Category: General

Judge orders US government to pay $28 million over Dakota Access protests

  Nine years after the Dakota Access Pipeline protests were staged in North Dakota, a federal judge has ruled the U.S. government should pay $28 million to North Dakota. The ruling came in a lawsuit filed by North Dakota in 2019 in which it sought $38 million in damages for policingand cleanup following the demonstrations …

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Energy briefs

** The U.S. Interior Department plans to dramatically speed up permitting for oil and gas, uranium, coal, biofuel, geothermal, hydropower, and critical mineral projects on federal lands, accelerating environmental reviews to 14 days and impact statements to 28. ** An Interior Department document suggests the Trump administration is considering shrinking national monuments in Arizona, California, …

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Groundbreaking in Tulsa on $252 million highway project

    Sen. James Lankford joined the City of Tulsa and the Oklahoma Department of Transportation to break ground on the next phase of the I-44/US-75 interchange improvement project on Wednesday, April 23. The long-anticipated project will complete the interchange dubbed “Traffic Henge” or “Tulsa Stonehenge” by area residents. “The I-44/US-75 interchange in Tulsa is …

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Turnpike Authority warns of text scam

The Oklahoma Turnpike Authority is advising consumers to be wary of the pervasive smishing text scam plaguing Oklahomans this week. Scam text messages have been targeting tolling authorities nationwide for the past year. Oklahomans are seeing a significant increase in these texts after bad actors in other countries have mimicked OTA’s pikepass.com website and messaging. …

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Slight gain in nation’s crude oil stocks

  Crude oil stocks across the U.S. grew slightly in the most recent reporting period from the U.S. Energy Information Administration while the total in Cushing slipped. The U.S. total as of April 18 was 443.1 million barrels up from the 442.9 million barrels recorded at the end of April 11. It represented a gain of …

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Oklahoma’s Dust Bowl remembered by legislators

By Mike W. Ray The Oklahoma Senate commemorated the 90th anniversary of “Black Sunday” on April 14 via the appropriately numbered Senate Resolution 14 by Senate President Pro Tempore Lonnie Paxton (R-Tuttle). “WHEREAS, the Dust Bowl of the 1930s was the worst natural disaster of its time in the United States, having a profound impact …

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Expand Energy’s 1Q earnings to be released next week

    Just a few months after increasing its 2025 expected annual synergy target by $175 million, Expand Energy of Oklahoma City prepares to release its first quarter 2025 earnings report. The company had $382 million in net cash from operating activities and a $399 million net loss in the fourth quarter. Investors will learn …

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Crude fell Wednesday along with Oklahoma energy stocks

  Energy stocks in Oklahoma slipped Wednesday and crude oil prices did the same as OPEC+ indicated it might speed up its oil output increases in June. As a result, it has been an up and down week for oil prices. But analysts indicated the losses weren’t as great after President Trump hinted he might …

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New utility law in Missouri has same issues debated before Oklahoma regulators

    A new law signed by Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe earlier this month features the subject of what is known as “construction work in progress” or CWIP. It was a bill that critics contend will likely increase utility bills in Missouri. At the same time, some critics say it points out the deep ties …

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Mitchell talks energy with Jerry Bohnen—a fiery response from regulators to one legislator’s attack

  Scott Mitchell talks energy with Jerry Bohnen and they focus on the Corporation Commission’s critical response to Rep. Trey Caldwell’s energy bills and his recent attack on the regulators. In the words of Commissioner Kim David, “I’m tired of being slandered over in the building across the street when it’s not true.”