Northeast PA LNG Plant Lives! NFE Tells FERC Still Wants to Build
Last year in March and then again in May, New Fortress Energy (NFE) confirmed to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) that it plans to apply for updated permits to build an LNG export plant in landlocked northeastern Pennsylvania (see New Fortress Confirms Intent to Build Wyalusing LNG Export Plant). In June of last year was the last time we wrote about the Wyalusing (Bradford County), PA, project. We have GREAT news. In a pair of filings last week with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), NFE and its subsidiaries confirmed it still plans to build both the Wyalusing LNG export plant AND the docking facility in New Jersey along the Delaware River to load ships with the PA-produced LNG. NFE plans to truck the LNG from Wyalusing, PA, to Gibbstown, NJ. And that has antis up in arms.
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EOG Resources, one of the largest oil and gas drillers in the U.S. (with international operations in Trinidad and China), owns a huge 430,000+ acres of leases in the Ohio Utica. EOG calls its position the “Ohio Utica combo play” and now considers it one of the company’s “premium plays.” EOG concentrates on oil drilling in the Utica. As part of the company’s first quarter 2024 update, Keith Trasko, Senior VP for Exploration and Production at EOG, said Utica wells “compete with the best plays in America, very comparable to the Permian on a production per foot basis.” Wow! High praise indeed. The Utica is the new Permian…we like the sound of that!
Southwestern Energy, with major assets in the Marcellus/Utica and Louisiana Haynesville, issued its first quarter update last week. You may recall that Southwestern agreed earlier this year to a deal to be acquired by and merged into Chesapeake Energy (see
Two more tracts of Ohio public lands designated as “wildlife areas” have been nominated by shale companies to be drilled and fracked under (not on), which has the anti-fossil fuel group Save Ohio Parks up in arms. The tagline for Save Ohio Parks is “No fracking on public lands.” The thing is, there isn’t any fracking on public lands in Ohio. It’s UNDER, not ON. Well pads and equipment would be erected on PRIVATE land adjacent to the public land. There is no disturbance of any kind on top of Ohio’s public lands. The new parcels nominated include 84 acres in the Keen Wildlife Area in Washington Township (Harrison County). A second parcel of 30 acres has also been nominated for the Egypt Valley Wildlife Area in Flushing Township (Belmont County).
According to a new article by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, abandoned oil and gas wells can be found “everywhere” in Pennsylvania. An influx of new federal funding gives the state Dept. of Environmental Protection (DEP) new urgency in finding and plugging them. However, it is the thorny issue of who pays or should pay when the owner is known that caught our attention. In some cases, producers (and speculators) buy leases and land, knowing that new drilling (in particular shale drilling) may one day happen on the property, but the new owners didn’t sign up for the financial responsibility to plug old/existing wells on the property. Should they (instead of taxpayers) be on the hook to pay?
Have you noticed? The NYMEX price of natural gas has been on an upward trend over the past week or so. We’ve actually broken the $2 barrier, and it continues to climb. Which begs the question, why? There are typically a number of factors combined to drive the price. This time around, we think we can boil it down to a classic economics principle — there’s more demand and less supply. The demand is coming from the problem-plagued Freeport LNG facility, which is rockin’ and rollin’ once again. Lower supply is coming from fewer natgas drilling rigs in operation.
OTHER U.S. REGIONS: Mass. legislation seeks to phase out natural gas; ‘Gas shortage’ impacting some South Hadley residents; NATIONAL: Chevron CEO says natgas demand will be higher than expected; TC Energy preparing for natural gas demand surge; INTERNATIONAL: JP Morgan analysts look at next OPEC meeting; Global gas glut to be delayed by another year; China’s in talks for gas offtake, stake in Canada’s Cedar LNG; Shell sold millions of ‘phantom’ carbon credits.