Boomtown #1
Bakken Shale – Williston, North Dakota - Boomtown. You’ve read about it in WSJ, Seen it on CNN. and in National Geographic. It is a “Eureka” sort of reality for hearty souls and pioneering entrepreneurs. Together with similar geology in Pennsylvania and Texas, a part of the solution to US dependence on foreign oil even though some environmentalists beg to differ.
For laborer
s and skilled trades people it is opportunity to work for crazy wages. Three weeks on and a week off. Straight time $60/hr for a Cat operator. New man camps are being set-up daily with mobile units. Hotels under construction have all rooms leased for 3 years before the doors open.
On a commuter jet out of Denver I sat next to the owner/CEO of an oil well drilling/leasing company working in North Dakota, Pennsylvania, Colorado and Texas. He explained the fraking process on the back of a napkin and assured me that environmental concerns were effectively mitigated. Interesting guy, self-made, rugged individualist running a business with 100 people, producing something of tangible value. His biggest challenge? Getting and keeping good skilled people. The big related challenge is places for people to live.
He told a story of buying a house for $250k. A week later he got an offer of $300k and a couple of weeks later, another for $350k. No sale. His business needed the living space.
This is harsh country with it’s own unique beauty. Brutal winter conditions – 40 below with big winds taking it much lower. It is also a black gold rush for risk takers and those willing to work hard in tough conditions.
Big players are there with Halliburton leading the list. Yet there is still a lot of bootstrapping, pioneering and small operators building their futures. I spent a day with a client CEO, a pioneer in his own right. We toured this frontier where oil well are being drilled as fast as possible. Three hundred wells are approved & permitted, yet to be drilled for lack of people and materials. On the drive back to Bismarck, ND from Williston I stopped at the visitor center that depicted this part of the Lewis and Clark expedition.
The parallel of pioneers then and now was both congruent and conflicting. Yet, surviving a winter on the plains of northwest North Dakota is a lot more likely today. I’m the Outsider and that’s what I think.


