Wildcatter Weekly, August 13, 2009
posted on: Aug 13, 2009
IPAMS Meetings and Announcements
Rocky Mountain Oil & Gas Hall of Fame
September 26, 2009
in Denver, CO
IPAMS is pleased to announce the Rocky Mountain Oil & Gas Hall of Fame. The induction dinner and ceremony will be September 26, 2009 at 6:00 p.m. at the Hyatt Regency Denver Convention Center, Denver, CO. This semi-formal event occurs every five years.
In 2004 during IPAMS’ 30th Anniversary, the Rocky Mountain Oil & Gas Hall of Fame was created to honor fifty-four individuals who have had a highly distinguished career in the Rocky Mountain energy industry. The 2009 Hall of Fame class will honor forty members.
2004′s event was attended by almost 900 to celebrate the accomplishments of the inaugural class. “Wow! What an event the HOF dinner and evening turned out to be. The inductees and their families were hugely honored….a very high mark again on the level of detail, thoroughness, professionalism, and fun.” – Robert L. Bayless, Jr., accepting the award on behalf of his father Robert Bayless, 2004 Hall of Fame inductee. Please make plans to be there for the induction of the 2009 class.
Hart Energy Publishing will create a special commemorative volume, Oil & Gas in the Rockies – Wildcatters and Legends profiling the 2009 inductees. Please contact Jon Haubert if you have any questions regarding this publication.
You’ll have an opportunity to bid on a half case of 2004 Silver Oak Cabernet, Alexander Valley in the Silent Auction. Sponsorship opportunities are still available as well. For more information on the event, including registration, please visit www.westernenergyalliance.org/HOF. Please contact IPAMS Events Coordinator, Becca Ness, with any questions.
Re-design of IPAMS.org
Please contact Donna Parker or Jon Haubert with any problems or errors you may encounter on our recently re-designed website.
We apologize for any inconvenience and are working to resolve the known and identifiable problems.
District Meetings with Members of Congress
IPAMS is scheduling meetings with Western Delegation Senators and some Representatives during the Congressional recess in August. As they’re scheduled, we’ll be asking for volunteers to attend those meetings and help us continue the dialogue on global warming legislation, taxes, public lands access, and fracking. So far, scheduled meetings are as follows:
Rep. Mike Coffman (R-CO) August 25th at 4:00 p.m., Lonetree
Rep. Jared Polis (D-CO) August 18th at 3:30 p.m., Boulder
Rep. Jim Matheson (D-UT) August 31st at 2:45 p.m., Salt Lake City
Please contact Spencer Kimball if you can attend these meetings.
Other Upcoming Meetings
* Legislative, Legal and Regulatory (LLR) Committee – August 14, 10:00 a.m. We will discuss the House Natural Resources Draft Bill
* Colorado Basin Advisors Network - August 19th, 10:00 a.m. We invite all Colorado operators to attend the next CBAN meeting to discuss an effort to engage the Governor on leasing issues in Colorado. During recent months, IPAMS has stepped up its efforts on leasing advocacy, and we’d like to expand our leasing advocacy in Colorado. We highly encourage you to attend the next CBAN meeting to discuss a strategy to engage the Governor’s office on the economic impacts to Colorado resulting from the slowdown in leasing by the Dept. of Interior. Contact Spencer Kimball for more information.
* Air Quality Committee - Bi-Weekly Call – August 18th, 3:00 p.m. We will discuss the status of the WRAP Phase III project and the EPA Proposed Ambient Ozone Monitoring Rule. Please contact Kathleen Sgamma if you would like to add other general items to the agenda.
* Wyoming Basin Advisory Network – August 25th, 10:30 a.m.
Agendas are available for upcoming meetings at http://www.westernenergyalliance.org/advocacy/. All meetings unless otherwise indicated are Mountain time, and at IPAMS and via teleconference.
Visit westernenergyalliance.org for the latest news affecting the Intermountain West’s oil and natural gas industry. Headlines are updated daily from local, national and international news sources. You may also sign up for daily newsbrief emails under the Manage Account section of the “Members Only” page.
The West
Interior Secretary Salazar aims to include natural gas in energy policy
published in: The Daily Sentinel on: 08/12/2009 by: Gary Harmon
Natural gas will be a part of the nation’s energy policy even while the federal government looks to other fuel sources, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said Wednesday. “The future of natural gas is very bright,” Salazar told The Daily Sentinel editorial board after he presided over the dedication of the Dominguez-Escalante National Conservation Area.
Natural gas does star turn at Las Vegas summit
published in: E&E News, Subscription Required on: 08/11/2009 by: Debra Kahn
Al Gore, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and other Democratic leaders talked up the virtues of natural gas extracted from shale here today, saying it could reduce U.S. reliance on foreign oil and greenhouse gas emissions. Shale gas is a “global warming game changer,” exclaimed John Podesta, president of the Center for American Progress and the director of President Obama’s transition team.
Colorado
COGCC director: Unnecessary FRAC Act would spread staff too thin
published in: Colorado Independent on: 08/12/2009 by: David O. Williams
When it comes to the safety of hydraulic FRACturing– the “stimulating” of natural gas wells with high-pressure injections of water, sand and chemicals to free up more gas– Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission director David Neslin argues the state has it covered. Federal oversight by the Environmental Protection Agency under the Safe Drinking Water Act, as proposed by Colo. U.S. Reps. Diana DeGette and Jared Polis in the FRAC Act, is not only redundant, Neslin said in a recent interview with the Colorado Independent, but it could force the state to divert staffing and resources from other environmental programs monitoring the oil and gas industry.
Oil and gas rules on back burner for time being
published in: The Daily Sentinel on: 08/12/2009 by: Dennis Webb
Action on matters too controversial even for the state’s heavily debated recent oil and gas rules rewrite will have to continue to wait because regulators are so busy with projects including implementing those rules. The Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission agreed during a meeting Tuesday in Denver to put off until late next year staff work on several issues. Among them is the question of how close to homes drilling should be allowed to occur.
Houpt, gas industry rep debate FRAC Act issues
published in: Glenwood Springs Post Independent on: 08/11/2009 by: John Colson
Just in case the Garfield County commissioners were getting ready to endorse federal legislation requiring disclosure of certain chemicals used in the gas drilling process, a gas industry representative this week argued forcefully against such a move. Kathy Hall, of the Western Slope Oil & Gas Association, told the board of county commissioners on Monday that the procedure known as hydraulic fracturing, or “frac’ing,” is “a very safe process,” and ended up in a short debate with commissioner Trési Houpt on a variety of frac’ing-related topics.
Williams builds gas holdings for push in Piceance
published in: The Daily Sentinel on: 08/10/2009 by: Dennis Webb
The biggest player in Piceance Basin natural gas development has expanded its hand thanks to a $258 million acquisition announced Monday. Williams said its purchase will add 21,800 acres of gas development rights to the approximately 190,000 it already holds in the Piceance.
Colorado senators seek $17M in Roan Plateau royalties
published in: Denver Business Journal on: 08/06/2009 by: Cathy Proctor
Colorado’s two U.S. Senators, Mark Udall and Michael Bennet, are going after at least $17 million they say the state is due in oil and gas royalties associated with the Roan Plateau, Udall said Thursday. The money comes from the fund established to clean up Anvil Points, an old oil shale pile at a former research site near the plateau on Colorado’s Western Slope.
Montana
Tribe seeks water rules that could curb drilling
published in: Associated Press on: 08/12/2009 by: Matthew Brown
Montana’s Northern Cheyenne Tribe is proposing water pollution restrictions that could force companies in the resource-rich Powder River Basin to spend more on cleanup efforts or face limits on where they can drill. Companies operating in the basin along the Montana-Wyoming border pump billions of gallons of water annually from underground aquifers to free trapped coal-bed methane, or natural gas. That water is high in salts and often pumped straight into rivers, a potential threat to the crops of downstream farmers.
Critics rap city over energy venture
published in: Great Falls Tribune on: 08/12/2009 by: Richard Ecke
Consultants received an earful Tuesday night from critics of the city of Great Falls’ electricity business. “That’s been my point for the last three or four years,” retired architect Bill Zucconi said. “Get out.” The city consistently lost money selling electricity to other government agencies, nonprofit groups and businesses through the end of 2008.
Crow Tribe begins producing natural gas
published in: Billings Gazette on: 08/06/2009 by: Susan Olp
For the first time, natural gas is being produced on the Crow reservation. Speakers at a ceremony Wednesday morning called the development a milestone for the Crow Nation, which is in the beginning stages of working with companies to develop the reservation’s rich supply of energy resources.
Petroleum Industry Appreciation Day Luncheon
September 2, 2009 in Billings, MT at 11:30 a.m.
Keynote Speaker: Niger Innis, National Spokesman, Congress of Racial Equality
Topic: “Energy Challenges and Their Impact to the Poor”
Location: Crowne Plaza Hotel (27 N. 27th Street, 3rd Floor, Billings, MT)
New Mexico
Farmington denies gas corporations in fence flap
published in: Farmington Daily Times on: 08/13/2009 by: Steve Lynn
A city councilman has apologized for an outburst after councilors denied permits for two oil and gas companies that allegedly commissioned construction of an illegal fence around their natural gas wells. City councilors, in a 3-2 vote, decided against granting permits to XTO Energy Inc. and Energen Resources Corporation at a meeting Tuesday. The decision prohibits the companies from keeping changes they made last year to two adjoining wells.
Farmington: Gas well fence broke law
published in: Farmington Daily Times on: 08/12/2009 by: Steve Lynn
Two oil and gas companies allegedly allowed a fence to be built illegally around their natural gas wells, blocking a man from accessing his property. Energen Resources Corporation and XTO Energy Inc. commissioned a fence to be constructed without a building permit from the city of Farmington, said the city’s Community Development Director Mike Sullivan.
South San Juan Baseline Emissions Inventory is ready for review
The draft baseline oil and gas emissions inventory for the San Juan Basin in New Mexico is now available on our Air Quality page for review. IPAMS is asking that San Juan producers review and provide feedback to our contractor, Doug Henderer (303-781-8211) at Buys & Associates.
The zip file contains the emissions summary entitled “South_San_Juan_Basin_Emission_Summary_060909.xls”. Please review the summary to see if anything seems unusual, but also view the by-source-category spreadsheets, paying close attention to emissions for dehydrators, which seem low. We could really use help to improve the estimate of dehydrator emissions. We are requesting your help with this source category even if your company does not own the dehydration. Please note that the spreadsheets contain aggregated information, and do not reveal any information from individual companies. Please contact Kathleen Sgamma with any questions.
North Dakota
Oil Can Cookfest Draws a A Crowd South of Stanley
published in: Mountrail County Promotor on: 08/05/2009 by: Staff
When Doug Kinnoin was asked to host the latest in the ND Petroleum Council’s “Oil Can” events, he could have hardly expected the crowd that turned out for the evening. One of two Bakken Rocks Cookfests held last week, the one at Kinnoin’s on Thursday, July 30, drew a crowd of around 1000.
North Dakota Petroleum Council Annual Meeting
September 1-3, 2009 in Medora, ND
Mr. Chuck VanAllen, Vice President, Americas Production, Hess Corporation will be the keynote luncheon speaker on Thursday, September 3rd.
Hotel rooms are available at the Badlands Motel and other nearby locations. When contacting hotels, don’t forget to indicate you are with the North Dakota Petroleum Council Annual Meeting to receive the group rate.
Click here to register for the meeting, or golf, or for sponsorships.
Contact Marsha Reimnitz at (701) 223-6380 with any questions.
Utah
Efficiency called best strategy for Utah’s energy future
published in: Deseret News on: 08/11/2009 by: Jasen Lee
Utah electricity producers should work harder to reduce energy waste and target the state’s various renewable energy resources to mitigate climate change and secure our energy future, a local energy executive said Tuesday. “Efficiency is far and away the easiest and cheapest” strategy to reduce carbon emissions, along with better use of renewable energy sources, Doug Hunter, Utah Associated Municipal Power Systems general manager, told the Deseret News.
Feds holding back $100 million in drill leases
published in: Associated Press on: 08/10/2009 by: Paul Foy
Brian Wixom’s company has paid the U.S. government hundreds of thousands of dollars for leases to drill for oil and gas on federal lands over the years, only to never put a rig in the ground. The money simply sits in a federal bank account as Wixom and other drillers wait for an agonizing bureaucratic process to run its course.
Take Back Utah rally
published in: Deseret News on: 08/08/2009 by: Lana Groves
Stretching to both sides of the street, thousands marched up State Street to the Capitol on Saturday hoping for one thing: their American rights. Farmers, hunters and all types of outdoor enthusiasts upset over the continued closure of forests and other lands gathered on the steps and lawn of the Capitol with resolve etched across their faces.
IPAMS Releases Uinta Basin Air Quality Study (UBAQS)
IPAMS publicly released the results of the Uinta Basin Air Quality Study (UBAQS), a comprehensive modeling study that provides quantitative estimates of air quality in the Uinta Basin of Utah. IPAMS proactively conducted this unprecedented analysis to ensure that industry, state, and federal land managers have the tools necessary to protect air quality. Without this IPAMS initiative, the information would simply not be available to regulators.
Click here to read IPAMS News Release
Wyoming
‘What’s in it for Wyoming?’ Symposium tackles wind development issues
published in: Associated Press on: 08/12/2009 by: Matt Joyce
Wyoming is used to dealing with natural resource industries, but the surge of wind energy developers with designs on the state has created a new slate of issues for Wyoming to address, Gov. Dave Freudenthal said. Freudenthal’s office and the University of Wyoming are hosting the Wyoming Wind Symposium on Thursday and Friday at the university’s Union Ballroom in Laramie. The two-day event is free and open to the public, but registration is required.
Company seeks OK to expand drilling in southwest Wyoming
published in: Casper Star-Tribune on: 08/10/2009 by: Jeff Gearino
The independent energy company EOG Resources Inc. is looking to enhance its natural-gas and oil production in southwest Wyoming through a proposed infill drilling project, according to federal officials. The Houston-based company is seeking Bureau of Land Management permission to drill 604 natural-gas wells from 454 new well pads within the existing LaBarge Platform field over a 10-year period.
Washington Watch
Senators Mark Udall (D-CO) and Michael Bennet (D-CO) Join the List of Lawmakers Opposing IDC Tax Increases
U.S. Senators Mark Udall (D-CO) and Michael Bennet (D-CO) have sent a letter to the Chairman of the Finance Committee asking him to reject tax increases for independent energy producers, including repeal of IDCs, saying that the provisions “may have unintended consequences for independent natural gas and oil producers in Colorado…
Click here to read IPAMS News Release
BLM management team wins Senate confirmation
published in: E&E News, Subscription Required on: 08/13/09 by: Eryn Gable
Two of the Obama administration’s highest-ranking public lands managers won Senate confirmation last week, overcoming opposition from Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), who has clashed with the Obama administration over a hardrock mining bill. Wilma Lewis will take her position as Interior assistant secretary for land and minerals management, while Bob Abbey was confirmed to become director of the Bureau of Land Management.
Cap-and-Trade’s Unlikely Critics: Its Creators
published in: Wall Street Journal, Subscription Required on: 08/13/2009 by: Jon Hilsenrath
In the 1960s, a University of Wisconsin graduate student named Thomas Crocker came up with a novel solution for environmental problems: cap emissions of pollutants and then let firms trade permits that allow them to pollute within those limits. When he was a graduate student in the 1960s working to reduce pollutants, Thomas Crocker devised a cap-and-trade system similar to one being considered in Congress. Now legislation using cap-and-trade to limit greenhouse gases is working its way through Congress and could become the law of the land. But Mr. Crocker and other pioneers of the concept are doubtful about its chances of success.
House’s global warming bill: $8B
published in: USA Today on: 08/11/2009 by: Traci Watson
It will cost nearly $8 billion over the next decade to pay for the expanded federal bureaucracy needed to combat global warming under a bill passed by the House of Representatives, a report by the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office says. The budget office also found that the House bill would shrink the federal deficit in that 10-year period because it requires businesses to buy permits to emit global-warming pollution. That would add hundreds of billions of dollars to federal coffers.
Gas industry fights to keep tax deduction
published in: Casper Star-Tribune on: 08/10/2009 by: Dustin Bleizeffer
Oil and gas officials say a proposal to strip away their ability to deduct drilling and other “intangible” expenses from their taxes would cripple the industry at a time when the cost of doing business is spiraling. “These tax increases will render many natural-gas projects in the Rocky Mountain Region uneconomic at today’s prices and will have the perverse effect of destroying thousands of green jobs that already exist in the natural gas industry,” said Marc Smith, executive director of the Independent Petroleum Association of Mountain States.
With Health Care in Spotlight, Climate Push Continues Backstage
published in: E&E Greenwire, New York Times on: 08/07/2009 by: Alex Kaplun
With health care dominating political talk nationwide, environmental groups and their allies are planning to put climate change in front of key lawmakers during the August recess in hopes of building momentum for a Senate vote this autumn. Several environmental groups say they will make direct contacts with lawmakers and use voter outreach rather than large media campaigns to push their message on global warming.
Media Watch
Guest Commentary: Look to natural gas as solution
published in: Denver Post on: 08/13/2009 by: T. Boon Pickens
America has enough natural gas to meet all our needs for the next 100 years. We should be using this vast natural resource to help provide electrical power, as feedstock for our chemical industry, and as a principal transportation fuel. There is strong national interest in moving away from high-carbon fuels to non-carbon fuels. That will not happen overnight, but natural gas is the perfect solution for this transition period.
Editorial: SME was wise to have its coal-fired permit revoked
published in: Great Falls Tribune on: 08/12/2009 by: Editorial Staff
Southern Montana Electric Generation and Transmission’s request to have its air quality permit for a 250-megawatt coal-fired power plant revoked was a good move — and a good lead for near-future energy transmission projects. When SME’s plans were first revealed six years ago, the project’s future seemed secure. SME had buyers for its electricity, five electric cooperatives and the city of Great Falls. It also had financing for the $470 million plus, including a loan from the Rural Utility Service.
Editorial: A commitment to the Piceance
published in: The Daily Sentinel on: 08/11/2009 by: Editorial Staff
The natural gas industry in Western Colorado has unquestionably nose dived from the booming heights of just a few years ago, and it may never again reach the pedal-to-the-metal development push of, say, 2006 and 2007. But that doesn’t mean the future of the industry in this area is bleak. Just ask Williams — the largest producer of natural gas in the Piceance Basin.
Editorial: Let’s keep the public lands debate productive
published in: Great Falls Tribune on: 08/09/2009 by: Editorial Staff
The Bureau of Land Management in Montana oversees 7.9 million acres of public lands that contain energy and mineral production, open space, recreation opportunities, national monuments, grazing livestock, historic and prehistoric sites, wildlife, wild horses, watersheds, timbered mountains and rolling prairies. Every 10 years or so, the BLM undertakes the giant task of creating a new resource-management plan for the various districts, monuments and areas under its watch.
Environment and Wildlife
Drilling in Wyo. elk range expected by end of Aug
published in: Billings Gazette on: 08/10/2009 by: Staff
Drilling for gas in the Fortification Creek elk range of northeast Wyoming is expected to start by the end of August after federal land managers ruled it would have no significant environmental impact. The Bureau of Land Management said last month the drilling wouldn’t have a significant environmental impact. Some conservation and hunting groups have raised concerns about the effects on elk.
Board endorses core sage grouse area decision
published in: Casper Star-Tribune on: 08/09/2009 by: Joan Barron
The state board of Land Commissioners on Friday voted to withdraw from wind energy development about 1 million acres of state land within the core sage grouse population areas. The board action will not affect wind leases issued earlier within the core areas, said Lynne Boomgaarden, director of the Office of State Lands and Investments.
Gunnison Prairie Dog Conservation Workshop
August 18, 2009 in Alamosa, CO
Colorado Division of Wildlife (DOW) is holding a prairie dog conservation workshop in Alamosa. The purpose is to ensure conservation of Gunnison prairie dogs and avoid listing under the Endangered Species Act.
Click here to read the News Release
Technology, Alternatives & Renewables
Rancher pitches wind power
published in: Casper Star-Tribune on: 08/13/2009 by: Tom Morton
A solar-powered computer and transmitting device beamed data to a satellite from six anemometers spinning on a 200-foot-tall meteorological tower at the Pathfinder Ranch on Monday. Ranch owner Jeff Meyer has been collecting other data, too, for the most ambitious and what could become the state’s largest wind energy program.
NREL gets $20M from DOE for solar
published in: Denver Business Journal on: 08/06/2009 by: Cathy Proctor
The U.S. Department of Energy reported Thursday that the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden will get $20 million over five years, for utilizing new materials to produce solar energy. NREL will use the money to establish an Energy Frontier Research Center. Overall, the DOE will disburse $377 million in 46 new, multimillion-dollar Energy Frontier Research Centers located at universities, national laboratories, nonprofit organizations and private firms across the nation.
Markets
Hedges Pay Off for Gas Producers
published in: Wall Street Journal, Subscription Required on: 08/12/2009 by: Ann Davis
For oil and natural-gas companies, the budding crackdown on U.S. energy markets comes at an awkward time. Producers are relying more than ever on the futures markets to hedge the risk that prices will fall, even as regulators take aim at energy traders in an effort to blunt the sort of spikes that hit consumers last year.
Oil, gas prices slip lower
published in: Oil & Gas Journal on: 08/11/2009 by: Sam Fletcher
Energy prices generally declined Aug. 10, with the front-month contract for benchmark US crude still above $70/bbl in the New York market. “For the last 5 trading days the support on $70/bbl [for light, sweet crudes] has held very strongly, continuing to make for a very narrow trading range as the rise in the dollar index has maintained a strong resistance as well around $72/bbl,” said Olivier Jakob at Petromatrix, Zug, Switzerland.
Natural gas producers struggling with glut
published in: Bloomberg, Houston Chronicle on: 08/06/2009 by: Staff
The largest U.S. natural-gas producers may be doing too well at the wellhead for their own good, pumping so much of the heating and power-plant fuel that prices won’t soon recover from last year’s market collapse. XTO Energy Inc. and Devon Energy Corp., two of the five largest producers of U.S. gas, on Wednesday reported record output and smaller declines in earnings than analysts estimated. Anadarko Petroleum Corp., London-based BP Plc and Chesapeake Energy Corp. previously reported second-quarter output gains that helped them beat estimates.
Industry News and Events
US Oil, Gas Rig Count Up 18 To 966 This Week
published in: Dow Jones Newswires/Wall Street Journal on: 08/07/2009 by: Christine Buurma
The number of rigs drilling for oil and natural gas in the U.S. rose this week as producers ramped up drilling activity in the hope of an economic rebound that could boost energy demand. The number of oil and gas rigs climbed to 966, up 18 from the previous week, according to rig data from oil-field services company Baker Hughes Inc. (BHI). The number of gas rigs was 681, an increase of four rigs from last week, while the oil rig count rose to 277, an increase of 16 rigs. The number of miscellaneous rigs fell by two, to eight rigs.
Buys & Associates’ Stormwater Training Seminars
According to figures reported by the EPA, states in the Rocky Mountain Region have increased enforcement to target stormwater violations, especially at construction, industrial, and oil and gas sites. With above average summer rainfall and anticipated heavy snowfall for the coming winter, poorly planned sites or ineffective stormwater management programs may result in timely project delays and costly fines for operators found out of compliance.
Buys & Associates, Inc. will be hosting two Stormwater Management & Erosion Control training workshops in September.These seminars are designed to help companies properly plan sites from the beginning, identify and fix sites found out of compliance, and will assist in minimizing costly stormwater violations in the future. B&A’s Stormwater Program Manager and Training Instructor, Mr. John A. Jehn, has trained hundreds of satisfied oil and gas companies on stormwater program management, federal and state permitting, inspection and reporting requirements, and final site stabilization and project closeout.
September 4, 2009- Littleton, CO
September 24, 2009- Sheridan, WY
DJ Basin Energy Expo
September 23, 2009 in Greeley, CO
Anadarko, Noble and EnCana sponsor this expo so residents can learn more about energy development in northeast Colorado. At this community event, attendees will have the opportunity to talk one-on-one with representatives from the natural gas and oil industry, as well as the alternative energy industry, and governmental and regulatory agencies.
Click here for more information.
Save the Date: RPSEA Member Reception
September 21, 2009 in Washington, D.C.
All RPSEA Members are invited to join the RPSEA Board of Directors and staff for a Member Reception the evening of Monday, September 21. The reception will take place on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. Details are being finalized and will follow at a later date. Please save this date as we hope all members will join us in networking and fellowship while hors d’oeuvres and cocktails will be served.
Contact Danette Mozisek for more information.
The Front Range Energy Career Expo and Forum (Expo)
October 15, 2009 at Tivoli Auraria Campus
The Front Range Energy Career Expo and Forum is an educational event for high school students in the Denver Metro area. The goal of the event is to bring college representatives, energy companies, and students together in one location, to present information about college options and job opportunities to the future generation of leaders that will graduate from high school in the next three years.
Click here for the Sponsorship Form.



