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Tourmaline Oil Corp (Alberta) T.TOU

Alternate Symbol(s):  TRMLF

Tourmaline Oil Corp. is a natural gas producer, which is focused on producing natural gas in North America. The Company is focused on long-term growth through an aggressive exploration, development, production and acquisition program in the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin. It operates in three basins, which include the Alberta Deep Basin, NEBC Montney Gas/Condensate and Peace River Triassic Oil. It has ownership interests in 22 natural gas plants in the Alberta Deep Basin. It owns and operates seven natural gas processing facilities with an aggregate capacity of approximately 1.0 Bcf/d with related gas gathering systems and NGL handling infrastructure in the NEBC complex. The Company owns and operates two oil batteries in the Peace River Triassic Oil basin. The Company’s operations are focused on northeast British Columbia and include a large contiguous land base with a Montney resource. Its Montney area assets include Septimus / West Septimus, Groundbirch, Monias and Tower.


TSX:TOU - Post by User

Post by retiredcfon Dec 18, 2023 12:36pm
154 Views
Post# 35790043

Red Sea Problems

Red Sea Problems

Oil rose 3 per cent on Monday as mounting attacks by the Iran-aligned Yemeni Houthi militant group on ships in the Red Sea disrupted maritime trade.

A Norwegian-owned vessel was attacked in the Red Sea on Monday and oil major BP said it has temporarily paused all transits through the body of water. Other shipping firms said over the weekend that they would avoid the route.

Brent crude futures were up $2.33, or 3.1 per cent, to $78.88 a barrel by 11:20 a.m. ET (16:20 GMT), while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude rose $2.27, or 3.2 per cent, to $73.68.

Both crude benchmarks posted small gains last week, following seven weeks of decline, after a U.S. Federal Reserve meeting raised hopes that the U.S. central bank’s interest rate hikes are over and cuts are on the way.

“BP’s decision to halt shipping through the Red Sea may have crystallized concerns for the oil market,” said Tim Evans, an independent oil analyst at Evans on Energy.

“The re-routing of tankers does add cost and it does add transit time, so we are seeing... fewer barrels arriving at European refineries in the near term,” Evans added.

About 15 per cent of world shipping traffic transits via the Suez Canal, the shortest shipping route between Europe and Asia.

Ample oil supply limited price gains on Monday. Brent and U.S. crude from prompt delivery traded at a discount to future deliveries, signaling a well-supplied physical market.

Also adding support, Russia said on Sunday it would deepen oil export cuts in December by potentially 50,000 barrels per day or more, earlier than promised, as the world’s biggest exporters try to support global oil prices.

Russia announced the deeper export cuts after it suspended about two-thirds of loadings of its main export grade Urals crude from ports due to a storm and scheduled maintenance on Friday.

Markets may also be seeing some short covering, Evans added. Money managers cut their net long U.S. crude futures and options positions in the week to August 8, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission said on Friday.

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