Crude Oil Powers Transformation of North Dakota's Economy

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Crude Oil Powers Transformation of North Dakota's Economy
Published: Thursday, 19 May 2011 | 7:00 AM ET Text Size By: Scott Cohn
Senior Correspondent, CNBC



Perennial favorite Texas — America’s Top State for Business in 2008 and 2010 — could still be a contender, but the Lone Star State is dealing with a potentially crippling budget gap.

Virginia, our Top State in 2007 and 2009, tends to be susceptible to issues in the national economy. Still, the state’s governor has been courting business around the world, so Virginia could be a factor in 2011.

But one state we will be watching —and we really don’t know yet how the rankings will turn out — is a quiet contender.

It’s North Dakota.

The Roughrider State finished a respectable number 12 in 2010. Not bad, but this year it’s aiming higher. And North Dakota has quite a story to tell.

North Dakota’s unemployment rate is hovering around 3.6 percent — by far the lowest in the nation.

And unlike most states which are dealing with budget shortfalls, North Dakota boasts a billion-dollar budget surplus.



The state owes its economic health to oil. While other energy producing states like Texas are dealing with safety concerns and federal restrictions on offshore drilling, landlocked North Dakota has quietly become a major oil producer.

The Bakken shale deposit in western North Dakota is believed to have as much as 4.3 billion barrels of oil, accessible now thanks to advanced drilling techniques. The recent high price of oil helps make it more cost-effective to extract that oil.

With 169 active oil rigs, North Dakota is now the fourth largest oil-producing state in the nation.

“North Dakota is one of the key reasons why in 2009 the United States had the greatest increase in oil and gas production anywhere in the world,” says Jim Burkhard, a managing director at Cambridge Energy Research. “In 2010 that growth trend continued.”


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Current DateTime: 03:14:59 23 May 2011
LinksList Documentid: 43009953
2010 Rankings2009 Rankings2008 Rankings2007 Rankings
North Dakota pumped 113 million barrels of oil last year, and in the last five years the energy industry helped North Dakota add some 13,000 jobs. The state boasts one of the fastest- growing economies in the nation.

North Dakota still has issues. It lagged the nation severely last year in the categories of Technology and Innovation as well as Access to Capital.

But if there’s ever a year for a state like North Dakota to shake up the coveted Top Five, this would seem to be it.

We’ll find out in a few short weeks.

http://www.cnbc.com/id/43089929?amp;par=RSS
 
I was encouraged when Obama did a flip on domestic drilling a couple of weeks back. Here's hoping it wasn't just talk...
 
It was just talk, more oil from dems is like more tax cuts for the rich from dems. rhetoric

we are talking thousands of jobs in the over $100,000 category
 
just as republicans wouldn't vote the dems bullshit tax attack, dems won't vote to open anwar, east coast, west cost.
They will rush a few GOM permits and act like they did something.

Obama and the libtards (good band name) are big oils best friend.
 
wrong multiple permits have been issued

sort of....
Department of the Interior Secretary Ken Salazar announced Oct. 12, 2010 that deepwater drilling could resume provided operators meet new regulations and guidelines

and....
New Orleans, LA —

A three-judge appellate panel heard arguments today asking the court to rescind the approval of five deepwater drilling plans in the Gulf of Mexico that were filed just days before and after the worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history when the Deepwater Horizon exploded.

http://earthjustice.org/news/press/2011/offshore-drilling-permits-issued-without-environmental-review
 
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