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BACK TO BACK DATA: Shark Tank's Kevin O'Leary and Bitzero CEO Akbar Shamji made back-to-back appearances in both Montana and North Dakota to announce new data centers. North Dakota will be getting a 200 MW data center to handle the state's own data requirements, and has also been chosen as Bitzero's North American Headquarters. Montana, meanwhile, is getting a 50 MW data center.

Both data centers will be using hydroelectric power, and the North Dakota center will also provide heat for a greenhouse for year-round production. Using hydroelectric power will help position data centers to fit new ESG metrics, something Wall Street investors are demanding of companies.

Data is the new oil, O'Leary said in both states. A single drone flight takes a terrabyte of data for an average size farm. Autonomous cars are reporting every inch of movement to the cloud. People have also become more digitally savvy since the pandemic, ordering groceries and meals online, attending conferences and meetings remotely — an insatiable ocean of data now underlies nearly every aspect of modern life.

NEW USES FOR LIGNITE: Meanwhile, a new use for lignite came up during Bitzero's appearance in North Dakota. Bitzero Akbar Shamji said his company is working with a leading global enterprise to assemble and distribute graphene batteries that will be made in North Dakota using lignite. Graphene is a component of lignite. North Dakota has an 800-year supply of lignite, Gov Doug Burgum said.

Graphene batteries are not the only new use for lignite that North Dakota is exploring. it also recently awarded a grant to Semplastics, which wants to use carbon derived from coal to
Imageproduce a super strong, yet light-weight building material suitable for both interior and exterior use. The materials will offer greater design flexibility making it easier to personalize a home. Read more about that in this week's energy Quick Takes.

TRAINND TO EXPAND CDL, CRANE PROGRAMS: TrainND Northwest has just
Imagebeen awarded a $1.9 million grant by the Economic Development Administration that will allow it to expand its program and update its equipment over the next decade. The grant as funded by the American Rescue Plan and EDA's $300 million coal Communities Commitment, as well as $464,000 in local matching funds. The program will create an estimated 549 jobs in all.

NWP12, FERC POLICY CHANGES AND MORE THINGS TO KNOW
: Nationwide Permit 12 is under the spotlight again, lately, with gas industry groups and the state of Montana urging a federal court to leave the permit in place. It was in Montana where Judge Brian Morris first up-ended NWP12, deeming it inadequate to protect pallid sturgeon for Keystone XL's water crossing. Morris' ruling would have created an injunction against the permit nationwide, but a higher court narrowed his ruling to just Keystone XL. Nonetheless, Morris' ruling did prompt a federal review of the permit. API commented on that and on FERC policy changes as well

WAIT THAT'S NOT ALL : Keep scrolling down for an excellent editorial from Basin Safety Consulting's Jon Greiner. This week's rundown of energy matters is 100 percent free, including all linked articles thanks to Basin Safety Consulting. You can help keep oil and gas news free in the Bakken by recruiting a friend to sign up for this free newsletter today!

ImageAs always, reach out if you've got more story ideas for me or you have feedback for me on this newsletter. I can be reached at rjean@willistonherald.com. I love hearing from you!


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The Safety Stinks (not really) series

An Honest Look at Safety's Role in the Industry


by Jonathon Greiner • Basin Safety Consulting

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Let me begin by clarifying the premise of my editorial article, safety does not stink. However, as a safety professional I can testify that for many this is the attitude towards safety directives in the field. Many operations personnel in our industry assume that safety people are either actively working against them, or at best, “just doing their jobs.” Candidly, we haven’t figured out how to get out of this two dimensional box and in many cases have built its structure ourselves. One of my goals is to clarify where we’re failing and strategies to leverage these failures into a new paradigm. One where our workers see safety leaders as coaches and partners, not police and tattletales.

As a fourth generation energy worker, I grew up with stories of valor and pickles my grandfathers and their coffee shop crews (as I call them) endured when they were still young enough to throw a chain. These guys were tough, and a lot of them got hurt. At the time, it was part of the culture. They grew up as farm kids working around machinery and driving grain or beet trucks at the age of seven. They breathed risk and chemicals, and pretty much every other particulate or gas that went airborne. Times were different then and a lot of our systems, data, and education have improved our workers longevity and quality of life, but the way these initiatives have been managed hasn’t always built trust with the people we ask to implement them.


Read the rest of this excellent editorial online
here.
 
 

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