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NCAA Football Bowls/Playoffs 2016 Open 1

by coldwarrior ( 70 Comments › )
Filed under Uncategorized at December 31st, 2016 - 6:00 am

Ahhhh, yes. After two weeks of too many shifts, I have arrived ‘Up North’ into the lake effect snow belt. The Puti and the twins have been at gramma coldwarrior’s since Christmas day…Lake Erie sent 18 inches of global warming into my parents property. Yeah, they didn’t retire South, they went North…go figure. I get the goofy ones who like several feet of snow driven by howling winds off of the Great Lakes.

Well, today we start playing for marbles…but first some other games to snack on:

#20 LSU

#13 Louisville

11:00 AM

LSU unperformed this year, Louisville is an offensive juggernaut and damned exciting to watch with that Heisman winning QB. Well, LSU eats Heisman winners for lunch on Bowl Day…ain’t that right Johnny Football? LSU is a 3 point favorite, they cover and salvage what’s left of this season.

Georgia Tech

Kentucky

11:00 AM

dont care

 

#4 Washington

#1 Alabama

3:00 PM

This is a total mismatch. ‘Bama is a 14 point favorite and this is a playoff game? The Pac-12 did not deserve this bid. I will say this though. The Penn State faithful were all very happy to go to the Rose Bowl and not be be low seed to have to go play ‘Bama. Good on ya lads! That would have ruined an otherwise great season. Oh Yes, PSU is back. Thank God.

14 point favorite…’Bama beasts this spread on principal.

#3 Ohio State

#2 Clemson

7:00 PM

I LOVE THIS MATCH-UP! This is gonna be a great game. OSU is the 3 point favorite. Clemson’s one loss came at the hands from my Alma Mater, the University of Pittsburgh. I think Clemson wins this game. And there is no doubt in my mind that ‘Bama would much rather play OSU in the championship.

So, after i dig my truck out of the snow bank this morning and then clear all of this snow,  I’ll take grampa coldwarrior to the sportsman’s club for some beers and wings as he is not allowed to drive yet. He got  brand new hip and is doing great. It’s all football all day.

;

 

 

 

 

 

Workin’ For The Krakah!

by coldwarrior ( 82 Comments › )
Filed under Economy, Open thread at December 30th, 2016 - 6:00 am

Well, more like working at cracking…hydrocarbons.

This new RDShell plant will take Marcellus and Utica hydrocarbons and break them down to more usable molecules as explained below. I’ve been watching this project for 5 years since they started to scrape off the topsoil at St Joe’s Zinc and neighboring sites along the Ohio River a very, very short drive from me.

This is a complete game changer here in Beaver County. The electric power pylons are already in, the pads for the gas lines are poured and right of ways have been established. There is plenty of room for expansion and a nice backbone in for multi-modal transport. All this from Fracing. This is overdue great news for an area that got destroyed when the gigantic steel mills closed.

 

A $6 billion ethane cracker plant coming to western Pennsylvania could bring thousands of new jobs to Ohio, including the Akron area’s plastics industry.

A subsidiary of Royal Dutch Shell announced plans Tuesday to build the plant on the Ohio River at Monaca in Pennsylvania’s Beaver County after studying the idea for four years.

The long-awaited decision could have sweeping implications for the petrochemical and plastics industries in Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia, where some experts say tens of thousands of jobs could be created as a result. The news also makes it more likely Ohio could get its own cracker plant.

The cracker plant planned by Shell Chemical Appalachia LLC in Pennsylvania will turn ethane from drilling in the Utica and Marcellus shales into polyethylene for plastics, textiles, automotive components and pharmaceuticals.

Ethane is a low-cost natural gas liquid that serves as the U.S. chemical industry’s main feedstock.

The Pennsylvania plant would be the first cracker plant in the three states and the first major cracker to be built outside the Gulf Coast in the last 20 years.

That news comes as Shell has laid off workers and delayed other projects because of low commodity prices. The company is banking on chemicals moving forward. It had earlier agreed to expand a Gulf Coast cracker and another in China.

“This is the biggest of big news,” wrote Jim Willis, editor of the Marcellus Drilling News, a trade publication. “We’ve been waiting for this day for a LONG time.”

Marcellus Shale Coalition President David Spigelmyer said, “Shell’s decision to move forward with this world-class facility … is welcomed news, especially given the challenging market conditions.”

Shawn Bennett, executive vice president of the Ohio Oil and Gas Association, a statewide trade group, called Shell’s announcement “phenomenal news.”

It will create a new petrochemical industry in the three-state Appalachian Basin and its impacts on Ohio’s chemical and plastics industries will be “very substantial and very significant,” he said.

Shell’s news is “the announcement we’ve been waiting for,” he said.

Shell’s decision also makes it far more likely that Thai chemical company PTT Global Chemical will build its $5.7 billion cracker plant in Ohio’s Belmont County, said Andrew Thomas, executive in residence at the Energy Policy Center at the Maxine Goodman Levin College of Urban Affairs at Cleveland State University and an expert on the Utica Shale.

That company is looking at a site of an old coal-fired power plant at Shadyside — with a final decision expected late this year or early next year.

It is easier to operate two cracker plants in the same region because two plants offer operating efficiencies for cracker operators when pipelines or plant operations go down, he said. “It is easier to run two than one,” he said.

The Shell plant will also produce huge savings for other chemical companies and plastic makers that locate nearby because they will pay less for shipping, he said.

One change that will likely be needed is for cracker operators to sign long-term contracts of two to five years to purchase the ethane, Thomas said.

At present, they generally buy ethane on the spot market in order to avoid troublesome surpluses because there is little ethane storage in the three states, he said.

Construction on the Shell cracker could begin in 18 months and commercial production is expected “early in the next decade,” the company said. It would create 6,000 construction jobs and 600 permanent jobs.

The plant will use about 105,000 42-gallon barrels of ethane per day.

Shell picked the site in 2012 and purchased the main 340-acre tract, a one-time zinc smelter, in late 2014.

It spent $80 million to fix environmental problems at the site. It also paid $69 million to a local water authority to relocate a water intake and build a new water treatment plant.

Pennsylvania also granted tax breaks to Shell to build the plant.

Ohio had vied for the plant before the Beaver County site was chosen.

At present, ethane from the Utica and Marcellus shales is piped to the Gulf Coast for processing. Some ethane is also being shipped to the East Coast via pipelines where it is loaded on tankers and shipped to Europe and Asia.

Two other cracker plants in the Appalachian Basin have been proposed.

Braskem/Odebrecht, two Brazilian companies, are looking at a site near Parkersburg, W.Va., and a Texas-based company, Appalachian Resins, had been looking at a small cracker plant in Ohio’s Monroe County.

Soros on Globalism

by coldwarrior ( 76 Comments › )
Filed under Open thread at December 29th, 2016 - 5:58 am

Read it here

And read it carefully, he tells some lies and bends Popper to his definition of societies. EVERY person who believes in globalism and the so called ‘free trade’ is a minion of this bastard. That includes people on our side, and some people who we knew fairly well. Those who willingly gut the American economic system for globalism are either suckers or willing follower of Soros. Pick one.

 

What has occurred here in America and in Europe is not what Adam Smith or Karl Popper (I studied both HEAVILY in Graduate School) had in mind. They would have NEVER agreed to this level of societal and economic destruction. Ever.

Some background

 

The US Shale Boom and its Effect on Manufacturing

by coldwarrior ( 133 Comments › )
Filed under Economy, Open thread, Science at December 26th, 2016 - 6:00 am

OK, this is  fairly dense academic paper, enjoy.

 

http://cep.lse.ac.uk/pubs/download/dp1454.pdf


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