How Offshore Oil Rigs Work - YouTube

Channel: Wendover Productions

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This video was made possible by Audible.
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Get any audiobook for free by going to audible.com/Wendover.
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The global petroleum industry lives and dies by the price of oil.
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This number—a gauge of the average amount paid for a barrel, 42 gallons, or 159 liters—is
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responsible for enormous shifts in the field.
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Shifts that lead to the rise of some nations, and the fall of others.
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Shifts that change where and how people get their energy.
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That’s because, just because there’s more or less one global price, there are innumerable
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different production costs depending on where and how the oil is extracted.
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One country’s barrel of oil can cost dozens of times more than another’s, but then even
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within the same country the costs are not the same.
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It’s more of a curve.
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A given country’s cost looks more or less like this.
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At a lower level of production, the average overall cost to produce a barrel of oil would
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be a certain amount but then, as total production increases, that average per-barrel cost also
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increases up until a point where the curve turns into a nearly vertical line, because
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a country’s production capacity has been reached.
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This is because oil is found in plenty of different places.
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Sometimes it’s found under a big empty field near a major road, but sometimes its found
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under thousands of feet of ocean nowhere near the coast.
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Between these two, it’s pretty easy to understand where it would be more expensive to extract.
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On that national cost curve, though, one must also put a horizontal line.
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That’s the oil price.
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If the price is here, then it makes sense to produce up to that amount of oil.
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Any more and a barrel of oil would cost more to produce than what it sells for.
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If the oil price moves up, though, then it makes sense to increase production even when
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it raises the cost per barrel, and that’s what happened for most of the last fifty years.
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The oil price rose, with some up and down, from $20 in 1973 to a peak of over $140 in
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2008.
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Throughout that time, as long as an oil company could find a way to produce a barrel of oil
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for less than the current price, they were guaranteed a profit.
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That’s what brought them from the field to the ocean.
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Offshore oil rigs are inherently a higher-cost, higher-risk method of oil extraction, but
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the oceans are, of course, home to a huge proportion of the world’s oil reserves so,
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if there are no more low-cost oilfields on land, that’s where the companies go.
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Before starting operations, though, these companies need to decide exactly where to
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go.
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Now, usually, oil platforms are installed where there are already plenty of other platforms
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such as in the Persian Gulf, the Gulf of Mexico, or the North Sea.
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They cluster together.
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Within these areas, though, they need to determine which exact spot has the greatest potential
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for oil extraction, so geologists conduct surveys using ships and satellite imagery.
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Once that spot is selected, a rig will be towed to its location and installed.
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Once they’re put in location, offshore oil platforms often don’t move for years—they’re
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intended for long-term operation in a single spot.
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Despite this, though, they operate quite differently from ships.
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Usually, those working onboard have a shift of 12 hours a day, every day, for a period
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of two or three weeks, followed by two or three weeks off onshore.
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Keeping those work hours dense means that fewer people onboard are not working at a
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given time, which means that less space is needed for accommodations.
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But of course, this pattern means that there’s quite a lot of back and forth between shore
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and rig.
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For that, they use helicopters.
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This is actually one of the largest commercial applications of helicopters and huge companies
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have emerged, especially in the past few decades, to serve offshore oil rigs.
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For example, Bristow Aviation, one of the largest, has a fleet of almost 500, mostly
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used to make these offshore flights.
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The North Sea oil field is primarily linked with Aberdeen, Scotland, onshore, at least
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for its UK-owned or operated platforms.
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Aberdeen airport—a primarily regional airport that only has commercial passenger flights
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to a couple dozen European destinations—happens to be the world’s busiest heliport.
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About 100 large helicopters take off from here each day, mostly flying out to the North
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Sea.
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But Aberdeen is also linked to the oil fields another way.
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It serves as a hub for the ships that service the rigs.
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Now, especially in the North Sea, oil makes its way from the rigs to shore by undersea
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pipeline, so there isn’t a need to bring much back, but they do need to be frequently
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replenished with supplies—both for the humans, and the rig’s operations.
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That’s the job of platform supply vessels, which are essentially mini, short-range, flexible
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cargo ships.
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Aberdeen Harbor is always abuzz with activity, filing up these vessels, to keep the hundreds
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of offshore platforms themselves supplied.
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Onboard, there are essentially three types of jobs: production, those directly involved
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with the extraction and processing of oil, maintenance, those who keep the facilities
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and equipment in working order, and service, those who cook or clean or care for the rest
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of the crew.
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There’s always a focus, within the companies operating these platforms, to minimize the
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numbers of people working actually onboard as much as possible.
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It’s expensive first to transport and supply these workers, and then their salaries are
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also considerably higher than typical onshore salaries in the petroleum industry.
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An average offshore salary in the UK is around 60 or 70 thousand dollars—nearly double
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the national average wage.
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Therefore, most management and high-level decisions are made by workers back onshore
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who video conference in to the platforms to coordinate.
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Workers onboard are, for the most part, strictly operational.
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On the inside, these platforms look a lot like ships.
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The rooms are small and the recreation areas are sparse.
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There isn’t, after all, much down-time given the long hours while onboard.
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The platforms are more or less self-sufficient.
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Even though they’re usually within a couple hundred miles of shore, ships only resupply
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sporadically and helicopter flights are expensive, so water and electricity are produced onboard.
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As you would image, the rigs themselves are also hugely expensive to build.
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That’s because, what you see, the platform, is only a small component of the overall structure.
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With all designs, there’s hundreds or thousands of feet of undersea drilling equipment, but
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with some, there’s far more.
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Certain platforms are floating, anchored to the ocean floor, but others are rather massive
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undersea towers.
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The tallest in existence is the Petronius platform which has almost 2,000 feet or 600
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meters of undersea towering to support the platform itself.
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This made it, until the opening of the Burj Khalifa in 2010, the tallest free-standing
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structure in the world.
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The development, construction, and installation costs of this platform were therefore about
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$500 million.
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And, in fact, those costs are completely typical, if not low.
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Plenty of platforms cost far closer to a billion dollars.
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So, the question that oil companies are now beginning to pose would be: is it worth it?
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Well, there’s the short-term answer to that question and there’s the long-term answer.
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In the short-term, the answer is definitively no.
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At the time of writing, in April 2020, oil prices are hovering in the 20s of dollars
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per barrel—artificially lowered by a price war between Russia and Saudi Arabia, and naturally
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lowered by a drop in demand due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
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There likely is not a single offshore oil platform in the world turning a profit at
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those prices.
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Places like the North Sea, which have particularly high costs due to their workforce coming from
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relatively high-wage countries like Scotland, England, and Norway, have seen their output
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reduced since oil reached a peak price up until 2014.
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It’s just far cheaper to buy oil from onshore production facilities.
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So, in the year of 2020, oil platforms just don’t make sense.
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In the longer term, though, oil platforms could turn a profit, and that’s why they’re
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kept around.
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In a high-price oil environment, there likely isn’t enough onshore capacity to fulfill
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demand and so these offshore platforms are how oil companies fulfill demand to increase
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profits.
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There’s much less short-term flexibility with offshore platforms than on-shore installations,
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so typically the oil platforms are kept running, in the medium-term, and then in the short-term
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onshore production is scaled more to demand.
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But there are long-term costs that oil companies might not have fully previously considered
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when offshore production first began at a large scale decades ago.
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This was all realized with the BP Deepwater Horizon platform’s explosion and subsequent
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oil spill in 2010.
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Almost 5 million barrels spilled out into the Gulf of Mexico.
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The full economic and environmental costs are still not fully realized, a decade later,
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and they certainly far eclipse the costs borne by BP itself, but the company spent about
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$65 billion cleaning up and settling claims related to the incident, and their market
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value dropped by about $60 billion.
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That’s equivalent to about two to three years of their profit.
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And it’s not like the Deepwater Horizon will be the last oil spill.
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There might have been reforms, and there might be more attention, but oil spills are just
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a byproduct of the business.
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The immense cost they impose on both the companies responsible, and the areas they alter will
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not go away.
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Even without considering their immense environmental cost, to the company, oil platforms have emerged
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as high-risk, low-reward alternatives to onshore extraction methods.
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That’s not a desirable combination by itself, and its coupled with widespread public sentiment
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against offshore drilling.
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That’s a losing combination, for everyone, and for that reason, there really hasn’t
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been any expansion in the industry in the past decade and a half.
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The world has been producing about 20 million barrels of oil from offshore sources per day
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since about 2005, despite oil demand increasing, and yet there’s little evidence that this
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will ramp up in the future in a free-market environment.
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The only reason it might is if governments artificially prop up this production method
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in order to ensure their oil needs are fulfilled domestically.
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That’s possible in a place like the UK, with vast offshore production but very limited
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onshore, but with the recent decline in North Sea oil, it’s not a future that oil companies
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themselves are likely interested in pursuing.
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This isn’t some great win for the environment, though—onshore extraction is hardly better
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than offshore—but it does mean that, in the current oil environment, the makeup of
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who, how, and where the world gets its energy is changing ever faster.
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The story of the Deepwater Horizon explosion and spill is a fascinating one, and there’s
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a great book that goes into immense detail of the saga the workers on the platform went
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through to save lives and escape in its first hours.
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It’s called Fire on the Horizon, and it gives a fantastic glimpse into the perils
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of such a job.
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Like many great stories, it is available as an audiobook on Audible, so that means that,
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by signing up for a trial at audible.com/Wendover, or by texting “wendover” to 500-500, you
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can get it for free.
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If that doesn’t sound like your thing, though, and you’re a sci-fi fan like me, I would
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wholeheartedly recommend Recursion by Blake Crouch.
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It’s a terrifically unique story, and its performance on Audible is fantastic.
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So, once again, by signing up at audible.com/Wendover, you can get Recursion, Fire on the Horizon,
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or any audiobook for free, plus two free Audible originals, and you’ll be supporting Wendover
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Productions while you’re at it.