Basin reserve

  1. Basin Preserve
  2. Visiting The Basin
  3. Permian Basin Reserves in Texas, New Mexico Could Drive World Oil Market Growth
  4. Basin Reserve


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Basin Preserve

In October 2006, an anonymous donor gave The Nature Conservancy 1,910 acres in Phippsburg, including more than 4 miles of coastline surrounding the Basin, a saltwater inlet on the New Meadows River. In 2012, the Conservancy transferred 64 acres to the town of Phippsburg to be used for town recreational access and school programs. The Basin Preserve is a recreational and scenic treasure, providing coastal access for clamming, fishing and miles of hiking trails. The Basin is the Conservancy’s largest coastal preserve in Maine and one of the Conservancy’s most valuable individual land gifts. Ecological Value & Features The acquisition of The Basin Preserve is a substantial addition to existing protected lands and waters in the Kennebec Estuary. Comprised of Merrymeeting Bay and the Lower Kennebec River, the Kennebec Estuary is the largest tidal estuary on the East Coast north of the Hudson River. In addition to protecting important estuary habitat of the Basin and shoreline of the New Meadows River, The Basin Preserve features extensive stands of rare Pitch Pine Woodlands. A series of ridges run down the length of the preserve in a northeast/southwest orientation. One of the larger ridges on the peninsula, Pasture Ridge, runs down the middle of the preserve and hosts an exemplary stand of Pitch Pine Woodland, one of the largest in Maine. These beautiful woodlands are influenced by past fires and pitch pine’s ability to persist in harsh growing conditions of acidic, thin soil ...

Visiting The Basin

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Permian Basin Reserves in Texas, New Mexico Could Drive World Oil Market Growth

Americas+1 212 318 2000 EMEA+44 20 7330 7500 Asia Pacific+65 6212 1000 • Company • • • • • • • • • Communications • • Follow • • • • • • Products • • • • • Industry Products • • • • • Media • • • • • • • • • • Media Services • • • Company • • • • • • • • • Communications • • Follow • • • • • • Products • • • • • Industry Products • • • • • • Media • • Technology • • • • Businessweek • • • • Media Services • • • Bloomberg Where can the world quickly turn to for more oil? The answer, it turns out, isn’t the traditional powerhouse of OPEC or the promising new offshore fields of Brazil. Instead, the weight of the oil world is falling squarely on the shoulders of a few counties tucked into lonely corners of the U.S. Southwest. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has revealed to the broader world what those who follow energy markets have been flagging for some time: Oil markets are tight—really tight. Supplies are so fragile that the threat of disruption to Russian exports immediately sent prices racing past $130 a barrel in a dizzying surge. The market has since eased a bit in volatile trading, but prices are still high enough to continue to weigh on global economies and raise broader concerns over energy security. To cool things down, all eyes are on the Permian. That makes the debate raging among drillers in the basin—whether to unleash the drill rigs or not—extremely pressing to a world dealing with the inflationary blow of oil’s price surge. Output in the Permian is above pre-pand...

Basin Reserve

A view of Basin Reserve in 2008 Ground information Location Coordinates 41°18′1″S 174°46′49″E / 41.30028°S 174.78028°E / -41.30028; 174.78028 Establishment 1868 Capacity 11,600 End names Vance Stand End Scoreboard End International information First Test 24–27 January 1930: Last Test 17–20 March 2023: First ODI 9 March 1975: Last ODI 26 March 2021: First women's Test 20–23 March 1948: Last women's Test 26–29 January 1990: First WODI 23 January 1982: Last WODI 11 December 2022: First WT20I 28 February 2016: Last WT20I 10 February 2020: Team information (1873–present) As of 20 March 2023 Source: The Basin Reserve, officially known as the Cello Basin Reserve for sponsorship reasons, the Basin, is a The New Zealand Cricket Museum is located in the Old Grandstand. It houses cricket memorabilia and a reference library. It opened in 1987, and was relaunched in 2021. Location [ ] The Basin Reserve is two kilometres south of the Wellington CBD at the foot of The Basin Reserve is also surrounded by numerous other Wellington landmarks, including Mount Cook Barracks, the Construction history [ ] The area that is now Basin Reserve was originally a lake (known as the Basin Lake), and there were plans to connect it to the sea by a canal to make it an alternative inner city harbour, with major warehouses and factories alongside it. However, the massive After a council meeting on 11 December 1866 the Basin Reserve became Wellington's official cricket ground. No cattle or horses were allowe...