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Big Midstream Companies Eye Data Center/AI Market for New Pipes

What had been a regular stream of talk about providing power to data centers and artificial intelligence (AI) has become a torrent. There is a clear connection between data centers and the natural gas industry. This most recent round of quarterly financial updates by the biggest of the big pipeline companies (all of which have a huge presence in the Marcellus/Utica) reveals a new opportunity: building natgas pipelines directly to data centers. Why? Because increasingly those data centers are considering making their own power.
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Shell Execs Admit Rocky Start for PA Cracker, Things are Improving

The mighty Shell ethane cracker plant in Monaca (Beaver County), PA, has a new person in charge: Emma Lewis, senior vice president of U.S. chemicals and products at Shell. We told you Lewis had replaced Hilary Mercer back in January (see Shell PA Cracker’s First Birthday – One Unit Still Not Online). Lewis splits her time between the Monaca cracker and four other sites on the Gulf Coast. According to a recent tour at the plant, Lewis said, “Let me start by saying I think we didn’t have the most smooth startup. There has been more disruption to the community than I think you would typically expect during normal operations.”
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Anti Lawyer Will Get to Question Chevron Execs in Pa. PFAS Case

A Washington County, PA, man and his anti-fossil fuel lawyer have won the right to force Chevron executives to testify in court in a case where the man accuses Chevron of using PFAS (“forever chemicals”) in fracking fluids in 2011-2012 near his home. He alleges the chemicals spread to his water well and damaged his health and the health of family members who drank and used the “contaminated” water.
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PA Supreme Court Lib Dems Collecting Briefs on RGGI Carbon Tax

In July, MDN told you about a disappointing (but not surprising) decision from the Democrat leftists on the Pennsylvania Supreme Court (see PA Supreme Court Allows Big Green $$ in RGGI Carbon Tax Lawsuit). The so-called Supremes ruled in favor of allowing three well-financed Big Green groups, including the Sierra Club, PennFuture, and Clean Air Council, to join a lawsuit attempting to force PA to accept the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI), an obscene carbon tax on coal- and gas-fired plants. With Big Green’s money and attorneys now supporting the state Dept. of Environmental Protection (DEP) in its quest to ram through RGGI, it’s time for the Supremes to solicit briefs in the case.
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PA DEP Smears Conventional Drillers Regarding Abandoned Well Issue

The vast majority (up to 99%) of Pennsylvania’s abandoned conventional wells are “orphans,” or wells without an identifiable, documented owner whom the state can hold liable for cleanup. Orphan wells date back to the Civil War in some cases. Even with “newer” wells, the problem has been poor recordkeeping by the PA Dept. of Environmental Protection (see Plugging PA’s Abandoned & Orphaned Wells is a Hot Mess). Writing in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Elizabeth Stelle, director of policy analysis of the Commonwealth Foundation, makes a strong case that the DEP continues to be the major problem in plugging old wells. Stelle says the DEP should partner with conventional drillers rather than misrepresent them and allow bad-faith actors to smear them.
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National Rig Count Up Again: U.S. Adds 2 @ 588, M-U Even @ 37

The Baker Hughes U.S. rig count has gone up three out of the last four weeks, including last week, when it went up by two to 588. However, it’s still down 41 from the 629 it hit earlier this year in March, so we don’t get overly excited about reading that it went up again last week. It’s still below 600, an important psychological level. The Marcellus/Utica stayed even last week with 36 active rigs. However, one rig moved. Pennsylvania gained a rig and now operates 21 active rigs. Ohio lost a rig and now operates 10 active rigs. West Virginia remained the same with five active rigs. The M-U’s primary competitor, the Haynesville, was down two rigs and now operates 32 rigs. The gap between the M-U and Haynesville grows!
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Other Stories of Interest: Mon, Aug 12, 2024

MARCELLUS/UTICA REGION: Proposed Newton Twp. solar farm draws resident opposition; OTHER U.S. REGIONS: Vermonters still don’t know how much a clean heat standard would cost; Negative natgas prices get more common in Texas; NATIONAL: EIA reveals latest world oil consumption forecast; America must unburden itself from Harris’s climate agenda; INTERNATIONAL: Another LNG tanker seen docking at Russian terminal sanctioned by US; European gas trades near 2024 high, luring imports of LNG.
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Heads Up on Changes to the MDN Site

As I previously emailed to let you know, some major behind-the-scenes changes are taking place for the MDN website. Last week, we changed the web host, which somehow inadvertently affected some people who had issues logging in and staying logged in. Today, we have changed the membership system, so a few of the links at the top will look different. If you are not logged in, you will see a Login button along the top right of the site (for the computer version). If you are logged in, you will see an Account button where you can manage the details of your MDN account.

This post is to alert you that things have changed, and you may be required to log in again (sorry about that). The benefit is that it should be MUCH easier to reset a password and login than in the past. However, there will be bumps along the way. There always are! If you have an issue, can’t log in, etc., please send me an email (jim@marcellusdrilling.com) with the details, including how you are accessing–computer, tablet, phone–and which operating system you are using (Windows, Mac, Android, iPhone, etc.). I will work as fast as possible to get the issued resolved for you.

At the end of this process, the MDN website will be easier to access and use. A big THANK YOU for your patience as we get there.

Jim Willis – MDN Editor