世界石油 2022 年头条新闻:6-10

世界石油工作人员 2022 年 12 月 27 日

(WO) “如果说 2022 年对于国际石油业来说是重要的一年,那么对于国内石油行业来说则是天文数字。从令人垂涎的年度世界石油奖到西德克萨斯州发生的事件,新闻从未停止过。继续阅读 2022 年最热门的本土故事。

6:2022年世界石油奖

20多年来,世界石油奖一直致力于表彰和表彰上游能源行业的领先创新者和创新者,并认可产生持久影响的技术进步。查看 2022 年的赞助商、决赛入围者和获奖者。

7:“拒绝”:金融公司告诉德克萨斯州他们不会抵制能源

当德克萨斯州官员寻找对能源行业怀有敌意的金融公司时,华尔街正在善意地展示其化石燃料,以说服官员不要禁止他们与该州开展业务。

8:康菲石油公司考虑出售 10 亿美元的二叠纪资产

北美最大的能源勘探公司之一康菲石油公司正在考虑出售二叠纪盆地价值超过 10 亿美元的业务。

9 月 9 日:德克萨斯州将投入 2500 万美元联邦资金开始堵塞 800 口废弃井

内政部宣布,德克萨斯州已从基础设施投资和就业法案中获得 2500 万美元的初始拨款,开始对全州废弃的油气井进行堵塞、封盖和回收工作。

10:尽管原油价格为 100 美元,二叠纪石油生产商仍将放缓

即使原油价格高于每桶 100 美元,二叠纪和美国其他页岩盆地的生产商仍在踩刹车。

原文链接/worldoil

World Oil’s Top Stories of 2022: 6-10

World Oil Staff December 27, 2022

(WO) — If 2022 was big for international oil, it was astronomical for the domestic sector. From our coveted annual World Oil Awards to happenings in West Texas, news never stopped flowing. Read on for the top home-grown stories of 2022.

6: 2022 World Oil Awards

For more than 20 years, the World Oil Awards have recognized and honored the upstream energy industry’s leading innovators and innovations and recognized step changes in technology that have made a lasting impact. See our sponsors, finalists, and winners for 2022.

7: ‘Hell no’: Finance firms tell Texas they don’t boycott energy

As Texas officials hunt for financial firms hostile to the energy industry, Wall Street is rolling out its fossil fuel bona fides to convince officials not to bar them from doing business with the state.

8: ConocoPhillips to weigh $1 billion Permian assets sale

ConocoPhillips, one of North America’s largest energy explorers, is considering a sale of operations worth more than $1 billion in the Permian Basin.

9: Texas to begin plugging 800 orphaned wells with $25 million of federal funding

The Department of the Interior announced that Texas has been awarded an initial grant of $25 million from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act to begin work to plug, cap and reclaim orphaned oil and gas wells across the state.

10: Permian oil producers about to slow despite $100 crude

Even with crude above $100 a barrel, producers in the Permian and other U.S. shale basins are riding the brakes.