EQT CEO Toby Rice Pulls Back the Curtain on Tug Hill $5.2B Deal
Yesterday MDN brought you the news that EQT Corporation is buying the West Virginia assets of Tug Hill Operating–the company’s THQ Appalachia operation–for $5.2 billion (see Confirmed: EQT Buys Tug Hill’s THQ Appalachia for $5.2 Billion). The deal adds roughly 90,000 leased acres (mainly in Marshall and Wetzel counties) to EQT’s massive existing footprint. It also adds an extra 800 million cubic feet per day (MMcf/d) of production to EQT’s current 5.5 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d). EQT CEO Toby Rice went on the record with the Pittsburgh Business Times to share his reasoning and thoughts behind the Tug Hill acquisition. Rice pulled back the curtain, giving a behind-the-scenes look at how deals like this come together. One of the big motivations for Rice is that he loves loves loves Marshall County, WV.
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Spanish-owed Repsol owns 214,000 net acres of leases in the Marcellus Shale, primarily located in northeastern Pennsylvania in Bradford, Susquehanna, and Tioga counties. However, the company’s upstream (drilling) operations extend far beyond the Marcellus–to other plays and even to other countries. EIG, a leading institutional investor in the global energy and infrastructure sectors, yesterday announced that it has entered into a deal with Repsol to acquire a 25% stake in Repsol’s upstream operations. EIG will pay Repsol $4.8 billion for the privilege. And what will Repsol do with $4.8 billion in cash?
We will continue to update MDN readers throughout the month of September as U.S. Senator Joe Manchin’s huge gamble of trading away the future of the country to finish the Mountain Valley Pipeline plays out. We spotted a story that quotes powerful Democrat members of the U.S. House of Representatives saying they have no allegiance to a deal made in the Senate–even though Speaker Nancy Pelosi promised support. A radical organization called Earthjustice (an adjunct of the Democrat Party) will hold a rally in the D.C. swamp today to oppose Manchin’s “save MVP” bill. You can expect a fierce battle against Manchin’s plan. Even if he wins (we hope he does) and MVP gets done, Manchin still traded away our country’s future to get it done. It’s not a good bargain, in our humble opinion.
The Bidenistas are at it again. The radicals that now occupy the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) have denied a request by Cheniere Energy (THE largest LNG exporter) to exempt compressor turbines at its Sabine Pass and Corpus Christi facilities from an obscure but onerous new regulation cooked up by the left. Cheniere currently exports 56% of all exported U.S. LNG. The EPA decision means Cheniere and other LNG exporters with large turbines will have to scale back exports to comply with this new reg–which is the intention. Bottom line: Biden is now screwing Europe as our exports will decrease at the very time Europe needs them the most. Go Joe!
Once a month, the analysts at the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) grab the official Henry Hub pricing dart board and play a quick game to determine what price they will predict for the average Henry Hub spot price for natural gas for the rest of this year, and an average price for all of next year. Last month the Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO) prediction for Henry Hub natural gas in 2H22 was $7.54 per MMBtu, and for all of next year $5.10, due to an increase in production (see
The U.S. natural gas NYMEX futures price for the “front month” October contract lost another 3.8% on Tuesday, hitting a four-week low, closing at $7.84/MMBtu. The NYMEX price is down over 13% over the past week. However, gas storage inventories are 11% below their five-year average. So what gives? Why is the price crashing, yet inventories (supplies) are low? It’s back to economics 101–supply and demand. The overall supply (production) of natural gas has gone much higher, according to recent EIA reports. Because of cooler temps (less demand for natgas at power plants), there is less demand overall. More supply with less demand equals lower prices.
Perhaps it’s not polite to say so out loud, but anyone who says New England needs to end its reliance on natural gas used to produce electricity, with winter about to begin and unreliable renewables not capable of making up the shortfall, is a lunatic. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) is holding a forum today in Burlington, Vermont, to discuss New England’s electric grid. ISO-New England, the region’s grid operator, will argue that natural gas supplies and grid reliability go hand-in-hand. A group of lunatics, including the Northeast Clean Energy Council, will argue that natgas should be cut off, forcing the region to adopt other sources of electricity. To which we say, why don’t they go first? The lunatics advocating to cut off natgas should unhook themselves from the electric grid in the dead of winter and see how that works out for them. Show us how it’s done.
MARCELLUS/UTICA REGION: Higher natural gas prices due to lack of infrastructure, Williams CEO says; Tim Ryan backing Manchin plan for expediting energy permits; OTHER U.S. REGIONS: ECONNECT picked as partner for New Fortress Energy’s FLNG projects; Top shale executive says U.S. oil output gains to disappoint; NATIONAL: Baker Hughes simplifies organization to enhance profitability; As natural gas prices jump, shale oil firms get gassy; INTERNATIONAL: Oil plunges to six month low amid demand concerns; Global scramble for LNG tankers likely to boost gas prices further.