413 billion barrels ???
Apakah beneran atau sekedar issue (hoax) utk mengerem harga karena
ketakutan kurangnya pasokan ?

RDP
===========================================
Dakota Oil Fields of Saudi-Sized Reserves Make Farmers Drillers
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=ayj1uo_gdNI4

By Anthony Effinger

 June 3 (Bloomberg) -- John Bartelson, who smokes Marlboro Lights
through fingers blackened with tractor grease, may look like an
average wheat farmer. He isn't. He's one of North Dakota's new oil
barons.

Every month, he gets a check for tens of thousands of dollars from a
company in Houston called EOG Resources Inc., which drilled two oil
wells on his land last year. He says the day his first royalty check
arrived was one to remember.

``I smiled to beat hell, and I went to town and had a beer,''
Bartelson, 65, says.

His new wealth springs from the Bakken formation, a sprawling deposit
of high-quality crude beneath the durum wheat fields of North Dakota,
Montana and southern Saskatchewan and Manitoba. The Bakken may give
the U.S. -- the world's biggest importer of oil -- a new domestic
energy source at a time when demand from China and India is ratcheting
up the global competition for supplies and propelling average U.S.
gasoline prices to almost $4 a gallon.

And unlike the tar from Canada's oil sands, Bakken crude needs little
refining. Swirl some of it in a Mason jar and it leaves a thin,
honey-colored film along the sides. It's light - -almost like gasoline
-- and sweet, meaning it's low in sulfur.

Best of all, the Bakken could be huge. The U.S. Geological Survey's
Leigh Price, a Denver geochemist who died of a heart attack in 2000,
estimated that the Bakken might hold a whopping 413 billion barrels.
If so, it would dwarf Saudi Arabia's Ghawar, the world's biggest
field, which has produced about 55 billion barrels.

Thin Deposit

The challenge is getting the oil out. Bakken crude is locked 2 miles
(3.2 kilometers) underground in a layer of dolomite, a dense mineral
that doesn't surrender oil the way more-porous limestone does. The
dolomite band is narrow, too, averaging just 22 feet (7 meters) in
North Dakota.

The USGS said in April that the Bakken holds as much as 4.3 billion
barrels that can be recovered using today's engineering techniques.
That's a fraction of the oil that Price said should be there, but it's
still the largest accumulation of crude in the 48 contiguous U.S.
states. North Dakota, where Bakken exploration is most intense now,
won't become Saudi Arabia unless technology improves.

``The Bakken is the biggest thing in oil in the lower 48 right now,''
says Jim Jarrell, president of Ross Smith Energy Group Ltd., a
research firm in Calgary. ``And among the least understood.''

Delaying the Peak

Some oil, like the 10.4 billion barrels estimated to be recoverable in
Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, remains off limits -- as a
nature conservation measure -- even as President George W. Bush renews
his calls for drilling there. North Dakota, already crisscrossed by
farm roads, is open for business.

As traditional oil fields become scarce, exploration companies must
tackle trickier ones to stay in business. Their success will determine
when the world reaches peak oil -- the high point in production after
which new supply will no longer be there to slake new demand. It's a
gloomy concept. Peak oil theorists predict the mother of all oil
shocks, complete with famine and wars for energy.

These days, big new oil deposits often come with caveats. Brazil's
Petroleo Brasileiro SA says its offshore Tupi field contains as much
as 8 billion barrels of oil, which the company hopes to start pumping
next year. But the field is under more than four miles of water and
rock, where pressure can crush drilling equipment.

Hedge Bus

The Bakken dolomite is hardly an obstacle, by comparison. And even if
Price was too optimistic, the Bakken is big enough to make investors
rich. Some have made fortunes already.

In April, a busload of hedge fund managers drove by Bartelson's land,
ogling the metronomic pump jacks and the devilish orange flares of
excess natural gas that are making parts of North Dakota look more
like west Texas.

``There's nothing that can stop this play,'' says Mike Reger, chief
executive officer of Northern Oil & Gas Inc., a five-person company
near Minneapolis that has leased the mineral rights under 32,000 acres
(13,000 hectares) in the North Dakota Bakken.

Reger, 32, brought the hedge fund managers up to see the oil field.
Some, like Ryan Zorn of Houston-based investment management firm
Saracen Energy Advisors LP, are investors in Northern already.
Northern shares have risen 61 percent since being listed on the
American Stock Exchange on March 26.

Fool's Gold

For decades, the Bakken was the fool's gold of the oil industry. The
name describes a geological formation that looks like an Oreo cookie:
two layers of black shale that bleed oil into the middle layer of
dolomite. It's named after Henry O. Bakken, the North Dakota farmer
who owned the land where the first drilling rig revealed the shale
layers in the 1950s.

All of the layers are thin -- about 150 feet altogether -- and none of
them give up oil easily. In older, vertical wells, oil would often
flow for a month and then fizzle.

Now, companies like Austin, Texas-based Brigham Exploration Co.;
Denver-based Whiting Petroleum Corp.; and EOG are drilling
horizontally. They go straight down 10,000 feet and then put a slight
angle in the mud motor, a 30-foot piece of tubing that drives the bit,
so they hit the Bakken sideways, making a horizontal tunnel 4,500 feet
long through the dolomite.

That exposes more of the oil-bearing rock. Then they pump pressurized
water and sand into the hole to fracture the dolomite, making cracks
for oil to seep through.

It eventually winds up in a pipeline that runs east to Clearbrook,
Minnesota, and then south to Chicago.

Where Billionaires Roam

Several billionaires are at work in the Bakken. Harold Hamm's Enid,
Oklahoma-based Continental Resources Inc. has leases on 487,000 acres
in Montana and North Dakota. Hamm, who started out driving a truck,
owns 73 percent of Continental, worth $7.9 billion. Philip Anschutz,
68, founder of Qwest Communications International Inc. and Regal
Entertainment Group, is there, too.

So are two sons of billionaire H.L. Hunt, the 1930s wildcatter.
Petro-Hunt LLC is owned by the trust estate of William Herbert Hunt,
who was convicted in a civil trial with his brothers Lamar and Nelson
Bunker of trying to corner the silver market in 1979. Hunt Oil Co.,
another Bakken operator, is owned by their half brother, Ray L. Hunt.

The big winner so far has been EOG, formerly a subsidiary of bankrupt
energy trader Enron Corp. It drilled a horizontal well in western
North Dakota just north of Parshall -- population 1,028 -- in April
2006. The well came online a month later and kicked out 1,883 barrels
in the first seven days. Unlike the older vertical wells, it's still
going. In March, it produced 2,305 barrels, according to the North
Dakota Industrial Commission.

No Slam Dunk

EOG has eight rigs running on 320,000 acres of mineral leases in the
North Dakota Bakken. The company said in its 2007 annual report that
the area has the highest return of all the places in which it operates
-- including Texas's Barnett Shale, the Gulf of Mexico coast and the
Permian Basin of New Mexico.

The Bakken isn't foolproof. Far from it. Drilling there is expensive
-- about $5 million a well, according to EOG -- and takes experience.
Dallas-based Petro-Hunt's first well in the North Dakota Bakken didn't
make money, company geologist Steve Bressler says. Brigham's Bergstrom
Family Trust well came online at 277 barrels a day -- viable at
today's high oil prices but not a gusher.

``There will be variances,'' says John Gerdes, an oil and gas analyst
at SunTrust Robinson Humphrey Inc. in Houston. ``The rock matters. The
people matter.''

Oil Rush

The success of EOG's Parshall well set off a land grab in North
Dakota's Mountrail County. Land men -- the experts who move from boom
to boom leasing mineral rights -- swarmed, paying ever higher prices
for ground that for decades grew crops and concealed Cold War missile
silos.

On private acreage, land men negotiate with mineral owners like
Bartelson. They offer a bonus upfront to hold the mineral rights for
three to five years, and they agree to pay a fraction of the revenue
from any oil produced each month -- often from 1/8 to 3/16. On land
with a producing well, the mineral lease lasts as long as the well
does. On government land, the bonus is set at auction.

Bartelson in 2004 granted a five-year lease on 1,400 acres, under
which he owns half the mineral rights. He got a bonus of $25 per
mineral acre, or $17,500, plus one-sixth of any oil revenue. Times
have changed since then. In November, Sinclair Oil Corp. of Salt Lake
City paid $16,500 an acre at auction for half the mineral rights on
320 acres of government- owned land in the Parshall Field, according
to the U.S. Bureau of Land Management.

`No Acreage'

``That's a record for Montana and North Dakota,'' BLM spokesman Greg
Albright says.

Among the biggest companies punching holes in the North Dakota Bakken
are Houston-based Marathon Oil Corp., the fourth- largest U.S. oil
company, and Hess Corp. of New York, which is No. 5. No. 1 Exxon Mobil
Corp. isn't active in the Bakken. John Freeman, an analyst at
investment bank Raymond James & Associates Inc. in Houston, says Exxon
is looking for bigger deposits overseas.

``Now, there's no acreage left,'' he says.

The truest believer in the Bakken might be Reger, the CEO of Northern
Oil. He's certainly the loudest promoter.

Reger is a fourth-generation oilman. His great-grandfather managed
operations for Mobil Oil, now part of Exxon Mobil, in the Williston
Basin, the 110,000-square-mile (285,000-square- kilometer) geological
formation in the northern plains that holds the Bakken and other
deposits. Reger's grandfather leased land atop all of them. His
father, uncle and brother are in the business, too.

``It's our basin,'' Reger says.

Bakken Hunters

If it works out the way Reger says, he and his partner, a former
derivatives trader named Ryan Gilbertson, will be the Sergey Brin and
Larry Page of the Bakken. Like the Google Inc. founders, Reger and
Gilbertson are young -- Gilbertson is also 32 -- and they aren't
afraid to roll the dice.

The lanky, blue-eyed Reger wears cowboy boots and a saucer-sized belt
buckle emblazoned with an ``R.'' He vacationed this year in the
Maldives in the Indian Ocean and insisted on a stopover to see Dubai's
building boom. Gilbertson, meantime, shot a 10-foot-tall brown bear at
eight paces in Alaska in 2007. He has a picture of him and the dead
bear on the wall in his office.

`Son o' Bitches'

The future partners met while boating on Lake Minnetonka, outside
Minneapolis. Gilbertson is from the area and traded derivatives for
Piper Jaffray Cos. and a hedge fund firm named Telluride Asset
Management LLC in nearby Wayzata, where Northern is based. Reger moved
from Montana to St. Paul to attend the University of St. Thomas.

``We're both cowboy-boot-wearing, country-music-listening, gun-toting
sons o' bitches,'' Gilbertson says. These days, they both drive black
Cadillac Escalade SUVs and wear designer jeans.

Gilbertson says he knows more about interest-only mortgage bonds than
he does about oil. But he says Northern will succeed because he and
Reger weren't in business during the busts of earlier decades, so they
aren't gun-shy today.

When EOG hit oil, they leased as many mineral rights in Mountrail
County as they could, even as prices rose.

``The fear of these busts has clouded the judgment of so many
players,'' Gilbertson says. ``We just grabbed everything with both
hands.''

Turning Over Leases

Northern makes money without actually drilling or operating wells. Its
strategy is like the game of Monopoly: lease in promising areas and
get paid when someone else uses the land to drill.

The strategy is possible because of the way land is assembled for
drilling. Reger's grandfather, uncle and father had made their money
as lease brokers: They'd lease the land themselves or buy leases
already granted and then sell them at higher prices to exploration
companies.

Reger and Gilbertson intend to keep their leases, pay a share of the
drilling costs and keep a portion of the oil revenue. Gilbertson says
it was his idea. ``I saw the family's model as flawed,'' he says.

Leasing mineral rights means finding mineral owners. That's not always
easy, because the farmer who owns the surface may not own the
``minerals,'' as they're known. Farmers can sell land and retain the
minerals. When a mineral owner dies, the rights are often passed in
equal portions to his or her children, Reger says, making them hard to
track down.

Hauling County Records

To find mineral owners in Mountrail County, land men spend months in
the courthouse, poring over photo-album-sized books that show who owns
mineral rights and whether they've been leased.

One day in April, there were 50 people lugging books around. They line
up well before the courthouse opens to get a spot on the first floor
so they don't have to haul volumes up the stairs to an old law library
that's been filled with folding tables to accommodate the horde.

Reger started leasing land for oil and gas exploration in Montana at
age 15. He carried a portable typewriter to bang out contracts on
landowners' kitchen tables.

It takes more than mineral rights to drill. Most western states are
divided into neat little squares called sections. Each is one square
mile, or 640 acres. If you want to drill an oil well in a section, you
lease the mineral rights inside it. You don't need all of them, but
you have to find all of the rights owners in that section and offer to
let them participate.

This is where Northern makes its money.

Watching Permits

Reger's favorite time of day is 4 p.m., when the North Dakota
Industrial Commission posts the names of companies that have gotten
permits to drill. Very often, a rig is heading to a section in which
Northern has mineral rights. He knows then that it will be a matter of
time before he gets a letter from the company asking if he wants to
share the cost -- and the revenue -- based on the percentage of
mineral rights Northern controls in that section. He almost always
says yes.

Reger makes it look easy because the Bakken is hot, says Summerfield
``Sam'' Baldridge, a partner at Montana Oil & Gas Properties Inc.,
founded by Reger's uncle, Steve, in Billings, Montana. Bigger
companies are eager to drill, their wells are producing and oil prices
are high.

``If it goes bad, you can go broke really quick,'' Baldridge says.
``You have to have guts and capital.''

Booms and Busts

Baldridge, 51, knows from experience. He was leasing mineral rights
for Mobil in Montana in February 1986 when he heard on the radio that
oil prices had plunged. In two days, a barrel of West Texas
Intermediate crude fell to $15 from $20.

``We knew it was history,'' Baldridge says. ``From Calgary to Houston,
everything went south.''

North Dakota has seen booms and busts from an array of oil deposits.
The Bakken began forming 360 million years ago from dead algae that
sank to the bottom of an ancient sea, where they were buried by
successive layers of rock. Heat and pressure turned the algae into
oil-saturated shale. Now it lies like a buried blanket under much of
the Williston Basin.

Amerada Petroleum Corp. roughnecks started drilling what would become
the first well in North Dakota on Sept. 3, 1950. They went through the
Bakken before producing oil from deeper Silurian dolomite on April 4,
1951. A year later, Amerada (now Hess) finished the Henry O. Bakken
well. Cuttings from the hole showed the shale layers that are now
known by the same name.

Finding Porosity

Exploration in the Williston Basin grew for a few decades after that,
ebbing and flowing with the price of oil. Mostly, drillers pursued
deposits deeper than the Bakken. Those who tried to exploit it usually
failed. The oil wouldn't keep flowing. ``Bakken was a four-letter
word,'' says Dick Findley, a geologist in Billings.

In 1996, Findley, now 56, had a revelation. The
consultant-turned-oilman went out to his rig in eastern Montana one
night to check on things. At 2 a.m., it hit the Bakken dolomite and
produced an unexpected rush of oil. Oil expands as it forms, and the
pressure drives it into rock fractures. In the past, the dolomite
hadn't seemed porous enough or fractured enough to release it.

``We got porosity that I didn't know existed,'' Findley says.

Findley and his partner, a land man named Bob Robinson, thought they
could re-enter old wells and blast the middle dolomite layer with
pressurized water to make cracks for crude to flow. They produced oil
but not enough. So they turned to horizontal drilling. The technique
had been around for decades.

500 Wells

Some had tried horizontal drilling in the Bakken in the early 1990s.
They had aimed for the upper shale layer, though. Findley thought they
could produce more by staying in the middle dolomite, even though the
best, most porous rock was just 10 feet thick.

They drilled their first horizontal well in May 2000, blasted it with
water, and the oil flowed. The field is called Elm Coulee, and today
there are more than 500 wells there. Findley sold much of his interest
to investors who could afford the drilling, though he still has an
override -- a small percentage of any production.

Findley's success got others thinking about the Bakken. One was
Michael Johnson, an independent geologist in Denver. Montana and North
Dakota require companies to make public the information they collect
when drilling, including gamma ray logs, which register the location
of oil-bearing shale. Johnson examined logs from hundreds of wells
east of Elm Coulee. He zeroed in on a dry one in Mountrail County that
had similarities.

Word of Mouth

Johnson and two partners, land man Henry Gordon and geologist Robert
Berry, leased about 38,000 acres in the area and shopped the mineral
rights around. EOG bought 75 percent across all of the acres. In April
2006, EOG started drilling near a stream called Shell Creek. Workers
drilled down some 9,000 feet and then started angling into the Bakken.
They hit natural gas and crude.

Oil companies try to keep discoveries quiet so they can snap up more
leases around them. Information travels fast in the Williston, though,
where all of the roughnecks and rig operators know one another. Reger
and Gilbertson had just formed Northern Oil when they got word from a
lawyer in Montana that EOG had hit a big one. Reger sent his brother
J.R. to lease as much land as he could, as close as he could, to EOG.

Pathfinder

In April, Reger took his busload of hedge fund managers to a well
called Pathfinder being drilled by Slawson Exploration Co. out of
Wichita, Kansas. Northern owns only 3 percent of Pathfinder but has
land all around it. Success here would almost certainly mean more
drilling in adjacent sections.

``From this location, we are literally masters of all we survey,'' Reger says.

The drill had hit the Bakken layer two weeks earlier, on Easter
Sunday, producing a burst of natural gas. Where there's gas, there's
often oil. As the rig clanks and groans like a motorized Godzilla, the
hedge fund managers gather inside the trailer and crowd around the
desk of Jon Starkweather, a ``mud logger'' who analyzes the rock chips
coming up the hole. His window is covered with long charts that look
like electrocardiograms.

``We landed this one just right,'' the bearded Starkweather says.
Recent gas ventings, called kicks, confirm it.

Even if Reger and Gilbertson stopped gathering more mineral leases,
they would make a fortune on what they have already, Reger says.

``I could take a nap for two years under my desk and wake up a hero,'' he says.

Millionaires

Reger's 14 percent stake in Northern is worth about $49 million.
Gilbertson has shares worth $24 million. Whiting Petroleum's shares
have more than doubled in the past 12 months, triple the 34 percent
gain for a group of 96 energy companies in the Russell 2000 Index.

The other people doing well in the Bakken are the mineral owners under
the oil wells -- folks like John Bartelson. Whiting paid them $56
million in 2007. EOG declines to say what it paid, though it's
certainly more because it operates more wells. Whiting gets much of
its Bakken revenue from shares of EOG wells it owns. It acquired them
by buying Robert Berry's remaining stake in the Parshall acreage after
EOG struck oil.

Bartelson's checks are about to get bigger. One more EOG well just
came online, he says, and another is about to be fractured with water.
Still another has been permitted for drilling. For now, he's farming.
The oil market is fickle, he says. Previous crashes drove the rigs out
of North Dakota for years, leaving only the wheat.

``It'll crash again,'' Bartelson says, sipping on a late- afternoon
cup of coffee beside his tractor.

Maybe so. But with crude trading above $125 a barrel, it'll be a long
time before the rigs leave again, and John Bartelson is likely to be a
wealthy man before they do.

To contact the reporter on this story: Anthony Effinger in Portland,
Oregon, at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Last Updated: June 3, 2008 02:26 EDT

-- 
http://tempe.wordpress.com/
Telling the truth is important
Telling the positive is better !!!

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PIT IAGI KE-37 (BANDUNG)
* acara utama: 27-28 Agustus 2008
* penerimaan abstrak: kemarin2 s/d 30 April 2008
* pengumuman penerimaan abstrak: 15 Mei 2008
* batas akhir penerimaan makalah lengkap: 15 Juli 2008
* abstrak / makalah dikirimkan ke:
www.grdc.esdm.go.id/aplod
username: iagi2008
password: masukdanaplod

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PEMILU KETUA UMUM IAGI 2008-2011:
* pendaftaran calon ketua: 13 Pebruari - 6 Juni 2008
* penghitungan suara: waktu PIT IAGI Ke-37 di Bandung
AYO, CALONKAN DIRI ANDA SEKARANG JUGA!!!

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, send email to: iagi-net-unsubscribe[at]iagi.or.id
To subscribe, send email to: iagi-net-subscribe[at]iagi.or.id
Visit IAGI Website: http://iagi.or.id
Pembayaran iuran anggota ditujukan ke:
Bank Mandiri Cab. Wisma Alia Jakarta
No. Rek: 123 0085005314
Atas nama: Ikatan Ahli Geologi Indonesia (IAGI)
Bank BCA KCP. Manara Mulia
No. Rekening: 255-1088580
A/n: Shinta Damayanti
IAGI-net Archive 1: http://www.mail-archive.com/iagi-net%40iagi.or.id/
IAGI-net Archive 2: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/iagi
---------------------------------------------------------------------
DISCLAIMER: IAGI disclaims all warranties with regard to information posted on 
its mailing lists, whether posted by IAGI or others. In no event shall IAGI and 
its members be liable for any, including but not limited to direct or indirect 
damages, or damages of any kind whatsoever, resulting from loss of use, data or 
profits, arising out of or in connection with the use of any information posted 
on IAGI mailing list.
---------------------------------------------------------------------

Kirim email ke