Cabot 1Q21 Financials Stellar; CEO “Hacked Off” re Stock Price
Cabot Oil & Gas is and has been (for years) one of the premier drillers in the Marcellus Shale. Cabot concentrates their drilling in one location in northeastern Pennsylvania: Susquehanna County. Cabot has lower costs to drill than almost any other driller. They also turn a profit year after year, unlike many other drillers. During 1Q21 Cabot made $126 million in net income, versus $54 million in 1Q20. Yet the company’s stock price continues to languish, something that has CEO Dan Dinges “hacked off.”
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Southwestern Energy, a pure-play Marcellus/Utica driller with 786,000 net acres and operations in all three M-U states (concentrates on drilling in WV and northeastern PA) issued its first-quarter 2021 update last Friday. The company made $80 million in net income during 1Q21, versus losing $1.5 billion in 1Q20. Southwestern produced 3 billion cubic feet equivalent per day (Bcfe/d) during 1Q21, of which 2.4 Bcf/d was gas and the rest (103,000 barrels per day) was liquids.
Here’s an interesting lawsuit in Pennsylvania with potential ramifications for both landowners and drillers. In 2013 a landowner in Warren County, PA filed a lawsuit against Mitch-Well Energy claiming the company had abandoned its leases (and its rights) by not producing marketable quantities of natural gas from several conventional wells. The company had also not paid a required annual fee in lieu of production royalties. For 18 years! Several lower courts ruled in favor of the landowner. Last week the PA “Supreme” Court (we use that term loosely) reversed the lower court rulings and said in this case, not producing gas for 18 years and not making any payments to the landowners during that time is not (yet) enough to claim the energy company has abandoned its lease rights.
The experts at RBN Energy continue their series of blog posts about pipelines that flow Marcellus/Utica gas to other regions with a look at two pipelines that connect directly to Canada: Tennessee Gas Pipeline and Empire Pipeline. In this post we learn that natural gas flows from the M-U over this past weekend hit a new record high of 17.3 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d). We also learn M-U pipelines flowed an average of 16.7 Bcf/d in April–an all-time high for any month! The problem is we’re now maxed out and need more pipelines.
If the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) thinks it is going to change the rules for how it approves existing, already-filed applications for pipelines, it needs to think again. That’s according to a group of both Republican and Democrat U.S. Senators who sent a warning letter to FERC last week. The Senators say FERC has no right to change the rules part of the way through the game, which is exactly what FERC, under Chairman Richard “Dick” Glick, is threatening to do.
Global warming nutters have convinced themselves that in order to prevent a global catastrophe, all fossil fuels (including natural gas) must be abandoned and never used again. It’s a lunatic notion, demonstrably so. The thinking is that hydrogen will replace natural gas and be burned in its place. The nutters further demand hydrogen be produced by “green” methods, namely using electricity from solar and wind to split water into hydrogen and oxygen. The problem is, it’s EXPENSIVE. Prohibitively so. There’s a better solution: Split the hydrogen out of methane (natural gas).
MARCELLUS/UTICA REGION: A project to plug 1,600 wells is almost ready to launch, and has been for six years; OTHER U.S. REGIONS: Texas upstream oil and natural gas sector continues to add jobs; NATIONAL: Federal bullying threatens small oil and gas producers; Let’s work for science with integrity: Steve Koonin’s new book “Unsettled”; INTERNATIONAL: China’s debt-trap diplomacy.