EIA May DPR: Shale Gas Production to Hit 5-Mo Low, Oil 6-Mo High
The latest monthly U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) Drilling Productivity Report (DPR) for May, issued Monday (below), shows EIA believes shale gas production across the seven major plays tracked in the monthly DPR for June will decrease production from the prior month of May. This is the eleventh month in a row that EIA has predicted shale gas production will decrease for the combined seven plays and (according to Reuters) will hit the lowest production level in five months. However, gas production won’t decrease everywhere. Gas-focused plays like the Marcellus/Utica and the Haynesville will see the most significant drop in production (a combined loss of 443 MMcf/d). In contrast, the oily Permian play will see a massive boost in the production of “associated” natural gas — the gas that comes out of the ground along with oil — up 143 MMcf/d. The Permian also adds another 18,000 barrels per day of oil production in June.
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ECA Marcellus Trust I, the royalty interest holder in some of the wells drilled and maintained by Greylock Energy in Greene County, PA, announced it would issue a 2.1-cents ($0.021) dividend to unitholders for 1Q24. The company paid 4.3 cents per unit in 1Q23, nothing in 2Q23, six-tenths of a penny ($0.006) in 3Q23, and 3.0 cents per unit in 4Q23. The company continues to hold back some profits ($90,000 in 1Q24) to build a cash reserve for “future known, anticipated or contingent expenses or liabilities.”
In the fall of 2021, President Biden signed into law the so-called Infrastructure bill, some $1.2 trillion in pork barrel spending, passed with the help of turncoat Republicans (see
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According to Energy in Depth, opposition to the Rockefeller-backed LNG export “pause” keeps pouring in from Republicans and Democrats alike. Last week, eight “moderate” (i.e., desperate) Democrat members of Congress sent a letter to President Biden requesting regular updates on the Dept. of Energy’s evaluation of LNG exports and more clarity on the timeline of the pause. The sycophantic Dems refused to condemn Biden’s overt action to harm American energy. However, they did “urge” him to “bring about a swift end to the LNG export permit pause” and to ensure “that any regulatory changes be incorporated in an open and transparent means.”
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