
Camille Buckley
Articles
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Jan 16, 2025 |
insight.factset.com | Rachel Koch |Camille Buckley |Matthew Hoza |Mitch Jennings
The natural gas market in 2024 experienced significant volatility, with a mild winter that led to oversupplied storage, resulting in crashing prices and production curtailments. Despite strong summer power burn, LNG growth faced delays and the U.S. saw record net imports from Canada, resulting in over 3.97 Tcf of gas in storage exiting the summer. As we go further into 2025, the market’s path remains uncertain, but several key trends are expected to shape its trajectory.
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Jan 9, 2025 |
insight.factset.com | Camille Buckley |Matthew Hoza |Mitch Jennings
The oil and gas market remained as volatile as ever in 2024, and the U.S. producer response wasn’t without its surprises. On the oil side, an underperformance of global oil demand weighed on prices, while the gas side saw the domestic market hampered by a warmer-than-normal ‘23/’24 winter that lead to high levels of gas in storage and production curtailments.
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Dec 1, 2023 |
insight.factset.com | Mitch Jennings |Camille Buckley |Jon Bowman
In recent weeks, U.S. Senior Advisor for Energy and Investment Amos Hochstein has said the U.S. will begin stricter enforcement of sanctions on Iran to bring down the country’s oil production. While Iran now produces ~4% of global supply, it accounts for 13% of OPEC production.
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Nov 20, 2023 |
marketscreener.com | Camille Buckley
San Juan Basin Full of Private Operators and Pricing Sensitivity Energy By Camille Buckley| November 20, 2023 The San Juan basin, located near the Four Corners area, is a basin in which activity was historically driven by larger, public players. However, around 2020, the last of the large, public operators exited the basin, selling assets to smaller, private operators that are typically more price sensitive. In aggregate, drilling activity in the San Juan is sensitive to both oil and gas prices.
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Sep 26, 2023 |
theculturetrip.com | Camille Buckley
Iceland’s most well-known church is probably the towering Hallgrímskirkja in Reykjavik. However, it does not represent the architecture of most churches around the country. The earliest churches, which can be found in the countryside, are simply structured and made out of turf. Travel to Iceland’s south coast, and you will find Heimaey, Westman archipelago’s largest island.
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