Posted on 01/30/2013 11:26:26 AM PST by thackney
Thats the question that keeps dogging the South Texas oil and gas field.
Even as thousands of workers and major oil and gas companies flood into the region, investors have been reluctant to invest in houses, apartments and other permanent infrastructure. A when-will-it-bust mentality hangs over the region.
But participants in the San Antonio Clean Technology Forums Eagle Ford Forum II event Tuesday said the oil and gas development appears to be here to stay, and that its time for the region to figure out how to manage everything from water issues to roads.
Lance Robertson, vice president of Eagle Ford operations for Houston-based Marathon Oil Corp., said the South Texas fields are almost without peer in terms of productivity, and that operators will continue to work there even if oil prices drop.
The Eagle Ford really stands apart from almost every other play, Robertson said. This is going to be the last bastion of activity if you see a low price environment.
Thats why Robertson said the company and other operators in the region have been baffled by the reluctance of developers to build homes, or of banks to lend to developers. Robertson said Marathon employees in the region and those of other operators are making the kind of salaries that can easily support home-buying.
They can afford to build homes, to buy homes, to renovate homes, he said.
Marathon will invest one-third of its 2013 capital budget in the Eagle Ford, an estimated $1.9 billion, And there are many operators, Robertson said.
Henry Cisneros, chairman of the San Antonio Economic Development Foundation, said, Weve all been guilty of not being quite sure this is going to last.
But Cisneros said theres a rising middle class now in a region that used to compare with Appalachia or the Mississippi Delta in poverty.
The region is fundamentally changed, he said. This is a world phenomenon that has occurred at our doorstep.
Jim Marston, founding director of the Texas office of Environmental Defense Fund, said the industry and environmental groups need to stop talking past each other to address issues that range from water use to global warming.
He said many environmentalists are too dismissive of any benefits of hydraulic fracturing, the process of using sand, water and chemicals pumped at high pressure to break rock and release long-trapped hydrocarbons. And he said the industry does itself a disservice by saying that its operations dont cause problems.
Improve practices on the ground and thats the way to win people over, Marston said.
Robertson said he hopes there will be a broad focus on water across the state.
We have to change our habits and do something different in our consumption of water, he said.
Texas Comptroller Susan Combs said there is serious discussion at the Legislature of taking $4 billion from the states rainy day fund which is funded by oil and gas severance taxes and creating a $2 billion fund for water and a $2 billion fund for roads, which communities impacted by oil field activity would be able to tap for repairs.
Deteriorating and dangerous road conditions throughout the Eagle Ford region have been a huge topic of discussion, and the same problems are developing in the Permian Basin.
Were sitting on a lot of money, Combs said.
County Judge Nelson Wolff said he hopes the Legislature will reinvest in South Texas. Were reaping great benefits and they need to be reinvested in South Texas, he said.
The event was recorded by KLRN for broadcast.
Every time I see one of these posts I think about that auto dealership.
Every time I see one of these posts I think about that auto dealership.
Sometimes I think about it twice.
So three posts and we have no clue what you are talking about.
Hope she finds a place to live down there. But she's tough, she'll manage.
/johnny
Sell you a nice motor home, complete with a washer and dryer.
That is okay. I understood it clearly.
Henry Cisneros, chairman of the San Antonio Economic Development Foundation, said, Weve all been guilty of not being quite sure this is going to last.Good man for the job?
The Henry Cisneros payments controversy was a lengthy investigation begun in 1995 into allegations that Henry Cisneros, United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development during the Presidency of Bill Clinton, had lied to the FBI background check investigators about payments he had made to his former mistress. Independent Counsel David Barrett was appointed to investigate the matter. In 1995 Cisneros was indicted; in 1997 he pled guilty to a misdemeanor; in 2001 he was pardoned by President Bill Clinton.
We’ve been talking about flipping some houses down in that area (or buying a Holiday Inn Express franchise). Interesting to read that investors are a little hinky about it. Maybe just precisely the right time for little guys like me to buy some fixer-uppers and get a few by-the-room rentals going.
Congrats RandomFreeper!
Having ANYTHING to do with a young’en getting a good job fresh out of school is a huge win.
My middle daughter is working on a grad degree in Physics at University of Boulder. Some of her classmates are getting lured away but not her yet.
As her dad I am praying she gets out of Boulder ASAP.
Surprisingly she is not a Koolaide drinker. She is very active in the libertarian movement. Unfortunately for me, she thinks the differences between us are more significant than the 99% of political issues we agree on.
I am still proud of her though.
She's smart as a whip, and a good kid.
It is interesting how some people view our relationship. I'm an older pasty white geek type, and she's a young beautiful dark black athletic rastafarian islander looking girl with an IQ of about 150. We get along great. Other people say "WTH?" ;)
/johnny
I go to Cotulla and Corizo Springs regularly. Two star hotels go for $120 to $240 per night.
Is the hesitancy to invest related to the viability of the field or is it more related to an inability to trust the government to do the right thing? Are they afraid the EPA will rush in and shut it all down?
The same Henry Cisneros who joined hands with Bill Clinton & Janet Reno and demanded that banks give mortgage loans to people who didn’t qualify to buy a T-shirt on time payments? The push to kill the banks!!!
That HENRY CISNEROS?????
I would not invest one red cent.
“Every time I see one of these posts I think about that auto dealership”
I always say to myself, it is about time the was a succesor to the Vision and the Talon for Eagle Motors!
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