Friday, September 12, 2025

Podcast # 27, Performance Evaluation

Combining the Performance Evaluation and Statistics & Analytics modules into one podcast turned out surprisingly good. The discussion sets in place the necessity of having the data’s structure and integrity established in the system first and foremost. Otherwise garbage in, garbage out rules. Consequently members of either the Joint Operating Committee or producer firms will be able to analyze that data with confidence and consistency. 


And there’s more. This data that’s been interpreted by the user is then able to be used in the Artificial Intelligence and Business Operations Management modules. Where the user may be able to capture unique competitive advantages from a deep pool of data. 


The podcast is presented well and captures the spirit of these modules in the overall Preliminary Specification. 


Pod up


🎙️Podcast

📝Performance Evaluation 

📝Statistics & Analytics

📝Artificial Intelligence

📝Business Operations

📚Index

Thursday, September 11, 2025

Timely Solutions, Part II

 Now after a few years, we can assess the viability of the producer officers and directors defined consolidation solution for what ails the industry. Anyone’s assessment would have been a failure on day one and now we see unquestionably their consolidation strategy has failed. Operational efficiencies will create redundancies; however, we see far more incremental staff cuts, even large ones for Oil & Gas producers. The follow-on consequences concern me as well (Haliburton 20 - 40%). I see a big neon sign advertising the oil & gas industry advantages:
  • Burearacracies only Karl Marx could dream of.
  • Job security for the week and the dull hum of a quiet office environment.
  • Watch in real time as the fourth industrial revolution plays out in other industries.
  • Calculate the number of days left by multiplying the number of years to retirement by 232 days per year. Hope that your tie can hold out that long.
As I write this, Oracle founder Larry Ellison surpassed Elon Musk as the richest man in the world. Oracle forms the base of the Preliminary Specification. It seems People, Ideas & Objects picked the right horse, just the wrong rodeo with the oil & gas industry. Outside of the officers and directors, we’re all just the paying customers. Or the rodeo clowns. And maybe those sent unceremoniously to the unemployment lines are the lucky ones.

Wednesday, September 10, 2025

Timely Solutions, Part I

People, Ideas & Objects do not concern ourselves with whether producers' officers and directors choose to listen to us or continue their "muddle through" ways. However, we will point out the deadlines we believe they should concern themselves with: September 30 and October 31, 2025. Actions to date, since mid-August 2025, reflect that nothing will be done. We see only one visible action: the silencing, or attempted silencing, of People, Ideas & Objects. The September 30, 2025, deadline is, of course, the third-quarter reporting requirement for all public companies. Producers will report on their third-quarter activities at this point, and these reports should include the discovery of the tangible and quantifiable leakage of natural gas revenues.


This century's natural gas leakage has proven real. Producers also ignored, evaded, and avoided recognizing the issue over the past 22 months. This reflects poorly on the state of compliance and governance in North American oil & gas producers. Since the issue affects all natural gas producers since 2009, and the calculated value falls in the range of $4.7 trillion, producers would consider this issue material to any and all natural gas producers. It is quite possible that both officers and directors were completely unaware of the structural decline in natural gas revenues from 6:1 to as low as 50:1 in 2024, and the helpful, friendly service we are providing them today.

The second deadline, October 31, 2025, is the approximate deadline for producers' quarterly reports. At this point, they will have no further means to avoid the issue or its recognition. Producers must recognize the natural gas revenue leakage issue, the amount to which it subjects them, and the steps they have taken to mitigate future potential losses. We can see through producers' filings to the SEC that none of the producers appear to be attempting to fulfill this reporting requirement, address the revenues lost, or mitigate further losses.

Thankfully, People, Ideas & Objects offer the Preliminary Specification to the producers' officers and directors. We would really appreciate the opportunity to help solve these issues, no matter who survives the upcoming events.

Tuesday, September 09, 2025

Podcast # 26, Security, Compliance and Blockchain

 This stellar podcast, created by the Artificial Intelligence bots, surprisingly exceeded expectations by efficiently combining three seemingly uninteresting modules. These modules, all related to security, compliance, and blockchain, share numerous overlapping concerns. The podcasts aim to offer a concise review of the material for interested audiences, saving them time and providing insight into our methods of issue resolution. 
Pod up

🎙️Podcast 
📝Security & Access Control 
📝Compliance & Governance
📝Blockchain
📚Index 

Monday, September 08, 2025

Officers and “Dictators”

 This past month should give everyone pause. Forget the past decade since investors last engaged, or the publication of the Preliminary Specification. Focus instead on just the past 22 months.

The $4.7 trillion hole—both quantifiable and qualifiable—was brought forward, alongside LNG business failures that expose the elementary lack of business competence in producer boardrooms. What happened? What was done? Or was it simply ignored? That would at least be consistent with the disqualifying level of understanding shown by today’s officers and directors.

Or perhaps they simply don’t care. Optimization of performance is absent from their agenda. Instead, officers and directors operate like dictators—driven by financial gain and control. As Victor Davis Hanson recently observed about Venezuela, it is not ignorance but willful disregard.


The $4.7 trillion was not forgotten—it was buried. The messenger was shot. People, Ideas & Objects were cast as delusional, our credibility shredded. I became the lone voice warning of imminent demise. And yet, I do not quit.

Then, in August 2025, Shell lost its action against Venture Global. If our claims were fantasy, why was Shell chasing the same money? If $4.7 trillion had fallen off the table, where did it go?

Without full access, we could not state definitively, though Venture Global was always a candidate. As a startup LNG provider, valued at $90 billion by J.P. Morgan, their $3.6 billion in revenues (at issue in Shell’s claim) were not only real—they were measurable.

Following this discovery, we raised alarms about insurance exposure and immediate reporting obligations. Yet, as of September 4, 2025, the only coordinated action taken has been to silence us.

Friday, September 05, 2025

Podcast # 25, Artificial Intelligence Module

 Artificial Intelligence holds far greater commercial promise than the novelty of conversational tools alone. Perplexity’s orientation toward business differentiates it from its peers, yet the real obstacle for AI in enterprise remains the condition of the data itself. In oil and gas, accounting information is functionally unusable at the Joint Operating Committee (JOC) level, forcing operations to rely instead on reserve reports and regional cost estimates that only approximate reality.

Within this environment, Artificial Intelligence costs and success are often inverse of one another. That tension will only sharpen as industries enter their inevitable “bright shiny object” stage of AI adoption. Enterprises today report 85% of corporate ERP systems remain on prem. It's not that Cloud use is a requirement of AI use, it just shows the speed at which corporate America falls short of their claims. 

The Artificial Intelligence Module of People, Ideas & Objects addresses this by embedding fundamental cost discipline into its design. It does so by pooling development and infrastructure costs across producers and establishing common frameworks that can then be extended and adapted by each firm’s distinct competitive advantage. This ensures AI delivers real value—grounded in accurate reporting and sustainable economics—rather than merely absorbing resources.


Pod up


🎙️Podcast 

📝Specification

📚Index 

Thursday, September 04, 2025

I'm Seeing Ghost's

 It's curious that after I bring up the Shell vs. Venture Global arbitration decision and its reporting implications for all producers, X is now reporting a ghost ban! Google suggests various reasons for being ghost banned, but I find the "mass reporting" reason particularly interesting and likely responsible.


Wednesday, September 03, 2025

Podcast # 24, Knowledge & Learning Module

 The Research & Development and Knowledge & Learning modules are designed to align scientific and technical capabilities with the locus of decision rights. Within the industry, that locus is the Joint Operating Committee, which integrates legal, financial, operational decision making, cultural, communication, strategic and innovative frameworks. The Joint Operating Committee embodies the property partnership, and the Knowledge & Learning module aggregates and presents the explicit technical knowledge of each producer within the Joint Operating Committee—making the collective expertise available for decision-making.

People, Ideas & Objects shifts knowledge to where decisions are made, directly addressing the primary operational accountability gap that exists today. Consider the drilling of a well: the operator proposes a program, the Joint Operating Committee votes, and if the approval threshold is met, the operator proceeds. If the well fails, who is responsible—the operator or the Joint Operating Committee? The Preliminary Specification resolves this ambiguity. The Research & Capabilities and Knowledge & Learning modules movement of the knowledge to where the decision rights are held ensures that outcomes are properly attributed, not to penalize individuals, but to capture learnings, avoid repetition of mistakes, and replicate successes.

This structure also mitigates the chronic engineering resource constraint facing the industry. Today, each producer maintains just-in-time engineering capacity across all their properties—an approach that is costly and ultimately unsustainable. By reorganizing around specialization and division of labor, the industry can scale capabilities more efficiently, ensuring commercial viability while reducing duplication of effort. Specialization on particular scientific capabilities, each producer contributes that high value knowledge of theirs to the Joint Operating Committee. Generic capabilities can be augmented from the Resource Marketplace module. 

The accompanying podcast provides further detail and explores the auxiliary aspects of these modules.

Pod up


🎙️Podcast

📝Specification 

📚Index

Tuesday, September 02, 2025

Remember When...

 ...there was a time when investors lined up around the block whenever a producer announced an offering. That world has long since disappeared—so long ago that many today may not even recall it. By 2015, investors had delivered a clear message: dissatisfaction with the performance and accountability of oil and gas producers. From that point forward, they withdrew from further investment in the industry, in effect telling management—restore accountability, deliver results, and perhaps we’ll return.

Meanwhile, at People, Ideas & Objects, we spent two decades warning that North American producers were unprofitable and inflicting lasting damage across the broader energy economy. We documented multi-trillion-dollar losses and argued relentlessly that this was not sustainable. It was easy for producers to dismiss these warnings, casting us as outliers who “didn’t understand” their so-called strategic brilliance.

Officers and directors, of course, chose to rely on the conviction, confident that “muddling through” would eventually prove the critics and investors wrong. Yet here we stand: a decade without investor support and two decades of repeated warnings ignored.

The truth is unavoidable. When value is abandoned or left unrealized by its rightful owners, others inevitably capture it and make something of it. To allow such leakage of value—on this scale, over this length of time—constitutes mismanagement. Especially when numerous mitigating strategies, solutions, and investor demands have long been available and ignored.

Natural Gas Price Structure Destruction

Few will forget the summer of 2025. It marked the moment producers were proven wrong—conclusively. The questions now are unavoidable: What happens next? Where do we go from here? How will this be resolved? And why did it happen at all?

Shareholders deserve clarity. The issue at hand is the collapse of natural gas price structures. Over the past 22 months, since People, Ideas & Objects first raised the alarm, two central facts have remained unaddressed:
  1. Producers’ fundamental misunderstanding of free-on-board LNG.
  2. The long-term structural decline in natural gas—from a 6:1 oil-gas ratio in 2009 to 50:1 in 2024.
The resulting revenue destruction is quantifiable: $4.7 trillion in losses across the industry.

Initially, People, Ideas & Objects paid the credibility cost of raising such an extraordinary figure. The market reacts to trillion-dollar claims, and in our case, it responds with indifference and isolation. For nearly two years, nothing was done.

Then came the turning point. Shell elected to sue Venture Global—suing, in effect, over the very issue we raised. The case, seeking $3.6 billion, highlighted that Venture Global had purchased gas at Henry Hub, liquefied it, and sold it FOB into Japan and Europe at global prices. The tribunal’s rejection of Shell’s claim validated our analysis: Shell acknowledged its own lost revenues, Venture Global captured the arbitrage, and the credibility has shifted back to People, Ideas & Objects.

Now, as of September 2, 2025, officers and directors of all producers face a non-negotiable duty. They must disclose material risks, along with mitigation steps, through press releases and, more importantly, through quarterly reports. With the Q3 10-Q reports due September 30, 2025, there is no excuse for silence on a $4.7 trillion structural revenue shortfall.

Can producers continue to avoid reporting obligations while value destruction compounds? The record is damning:
  • Did they fail to understand the issue?
  • Were they conflicted?
  • Or simply too indifferent to act?
For each officer and director over the past 16 years, one of those answers will apply. And it must be remembered: over the past 22 months of their silence producers were aware of the legitimacy of our claims.

A Pattern of Avoidance

Our hypothesis of “a designed lack of accountability” has its roots in history. Oracle abandoned its oil & gas ERP effort in 2000; IBM followed in 2005. Both cited the same issue: producers had no appetite for systems that enforced accountability. People, Ideas & Objects have faced the same resistance with the Preliminary Specification. The conclusion is clear—this absence of accountability is not incidental, it is systemic. Implemented by way of skeleton budget allocations to accounting and systems. 

Shell’s Response and the Industry’s Default

In the wake of the tribunal ruling, Shell stated:
Shell said it was disappointed with the tribunal’s decision. “Trust in long-term contracts is the bedrock of the LNG industry and essential for continued investment and sustainable growth,” the company said in a statement.
This is emblematic of the industry’s reflexive posture—deflect blame, warn of dire consequences, and ignore the root cause. Yet the facts remain:
  • Shell signed the contracts.
  • Shell delivered the gas.
  • Shell accepted payment.
  • Industry ignored a decade of investor demands for accountability and profitability.
  • Shell has dismissed People, Ideas & Objects’ solutions since 2012.
  • Shell failed to address the collapse in gas pricing from 2009 to 2024.
  • Shell chose litigation over reform.
  • Shell valued its claim at $3.6 billion and Venture Global estimates upwards of an additional $197.9 billion in incremental revenues from their contract.
This is not misfortune. It is mismanagement.

Historical Dishonesty

The industry’s dishonesty is not new. On July 4, 2019, when People, Ideas & Objects published Profitable, Energy Independence in North America—Through the Commercialization of Shale, we argued that unprofitable wells should be shut in. Producers countered with a falsehood: that shutting in wells caused reservoir damage. Within nine months, 25% of global oil production was shut in during the negative oil price crisis. No subsequent reservoir damage was reported to have been realized.

This pattern—deny, disparage, and deflect—has defined the producers’ response for decades.

The fiduciary obligations of officers and directors are clear. They cannot claim ignorance of a $4.7 trillion destruction of value, nor can they dismiss a solution on the table since 2012. Instead, they have defied their shareholders, disregarded investor warnings, and undermined the integrity of the industry.

They must now answer for it.
A kingdom that has once been destroyed can never come again into being.
— Sun Tzu

Arbitration Decisions & Consequences

The outcome of Shell’s arbitration makes one point inescapable: every producer now owes a duty to their shareholders to disclose the consequences. SEC rules are clear—material events must be disclosed promptly, typically within four business days via press release or Form 8-K, or sooner if the stock price is materially impacted.

Yet no 8-K filings have been observed. This silence is unacceptable.

For two decades, producers sold gas at Henry Hub netback prices, leaving the $4.7 trillion shortfall to accumulate across the industry. Whether a startup or a major, each producer’s exposure is proportional to its period of operations. The arbitration ruling validates the claim. Venture Global’s own Q2 report disclosed $197.9 billion in potential future earnings under the disputed contract, providing undeniable evidence that value leakage on this scale is real and material. People, Ideas & Objects’ $4.7 trillion assessment over 25 years is no longer speculative—it is substantiated.

If producers fail to issue a timely press release or 8-K, they remain obligated to disclose in their 10-Q filings for the quarter ending September 30, 2025. For Shell, this will be filed October 30, 2025. The clock is ticking. Officers and directors face serious consequences if failure to disclose is determined. And disclosure must include not only the financial impact, but the qualitative context: a decade of obstinacy toward investor demands and repeated rejection of viable solutions such as the Preliminary Specification.

Litigation Exposure

Shareholder litigation will not be straightforward. A record exists of management’s willful neglect:
  • 2009 – Ignored the beginning of the structural decline in natural gas pricing.
  • 2015 – Investors explicitly demanded greater accountability and performance.
  • 2019 – Industry dismissed shut-in strategy as damaging reservoirs.
  • 2020 – Covid crisis shut in 25% of global oil production with no reservoir damage.
  • 2023 – People, Ideas & Objects identified LNG FOB value leakage.
  • 2024 – EIA recorded lowest average natural gas prices in history (February 50:1 ratio).
  • 2023–2025 – Producers maintained silence on LNG and larger structural price breakdown.
  • 2025 – Shell lost arbitration against Venture Global.
This is a track record of conscious disregard.

D&O Insurance at Risk

It's been nearly two decades since insurers faced a systemic challenge on this scale. The $4.7 trillion shortfall may yet rival the collapse of synthetic CDOs. Insurers have grounds to cancel coverage, leaving officers and directors personally liable. While most producers indemnify their executives, the sheer magnitude of this disaster could easily overwhelm both indemnification and insurance. The result would be bankruptcy proceedings, in which shareholders would likely be extinguished, with only unsecured creditor claims in litigation offering them any potential recovery.

The alternative for shareholders may be to exit positions now, before insolvency risk escalates.

Mitigation Options

There is a path to mitigation—but it requires action. Producers officers and directors can reduce their litigation and fiduciary exposure by funding development of the People, Ideas & Objects Preliminary Specification. This would demonstrate to courts, insurers, and investors that officers and directors acted decisively to resolve long-standing issues and deliver the performance gains demanded by shareholders.

Investors have consistently asked for a Tier-1 ERP solution. Only two exist:
  • SAP – Already installed in many producers, but performance has not improved. Its custom integrations simply mirror existing culture, reinforcing the status quo. As our disconcerting hypothesis suggests, lack of accountability is preserved by design. SAP is the bureaucracy.
  • Oracle Cloud ERP – The basis of the Preliminary Specification. Oracle has invested since 2004 in rebuilding its ERP from scratch in Java, and combined with their premier database, provides the foundation necessary to achieve industry transformation.
The Preliminary Specification is purpose-built for oil & gas. It delivers a decentralized, price-maker model ensuring all production is profitable, with 14 modules, 7 organizational constructs, and 3 marketplaces. It embeds a new culture of reserve preservation, performance and profitability.

Intellectual Property Constraints

It must also be emphasized: People, Ideas & Objects’ Intellectual Property is a protected competitive advantage. Any solution producers adopt must respect that IP. Replicating our design is not an option. Our research took a decade before publication in 2012, and would take any alternative at least another decade, based on some other methods to replicate where the Preliminary Specification was in 2012. Time producers simply do not have.

The choice is stark: acknowledge the $4.7 trillion shortfall, disclose truthfully, and act on it—or continue to stonewall until insurers, investors, and the courts enforce accountability through failure, bankruptcy, and litigation, both corporate and personal.