Sentences with phrase «around in a barrel»

«My personal theory is that as the bourbon constantly sloshed around in the barrels, the constant contact with the wood accelerated the maturation process,» he explains.
Sneaking around in a barrel, the enemy encounters, etc..
The footrest was too narrow to fit my entire left foot, and I found that to start the car, the ignition key needed to be turned further around in the barrel than was entirely comfortable for the wrist.
One player rolls around in a barrel below the palm trees while the other players ground pound coconuts from above.

Not exact matches

The Federation of Quebec Maple Syrup Producers made news around the world when it announced in August that thousands of barrels of maple syrup had been stolen from its reserves in Saint - Louis - de-Blandford, southeast of Trois - Rivières.
The Permian continues to boom, and even in case of takeaway capacity constraints — which have led to around $ 11 a barrel discount of Midland, Texas, oil to Brent — Permian producers would pump at profit if Brent were to rise (and stay) at $ 80, Bloomberg's Denning argues.
Oil output in Venezuela, a member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, has fallen from almost 2.5 million barrels per day to just around 1.5 million bpd currently due to political and...
With oil selling for around $ 100 a barrel and gasoline prices high, sales of cars that plugged in rather than filled up were beginning to climb.
The Aframax tanker Tulip, chartered by Britain's BP, has been waiting since mid-May around Curacao to discharge some 500,000 barrels of U.S. light crude for which PDVSA has not paid, according to Reuters data and a company source involved in the sale.
Vito was first designed in early 2014, when oil was trading around $ 100 a barrel.
The day before Marathon announced it was breaking up in January 2011, the combined company had a market value of around $ 28.9 billion, when oil was trading at around $ 90 to a $ 100 a barrel.
In oil markets, Brent crude traded at around $ 51.03 a barrel on Tuesday, down 1.14 percent, while U.S. crude was around $ 47.50 a barrel, down 1.82 percent.
Venezuela's crude production has fallen from almost 2.5 million barrels per day (bpd) in early 2016 to around 1.5 million bpd due to political and economic crisis.
In oil markets, Brent crude traded at around $ 47.99 a barrel on Wednesday, down 0.52 percent, while U.S. crude was around $ 50.59 a barrel, down 0.73 percent.
Citgo, which operates the Corpus Christi Refinery with a capacity to process 157,000 barrels a day, will provide the aid to affected families through local mayors and allot a percentage of gasoline revenue to the construction of homes and shelters in and around Houston, Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza said on state television.
By comparison, the average discount paid for Western Canadian Select oilsands blend crude from Alberta in the fourth quarter was US$ 12.26 per barrel and it has since spiked at times to around US$ 30 per barrel, a trend also blamed on constrained pipeline access.
Deshpande forecast Brent prices will stay around $ 39 per barrel in the first quarter, but with prices rising to $ 56 by the end of the year, to average around $ 47.80 for 2016.
Mike Kelly predicts an oversupplied oil market in 2018 causing oil to stabilize around $ 40 per barrel in the second half of next year.
Prices averaged around $ 67 a barrel in the first quarter, nearly 25 % higher than a year ago.
Prosecutors in the country last week slapped Chevron and drilling partner Transocean with an $ 11 billion fine for accidentally releasing around 3,000 barrels of oil off of Brazil's coast.
US - based Chevron (CVX) was fined 50 million reals ($ 28 million) by Brazil's federal government earlier this month for leaking around 2,400 to 3,000 barrels from one of its offshore drilling platforms located 75 - miles off the coast of Brazil's iconic beaches in Rio de Janeiro.
«We hit $ 66 a barrel in January and we're down around $ 60 to $ 61 dollars now.»
Oil output in Venezuela , a member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), has fallen from almost 2.5 million barrels per day (bpd) to just around 1.5 million bpd currently due to political and economic turmoil in the South American country.
This conviction was based on a couple of assumptions: First, that the cost of adding new production, in U.S. shale fields and elsewhere, was somewhere around $ 75 to $ 80 per barrel.
Citi's comments come as oil prices have recovered from a plunge in 2014 with the bank seeing the first stop for the rally at about US$ 65 a barrel, around 25 % more than current price levels.
In January energy specialists Wood MacKenzie analyzed its database of 2,222 oil - producing fields around the world and found that a mere 0.2 % of the world's supply would be operating on a cash - negative basis at $ 50 per barrel for Brent.
Consumers have been slow off the blocks after having been burnt the last time around when they locked in prices at around US$ 80 a barrel in 2014, a level that crude hasn't even been within sniffing distance of since.
In oil markets, Brent crude traded at around $ 50.90 a barrel on Friday, down 0.67 percent, while U.S. crude was around $ 48.01 a barrel, up 0.65 percent.
U.S. petroleum output peaked at 10 million barrels per day (bpd) in 1970, declined slightly, rose again in the 1980s as a result of the Prudhoe Bay discovery in Alaska, then declined again to around five million bpd in 2006.
The IEA says rail shipments are expected to return to around the 170,000 - barrel - a-day level in 2020 assuming Enbridge Inc. replaces its Line 3 pipeline and adds capacity elsewhere on its Mainline pipeline system.
Dubbed Warthog, Hog or just Hawg, the A-10 Thunderbolt II, the «airplane built around the GAU - 8 Avenger 30 - mm hydraulically driven seven - barrel Gatling - type cannon» to fight the Soviet tanks in the European battlefields during the Cold War, is considered one of the most durable and lethal combat plane in the CAS (Close Air Support) mission.
This puts the country on a path to catch up with and possibly exceed Russia, which produced an average 11 million barrels a day in 2017, and world leader Saudi Arabia, whose energy behemoth Saudi Aramco produces around 12.5 million barrels a day.
Brent crude oil prices in the first three months of this year averaged around $ 67 a barrel, leaving last year's $ 54.5 behind as a distant echo of the price crash of late 2014.
Altogether, 3.6 million barrels per day were lost in May around the world, nudging crude prices up to levels we haven't seen since July of last year.
Over the past five years the price of west Texas crude, the primary American benchmark for oil, has yo - yoed from US$ 60 a barrel to US$ 145 in 2008, all the way back down to US$ 30 during the recession, then up again to US$ 114, before settling this year around US$ 100.
Monetory and fiscal stimulus can only help in the short - term but don't solve the long - term problem of an economy designed around cheap $ 20 a barrel oil.
Low oil prices in the early 1970's (around $ 3 a barrel) caused demand to soar.
Oil prices fell over 5 percent in early Asian trade and were still trading around $ 41.21 a barrel for benchmark Brent crude and $ 38.47 for U.S. WTI (West Texas Intermediate) in early European trade.
In a survey of private sector forecasters last week, he was told that oil prices look to be stabilizing around the current level of $ 50 a barrel.
Oil sands production has already doubled in the last decade to around 3 million barrels a day.
Oil prices have fallen to around $ 30 a barrel, well below the oil price assumption assumed by the Department of Finance ($ 54 a barrel for 2016) in the November Update.
This is mostly due to much lower oil prices after the oil shock (expected to remain around $ 53 per barrel in the next two years), as oil proceeds still account for more than 50 % of government revenues.
The report said a price recovery is expected to cause the most pain among companies drilling in the United States, who rely mostly on hydraulic fracturing, which isn't profitable unless the average global price of oil is around $ 60 per barrel.
Prices plummeted from above US$ 100 a barrel in the first half of 2014 to around US$ 35 a barrel by the end of 2015.
After trading as low as US$ 27 a barrel in mid-February, the price of West Texas Intermediate, a grade of light, sweet crude used as a North American benchmark, is closing in on US$ 50 a barrel in the wake of several supply outages around the globe and renewed optimism in some quarters about a re-balancing of a previously over-supplied market.
Global crude - oil production has risen about 30 percent this century; expanding from around 75 million barrels per day in 2000 to 95 million barrels in 2016, with the top 10 - producing countries accounting for more than 60 percent of the total production.
Commodities are little changed in today's low volatility environment, with gold hovering around the $ 1275 level, while oil is trading near $ 47.50 per barrel after the decline of the past few sessions with the mixed US inventory and [production data causing some volatility.
If the actual EIA data is in sync with my distillate fuel projection inventories versus last year will likely now be about 9.2 million barrels above last year while the surplus versus the five - year average will come in around 18.7 million barrels.
In a recent and highly informative article in Business Insider originally published in The Motley Fool and using energy industry consultant Rystad Energy research, author Matthew DiLallo shows that it costs Saudi Arabia around $ 9 per barrel to breakeven, Russia $ 19 and U.S. shale a little over $ 2In a recent and highly informative article in Business Insider originally published in The Motley Fool and using energy industry consultant Rystad Energy research, author Matthew DiLallo shows that it costs Saudi Arabia around $ 9 per barrel to breakeven, Russia $ 19 and U.S. shale a little over $ 2in Business Insider originally published in The Motley Fool and using energy industry consultant Rystad Energy research, author Matthew DiLallo shows that it costs Saudi Arabia around $ 9 per barrel to breakeven, Russia $ 19 and U.S. shale a little over $ 2in The Motley Fool and using energy industry consultant Rystad Energy research, author Matthew DiLallo shows that it costs Saudi Arabia around $ 9 per barrel to breakeven, Russia $ 19 and U.S. shale a little over $ 23.
The West Texas Intermediate crude oil price has tended to increase over recent months, to be around US$ 38 per barrel, compared with around US$ 32 in late 2003 (Graph 12).
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