CONTINUING COVERAGE

Energy Impact in Tulsa

Overview: Maybe the Golden Driller or the oil rig water fountain at Centennial Green pay ample tribute to what energy means to Tulsa, but a quick read through the Fortune 500 does the trick, too.



Neither the past nor the future can tell the complete story of the oil, natural gas, utility and coal sectors impact the local economy. Right here, right now, are seven Fortune 500 companies which employ large groups of relatively well-paid workers in the seven-county Tulsa Metropolitan Statistical Area.

Names like Williams Cos. ONEOK Inc., ConocoPhillips, Baker Hughes, Apache Corp., AEP and HollyFrontier Corp. — some headquartered in Tulsa, some not — lead a Tulsa-area energy industry that employs more local people than any other sector other than health care.

Tulsa’s energy companies create nearly $29 billion in total economic output annually, nearly triple what the health care and aerospace sectors singularly offer in Tulsa.

See a list of some of the largest energy employers in Tulsa.

This page is home to all of the Tulsa World's coverage of the energy industry.

HEADLINES

Oil: Price tracks gains in stocks, erases early losses   5/23/2013

An afternoon recovery in U.S. stock markets helped oil reverse early losses Thursday.

Caballo starts up Carmen gas plant   5/23/2013

The project will help the company connect to the growing natural gas production in the Mississippi Lime and Cana Woodford Shale plays.

Magellan Midstream Partners considering pipeline to Little Rock   5/23/2013

The new line, if built, would transport gasoline, diesel and jet fuel, the company reported.

ONEOK Inc. shareholders reject added methane precautions

ONEOK Inc. shareholders reject added methane precautions   5/23/2013

ONEOK Inc. shareholders shot down a proposal Wednesday from a social advocacy investment group to increase methane monitoring and reporting.

CVR refinery in Coffeyville, Kan., to pay $300,000 penalty to EPA

CVR refinery in Coffeyville, Kan., to pay $300,000 penalty to EPA   5/23/2013

An oil refinery in Coffevyille, Kan., will pay a $300,000 penalty in what federal regulators called the facility's third environmental settlement in 13 months, the EPA announced Wednesday.

Keystone pipeline speed-up bill passed by U.S. House   5/23/2013

House Republicans pushed through a bill Wednesday to bypass the president to speed approval of the Keystone XL oil pipeline from Canada to Texas. Democrats criticized the legislation as a blatant attempt to allow a foreign company to avoid environmental review.

Exxon Mobil accused of anti-gay bias in complaint

Exxon Mobil accused of anti-gay bias in complaint   5/23/2013

One after another, major U.S. corporations have updated anti-discrimination policies to protect gay, lesbian and transgender workers, drawing plaudits from gay-rights groups. There's one prominent exception: Exxon Mobil Corp.

Fossil Free campaign has students pushing universities to drop fossil fuel investments

Fossil Free campaign has students pushing universities to drop fossil fuel investments   5/23/2013

Student activists at more than 200 colleges are trying a new tactic in hopes of slowing the pace of climate change: They are asking their schools to stop investing in fossil fuel companies.

LNG exports on hold until data review by Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz

LNG exports on hold until data review by Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz   5/22/2013

Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz said Tuesday he will delay final decisions on about 20 applications to export liquefied natural gas until he reviews studies by the Energy Department and others on what impact the exports would have on domestic natural gas supplies and prices.

Obama opposes GOP bill on Keystone XL oil pipeline   5/21/2013

The White House said Tuesday that the bill 'seeks to circumvent longstanding and proven processes' by removing a requirement for a presidential permit. The legislation also says no new environmental studies are needed.

International leaders in energy come to Tulsa as part of national tour   5/21/2013

It's no coincidence that a group of visitors from across the globe are asking the same kinds of questions about energy that are dominating discussions about U.S. energy policy.

Energy firms join up to push for stricter drilling standards in Marcellus Shale

Energy firms join up to push for stricter drilling standards in Marcellus Shale   5/21/2013

Andrew Place once planted 5,500 trees on his 210-acre Greene County farm, adding native hardwoods to expand the habitat of a rare salamander.

Judge dismisses charge against ex BP exec in Gulf Oil spill   5/21/2013

A federal judge on Monday dismissed one of the two counts in the indictment of a former BP executive who was charged with concealing information from Congress about the amount of oil that was leaking from the company's blown-out well in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010.

Oklahoma oil and gas drilling   5/21/2013

Kay: Devon Energy Production Co. LP, Cales No. 1-4MH Well, SE/4 NE/4 NE/4 NE/4 (SL) of 04-27N-04E, 10 BOPD, 101 MCFPD, TD 8,150 feet.

Wall Street praises Chesapeake's tapping Anadarko exec as new CEO

Wall Street praises Chesapeake's tapping Anadarko exec as new CEO   5/21/2013

Chesapeake Energy Corp. shares jumped nearly 3 percent Monday after the Oklahoma City-based company tapped Anadarko Petroleum executive Robert Douglas Lawler as its new CEO.

PSO seeks officials' OK on plan to phase out 2 coal units near Oologah   5/21/2013

Calling it an 'Oklahoma solution' that uses state-produced energy resources, representatives of Tulsa-based utility Public Service Co. of Oklahoma urged environmental officials Monday to approve a plan that phases out its last two coal units at a power plant near Oologah by 2026.

Oil: Price rises on falling dollar; gasoline at $3.65   5/20/2013

Although stocks slipped in the afternoon, a weak dollar propped up oil prices.

Chesapeake names Anadarko executive as new CEO

Chesapeake names Anadarko executive as new CEO   5/20/2013

The appointment comes after a tough year during which Chesapeake's board ousted its founder and the company worked to shore up its finances.

Keystone pipeline critics point to 2010 Enbridge disaster

Keystone pipeline critics point to 2010 Enbridge disaster   5/19/2013

The Enbridge oil slick never reached Lake Michigan, but it slid as far down river as the delta of Morrow Lake, not too far from the city of Kalamazoo.

McClendon development plan raises dispute in Michigan community

McClendon development plan raises dispute in Michigan community   5/19/2013

The windswept dunes lining Lake Michigan's western shoreline seem to invite peace and serenity.

LNG export terminal plan gets Energy Department's tentative go-ahead   5/18/2013

Four months after a group of U.S. mayors urged faster approval of liquefied natural gas export facilities, the Energy Department gave its conditional thumbs-up to a Gulf Coast LNG project Friday.

Fracking study in Arkansas finds no pollution   5/18/2013

Hydraulic fracturing for natural gas hasn't contaminated drinking water wells in Arkansas, according to a new study, but researchers said the geology there may be more of a natural barrier to pollution than in other areas where shale gas drilling takes place.

AEP-PSO haze plan due state hearing May 20   5/18/2013

State Attorney General Scott Pruitt has asked the state's environmental agency to delay a hearing Monday on a new plan to deal with regional haze by Tulsa-based utility American Electric Power-Public Service Company of Oklahoma.

Transocean shareholders heed Icahn, vote out chairman

Transocean shareholders heed Icahn, vote out chairman   5/18/2013

Shareholders of Transocean Ltd. voted out the chairman Friday and backed one of Carl Icahn's director nominees.

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BY THE NUMBERS


Tulsa’s energy sector accounts for:

2.5 percent of all jobs in the area
4 percent of computer and mathematical occupations
6.6 percent of all wages
7.6 percent of management positions
14.7 percent of science occupations (geologists, etc.)
26 percent of the architecture and engineering positions held locally

Source: Tulsa Metro Chamber Chief Economist Bob Ball and U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
TIMELINE

Tulsa’s early version of the Golden Driller is hoisted up onto an oil derrick in 1959.

Tulsa’s energy sector highs and lows

Early 20th century: Tulsa defined as new “oil capital of the world” after giant finds at Red Fork (1901) and Glenn Pool (1905)
1918: Dave and Miller Williams move pipeline and construction firm, Williams, from Fort Smith, Ark. to Tulsa.
1920: Bill Payne joins Walt Helmerich to start drilling rig company that becomes Helmerich & Payne.
1923: Tulsa oil men create first International Petroleum Exposition and Congress.
1986: Oil bust leads to mass layoffs industry-wide, and Tulsa oil and gas companies are no exception.
1989: Reeding and Bates Corp. moves to Houston, only five years after adding 20 floors to Mid-Continent Tower in downtown Tulsa
1996: Warren Petroleum Co. ceases operations as NGC Corp. moves remaining employees to Houston.
2001: Parker Drilling Co. moves corporate HQ to Houston
2002: Bartlesville-based Phillips Petroleum Co. merges with Conoco Inc. and moves HQ to Houston
2002: Helmerich & Payne spins off exploration and production segment, merges it with Key Production to create Cimarex. Merged company based in Denver but maintains significant Tulsa office.
2004: Citgo Petroleum Corp. moves HQ to Houston.
2009: Holly Corp. (later HollyFrontier) buys Tulsa’s refineries from Sunoco Inc. and Sinclair Oil Corp.
2010: Oklahoma City-based SandRidge Energy buys out Tulsa-based Arena Resources Inc. for $1.6 billion
2011: Four Tulsa-based companies — Rose Rock Midstream, Mid-Con Energy Partners, Laredo Petroleum Inc. and WPX Energy Inc. — go public through IPOs or spinoffs. Baker Hughes announces major expansion at Tulsa area plants.
Early 2012: RAM Energy renamed Halcon Resources Corp. and HQ moving to Houston. RAM maintaining Tulsa offices.
CONTACT THE TULSA WORLD
Rod Walton has covered the Tulsa World's energy beat since July 2008. He has won Oklahoma Press Association and Great Plains awards for his stories about the SemGroup bankruptcy and oil futures trading collapse.

Walton has worked at the World since 1993, as Community World editor, assistant city editor and state writer. He graduated 1986 from the University of Oklahoma. Walton lives in Bartlesville with his wife and four children.

Contact: 918-581-8457, rod.walton@tulsaworld.com