EQT $5.2B Deal to Buy Tug Hill Extended Additional Year to Close
Last September, EQT Corporation announced it is buying privately-owned Tug Hill Operating’s West Virginia shale assets for $5.2 billion (see Confirmed: EQT Buys Tug Hill’s THQ Appalachia for $5.2 Billion). The deal adds 90,000 acres and 800 MMcf/d (million cubic feet per day) of production to EQT’s existing, massive, portfolio. But then the Bidenistas at the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) got involved, slowing down the deal (see Bidenistas at FTC Probing EQT Deal to Buy Tug Hill’s WV Assets). Because of the FTC dragging its feet, EQT and Tug Hill recently renegotiated the timeline, adding a full year.
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Yesterday MDN brought you the news that the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PUC) held a hearing in December to explain new regulations coming from the PUC, based on directives from the federal Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA), to begin regulating previously unregulated natural gas gathering pipelines (see
Why would a major oil and gas driller decide to cede control of the future of its company to a group of international leftists hellbent on destroying fossil energy? The answer eludes us, but it has just happened with a second Marcellus/Utica driller: EOG Resources. Yesterday, EOG announced it has joined the UN’s Oil & Gas Methane Partnership 2.0 (OGMP 2.0). Support for OGMP 2.0 is growing in the natgas marketplace in the U.S. We previously told you that Cheniere Energy’s LNG export plants are seeking certification under OGMP 2.0 (see 
S&P Global Commodity Insights published an analysis article speculating on the overall level of natural gas production we can expect to see in the U.S. in 2023. According to S&P’s analysts, weaker prices for the NYMEX Henry Hub futures price expected this year, along with recent weakness in the internal rate of return (IRR) for companies, are combining to lower the amount of growth in natgas production we might otherwise have experienced. S&P isn’t saying we’ll go backward–with less production. It’s saying production won’t grow as much as it could have if not for these negative factors.
Finally! Richard “Dick” Glick is no longer a Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) commissioner. He is also no longer Chairman of this key agency that has the power to block new pipeline projects. We’ve complained about Glick, a former wind lobbyist, for years–pretty much since Donald Trump nominated him to serve at the behest of Chuck Schumer (see
Kentucky is joining a number of other states, including Texas, West Virginia, and Florida, in putting Big Banks (and Big Investment Firms) on notice that those companies are about to lose the business of the State of Kentucky. On Tuesday, State Treasurer Allison Ball released a list of 11 financial companies that are engaged in energy company boycotts–refusing to invest in, or loan money to, fossil energy companies. The list includes BlackRock, Citigroup, and JPMorgan Chase, among others.
NATIONAL: Chevron CEO defends record profits; Crude oil prices increased in 1H22, declined in 2H22; Things to watch in the House Republican rules package.