Ohio Utica Shale Dashboard Shows 73% of New Drilling Done by 2 Cos.
On May 24, Cleveland State University researchers quietly published the “Shale Investment Dashboard in Ohio Q1 and Q2 2021” (full copy below). The new report details shale-related investment in Ohio, looking at upstream, midstream, and downstream activities. The investment estimates are from January through June of 2021–the first half of last year. The report shows investment in the Ohio Utica continued to increase last year, during the height of the pandemic. It also shows just two companies drilled 73% of Ohio’s new shale wells and 69% of the money invested in drilling new shale wells in the Buckeye State in 1H21. Which two companies?
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In what is being called an “explosive” trading session yesterday, the price for the front-month NYMEX contract (July) spiked up 80 cents in a single day to close at $9.32/MMBtu–the highest level in over 13 years. The August NYMEX contract closed at one penny less, $9.31/MMBtu. The weather seems to be the main reason for the spike. Longer range forecasts for Texas and the Midcontinent region are for high heat in the coming weeks. The high heat will lead to running air conditioners that use electricity. Windmills in Texas are “faltering” and not expected to deliver their normal load, meaning natgas plants will need to make up the difference. Once again unreliable renewables prove they are not up to the task.
It’s time to remove three radicalized Democrat judges who have consistently (12 of 14 times) voted against Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) in appeals brought by Big Green groups. The three judges of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit (we call it the 4th Circus) are bigoted and prejudiced against natural gas pipeline projects. We’re talking about Judge Stephanie Thacker, appointed by Barack Hussein Obama; Judge James Wynn, appointed by Barack Hussein Obama; and Chief Judge Roger Gregory, appointed by William Jefferson Clinton. These three leftwing judges find the smallest, nitpicky things to use as an excuse to block the completion of the 94% completed, 303-mile MVP project. MVP has just filed a request with the 15 members of the 4th Circuit to appoint three new judges in their place.
Broadcasting its intent to expand aggressively in the LNG export market, Chesapeake Energy is advertising to hire a liquefied natural gas (LNG) advisor. The LinkedIn ad shows that so far 41 people have applied. The ad opens by saying the company is looking for “a lead for new business opportunities for Chesapeake for liquified natural gas (LNG) and provides guidance on LNG Marketing activities in order to optimize the company’s revenue.” And hey, good news: The job can be 100% remote!
In August 2018 DTE Energy broke ground on a new state-of-the-art natural gas-fired power plant in St. Clair County, Michigan (see
RBN Energy’s own Rusty Braziel (the R and the B in RBN) is back with another powerhouse post on the RBN blog site. This one is about the market for ethane. For those new to MDN, ethane is one of the primary NGLs (natural gas liquids) that comes out of the ground along with oil and natural gas. Propane and butane are a couple of other common NGLs produced in the Marcellus/Utica. Ethane is the raw material used to produce ethylene, and ethylene is turned into plastic pellets that are used to manufacture thousands of different products you use every day of your life. The ethane market is, according to Braziel, “in turmoil” right now. Ethane prices are up, almost double since January, and are at their highest level in 10 years. Ethane traditionally has been a waste product for many M-U drillers. Now it’s an important source of revenue.
MARCELLUS/UTICA REGION: Utica Shale graduates largest class; NATIONAL: Biden to waive tariffs for 24 months on solar panels hit by probe; Climate “scientist” goes wild and glues himself to bank; AEA launches digital advocacy campaign against a new national energy tax; 100 ways Biden and the Democrats have made it harder to produce oil & gas; INTERNATIONAL: Germany doesn’t want to be ‘too successful’ at replacing Russian natural gas.