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Marcellus Drilling News
  • Berkshire Hathaway | Energy Services | Industrywide Issues | LDCs | Litigation | Marion County | Pipelines | West Virginia

    Who’s to Blame for Dirty NatGas that Ruined WV University Boilers?

    July 30, 2024July 30, 2024

    This is a case of everybody pointing at somebody else. Natural gas with contaminants (dirty gas) flowed through pipelines to Fairmont State University (in Marion County, WV), which “significantly damaged boilers, gas lines, valved and regulators and other structures and equipment on the college campus” in September 2021. The university sued the local utility company providing the gas, Hope Gas. In return, Hope said that *if* the gas was not clean, it was not their fault. They got the gas from Eastern Gas Transmission and Storage (EGTS), formerly owned by Dominion Energy but now owned by Berkshire Hathaway Energy.
    Read More “Who’s to Blame for Dirty NatGas that Ruined WV University Boilers?”

  • Anti-Drilling/Fossil Fuel | Industrywide Issues | Pipelines | Regulation

    Baltimore Antis Protest Fossil Fuels Wearing Costumes Made from O&G

    July 30, 2024July 30, 2024

    You really can’t make this stuff up. A big picture is splashed across the pages of the Baltimore Sun website showing anti-fossil fuel nutters protesting “burning oil and gas indoors” (i.e., protesting the continued use of fossil fuels in stoves and furnaces). They were there to lobby the state Public Service Commission to disallow spending on new natural gas pipelines of any kind (local delivery, statewide transportation, etc.). Two of the protesters were dressed up as characters from The Flintstones. Both costumes were made from plastics — from oil and gas. That is, they were there protesting fossil fuels and WERE TOO STUPID to know they were wearing fossil fuels! Hilarious!!
    Read More “Baltimore Antis Protest Fossil Fuels Wearing Costumes Made from O&G”

  • Electrical Generation | Industrywide Issues

    Oglethorpe Investing $2.3B in New Gas-Fired Power Plants in Ga.

    July 30, 2024July 30, 2024

    Oglethorpe Power is investing more than $2.3 billion in two new natural gas-fired power plants to supply its 38 member cooperatives with an additional 1,400 megawatts of electricity to meet escalating demand across residential, commercial, and industrial sectors. We think some, perhaps most of the gas that will feed these two new plants will come from the Marcellus/Utica.
    Read More “Oglethorpe Investing $2.3B in New Gas-Fired Power Plants in Ga.”

  • CNG/LNG | Exporting | Industrywide Issues | Regulation

    Eagle LNG Seeks Extension to Build Jacksonville LNG Export Facility

    July 30, 2024July 30, 2024

    In September 2019, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) gave its blessing to Eagle LNG to build a small LNG export facility project at a site on the St. Johns River in Jacksonville, Florida (see FERC Grants Final Approval to Jacksonville, FL LNG Export Plant). According to our research, some of the gas that will feed it will come from the Marcellus/Utica. FERC’s blessing in September 2019 came with a deadline to get the facility built by September 2024. Eagle says it can’t meet the deadline and has asked FERC to extend it by another five years.
    Read More “Eagle LNG Seeks Extension to Build Jacksonville LNG Export Facility”

  • Anti-Drilling/Fossil Fuel | Electrical Generation | Industrywide Issues

    Irrational Antis Oppose Tiny Peaker Plant in Lansing, Mich.

    July 30, 2024August 9, 2024

    Lansing (Michigan) Board of Water and Light (BWL) is committed to the false premise that humans are catastrophically warming the planet. BWL has a clean energy plan that includes building solar, wind, and battery storage. However, solar and wind — even with battery storage — are intermittent and unreliable. That’s just a fact. In order to use MORE solar and wind, BWL needs to install a small (very small) natural gas-fired peaker plant that will turn on during periods of high demand, periods when solar and wind and battery backup can’t meet the demand. In other words, natgas will make using more renewable power possible. And still, antis who irrationally hate fossil fuels are protesting the peaker.
    Read More “Irrational Antis Oppose Tiny Peaker Plant in Lansing, Mich.”

  • Electrical Generation | Industrywide Issues | Research

    NatGas Demand in Powergen Grows, but Falls in Other Sectors

    July 30, 2024July 30, 2024

    As you may have noticed, a number of our posts today are stories about gas-fired power plants, which are vitally important (very big) customers for shale gas. According to an analysis by Reuters, natural gas use by power generators has expanded by around 3.5% a year over the past three years and is by far the largest single source of gas used in the U.S. However, natural gas consumption by the other major sectors, including industry, households, and commercial, is falling each year. The fall in usage by industry, etc., is more than the growth in powergen.
    Read More “NatGas Demand in Powergen Grows, but Falls in Other Sectors”

  • Commodity Price | Industrywide Issues

    NYMEX 101: What is The Natural Gas Futures Market?

    July 30, 2024July 30, 2024
    Performance of NYMEX Henry Hub Natural Gas Front Month Futures – Last 6 Mos.

    We often write about the price of natural gas because it is the price that drives everything else. But there is no one “price” for natural gas. Natural gas is sold along pipelines at many different locations. However, the NYMEX Henry Hub “front month” futures price is often used as a proxy for “the price” of natural gas. But what is a futures vs. spot price? And, what is the natural gas futures market? The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) helps us answer those questions in a recent post.
    Read More “NYMEX 101: What is The Natural Gas Futures Market?”

  • Best of the Rest

    Other Stories of Interest: Tue, Jul 30, 2024

    July 30, 2024July 30, 2024

    MARCELLUS/UTICA REGION: Governor Josh Shapiro “ain’t got sh*t done”; PA Utility regulators file complaint against natgas utility in fatal 2021 blast; NATIONAL: Natural gas continues to look at $2; Oil falls to 7-week low in on demand fears; Legal challenges to the SEC’s climate-related disclosures rule; Senate’s energy permitting reform gains broad industry support.
    Read More “Other Stories of Interest: Tue, Jul 30, 2024”

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