Heartbreak: Weatherford, ECA Lay Off Combined 175 Jobs in WV
A pair of companies operating in the Marcellus Shale announced late last week that they are laying off a collective 175 jobs in West Virginia between them . Energy Corporation of America (ECA), which ranked 20th for most production in the Marcellus Shale in 2015 according to NGI’s 2016 Shale & Resource Plays Factbook, announced last Thursday they will lay off 51 positions (28 of them in WV). Oilfield services company Weatherford International has a branch office in Buckhannon, WV. Weatherford announced last week that it will lay of 147 positions in the Buckhannon office by the end of August. The announcement hit the local community hard…
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FirstEnergy is one of the nation’s largest investor-owned electric systems, serving customers in Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, West Virginia, Maryland and New York. FirstEnergy loves the shale industry. In April, MDN reported that FirstEnergy’s construction crews had begun erecting steel poles for a new 18-mile high voltage power line that will run through Harrison and Doddridge counties in WV (see
A year ago MDN told you about a new gathering pipeline project in Butler County, PA. Rex Energy contracted with Stonehenge Energy Resources to build a gathering system in Butler County (see
The U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania has sided with landowners in a dispute with Shell’s shale drilling arm, called SWEPI (Shell Western Exploration Production Inc.). SWEPI signed a lease with two landowners who own a collective 1,036 acres in Lycoming County. SWEPI promised a $4,000 per acre signing bonus, but a few months after signing SWEPI decided they didn’t want the acreage after all and tried to cancel the lease and the bonus payment. The judge ordered SWEPI to pay $2,072,000 to each of the two landowner families…

Some interesting Marcellus-related items were included in the recently adopted Pennsylvania state budget that have largely flown under the radar. There are also a few things that weren’t in the budget bill–previously intended to be part of it–that didn’t survive the process. At the top of the list is lack of a severance tax. But right behind that (for us) is that a gross receipts tax on natural gas use, which we thought would be part of the final deal, was not. As MDN previously reported, a gross receipts tax taxes end users of natural gas, in essence targeting low-income households (see 
In what appears to be a new standard operating procedure, Eclipse Resources yesterday released their second quarter 2016 operating update, delaying the release of the “bad news” (i.e. financial update) until a later date. A few days Antero Resources and Gulfport both did the same thing. Drillers like to brag about increasing production, but hate to talk about how much money (at least on paper) they’re losing. We understand. Eclipse is a Marcellus/Utica pure play driller headquartered in State College, PA that drills mostly in Ohio. What do we learn? Eclipse’s production went up 19% in 2Q16 over 2Q15. Previously the company had stopped all drilling, but they resumed again in 2Q16 (a good sign) and ended up drilling and completing 2 Utica wells during the quarter. Here’s the operational (not financial) update from Eclipse for 2Q16…
The “best of the rest” – stories that caught MDN’s eye that you may be interested in reading. In today’s lineup: Drilling on upswing nationwide, but OH permitting down; PA rig count up for first time in months; antis protest pipeline in Mass.; how a single natgas-fired electric plant in VA is saving consumers billions; ND sues EPA over new methane rule; Chesapeake & Tom Ward sued for alleged collusion; oil & gas deals coming back; and more!