
Reuters
By Simon Romero, NYT
Brazil has begun building its first nuclear submarine to protect its vast, new offshore oil discoveries. Colombia’s oil production is climbing so fast that it is closing in on Algeria’s and could hit Libya’s prewar levels in a few years. ExxonMobil is striking new deals in Argentina, which recently heralded its biggest oil discovery since the 1980s.
Up and down the Americas, it is a similar story: a Chinese-built rig is preparing to drill in Cuban waters; a Canadian official has suggested that unemployed Americans could move north to help fill tens of thousands of new jobs in Canada’s expanding oil sands; and one of the hemisphere’s hottest new oil pursuits is actually in the United States, at a shale formation in North Dakota’s prairie that is producing 400,000 barrels of oil a day and is part of a broader shift that could ease American dependence on Middle Eastern oil.
For the first time in decades, the emerging prize of global energy may be the Americas, where Western oil companies are refocusing their gaze in a rush to explore clusters of coveted oil fields.
Rush Limbaugh
A conservative vegetarian will eat his vegetables and leave you alone. A liberal vegetarian will eat his and then demand that you only eat vegetables, too. And this is one of the big differences between liberals and conservatives across the board
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trscoop: @NewsNinja2012 indeed. I saw the form but haven't had a chance to complete it yet :-)
memeorandum: GOP Mixed on Health Moves (Wall Street Journal) http://t.co/qp0NgBqS http://t.co/kvRp5hqd
ewerickson: @AustinWalne @nickrp I love that site.
politico: Katie Couric has extended an open invitation to Sarah Palin to guest on her forthcoming daytime talk show: http://t.co/PEcJsmAf