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CNX Drilled 8 Marcellus, Turned to Sales 2 Utica Wells in 2Q24

Last week, CNX Resources issued its second quarter 2024 update. The company lost $18.3 million in 2Q24, compared with making a profit of $475 million in 2Q23. This is quite a whack due to the low price of natural gas. Production was 134.0 Bcfe (billion cubic feet equivalent) in 2Q24 ā€” which works out to 1.47 Bcfe/d ā€” down from 134.2 Bcfe last year (statistically the same). On the bright side, management was excited about the early results of two deep Utica gas wells that were brought online last quarter.
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Virginia Fines MVP Another Piddly $30K for Erosion Violations

The Virginia Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) slapped the Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) project (which is now online) with a fine of $30,500 for violations of erosion and sediment control rules that happened during the second quarter. It is the fourth consecutive quarter in which MVP was fined by the DEQ for violations. In total, MVP has been fined nearly $100,000 by the DEQ over the past one year. Which is pretty much a nothingburger.
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Mass. Radicals Arrested at Algonquin Pipe Meter Station Site

The Algonquin Gas Transmission pipeline (owned by Enbridge) transports up to 3.09 Bcf/d through 1,131 miles of pipeline. Algonquin connects to Texas Eastern Transmission (TETCO), Millennium Pipeline, and Maritimes & Northeast Pipeline and supplies New England with critically needed natural gas supplies for power generation and consumer use. Much of the gas flowing through it comes from the Marcellus/Utica. Algonquin needs to install a backup “meter and regulator” station in Lincoln, Mass., to keep the gas flowing in the region. The city of Cambridge owns a piece of land that it uses as a “buffer” for the city-owned reservoir in the area. Algonquin needs to cut some of the trees on that land in order to get its equipment through for the meter and regulator station, which will be constructed on land owned by Algonquin. Enter several nutjobs who are trying to block work at the site.
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EQT Name Removed from Downtown Pittsburgh Building, HQ Remains

625 Liberty

All the way back in February 2020 BC (Before COVID), we told you that EQT Corporation, the largest natural gas producer in the country, was looking to lease most of its mammoth downtown Pittsburgh headquarters building at 625 Liberty Avenue (see EQT Subleasing Most of its Downtown Pittsburgh Office Building). The building has been known for years as EQT Plaza. No more. While we speculated in 2020 that the company would completely leave the building in 2024 at the end of its lease, EQT is going to keep a small presence in the building and retain it as “the headquarters” of the company (although almost nobody works there anymore).
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Companies Argue Over Who Can Supply NatGas to WV Hydrogen Plant

Hope Gas, West Virginia’s largest natural gas utility company, and Quantum Pleasants, which is working on a plan in Pleasants County, WV, to use natural gas to produce hydrogen for electricity generation at what is currently a coal-burning plant, are squabbling before the state Public Service Commission (PSC) over whether or not Quantum Pleasants has the right to buy its natural gas from a different vendor (with a different pipeline).
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Freeport LNG Returns to Full Production After Outage Since July 7

We need a scorecard to keep track of all the ups and downs at the problem-plagued Freeport LNG export facility. We don’t think it’s a stretch to say the plant, which is the second largest LNG export plant in the U.S., has been down as much as it has been up over the past two years of its short existence. Just last Thursday, Reuters reported full operations at the plant (all three “trains”) would not be fully online again until “early August” following Hurricane Beryl visiting the area (see Freeport LNG Full Restart Delayed Until August, Says Source). But just like that, Reuters is now reporting the facility is pulling in a full 2 Bcf/d of gas to liquefy and load.
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National Rig Count Up Again: U.S. Adds 3 @ 589, M-U Even @ 37

The U.S. national oil and gas rig regained more of its lost ground last week by adding three more rigs back to active status. The national combined Baker Hughes oil and gas rig count now stands at 589 rigs. The Marcellus/Utica remained even last week. Pennsylvania continued to operate 21 rigs. Ohio operated 11 active rigs (after adding a rig two weeks ago). West Virginia remained the same with five active rigs. The M-Uā€™s primary competitor, the Haynesville, remained static with 36 active rigs — one less than the M-U’s 37 rigs.
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