Independent news from the Indigenous Media Freedom Alliance

Cooperation may be essential for oil development

JT Shining Oneside shared stories about her Ojibwe and Anishinaabe inheritance during the Native American Heritage Month Celebration on Nov. 15. She spoke about the coming-of-age and traditional birth ceremonies. (Photo credit/ Adrianna Adame)

BY ADAM WILMOTH Energy Editor awilmoth@opubco.com

The oil and natural gas industry largely is made up of small, fiercely independent companies.

While those firms often work together to drill and produce multi-million-dollar wells, they also tend to maintain a strong sense of competition and distrust.

Competition can be especially fierce as companies vie for the best leases and for access to critical infrastructure, such as power lines, pipelines and access to market.

While heightened competition may work in some parts of the oil patch, the Mississippi Lime play of northern Oklahoma and western Kansas apparently requires more cooperation.

Three times over the past two weeks, I’ve heard industry leaders talk about the need to work together in the Mississippi Lime, one of the newest and higher-potential oil fields in the country.

Stretching up to about 20 million acres, the play has attracted the country’s largest independent producers and the state’s smaller and mid-size operators.

The land grab essentially is over, and producers are now testing drilling and completion techniques to get the most oil and natural gas out of the ground.

Because the play is so new and still largely untapped, cooperation is especially critical, said Robert Sullivan, owner of Tulsa-based Sullivan and Co.

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Jodi Rave Spotted Bear

Jodi Rave Spotted Bear is the founder and director of the Indigenous Media Freedom Alliance, a 501-C-3 nonprofit organization with offices in Bismarck, N.D. and the Fort Berthold Reservation. Jodi spent 15 years reporting for the mainstream press. She's been awarded prestigious Nieman and John S. Knight journalism fellowships at Harvard and Stanford, respectively. She also an MIT Knight Science Journalism Project fellow. Her writing is featured in "The Authentic Voice: The Best Reporting on Race and Ethnicity," published by Columbia University Press. Jodi currently serves as a Society of Professional Journalists at-large board member, an SPJ Foundation board member, and she chairs the SPJ Freedom of Information Committee. Jodi has won top journalism awards from mainstream and Native press organizations. She earned her journalism degree from the University of Colorado at Boulder.