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Ohio Utica 1Q25 Production – Top O&G Wells, Drillers, Counties

The Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) recently released production numbers for the first quarter of 2025. The top natural gas producer in the state, by far, was Ascent Resources, with 195,139,574 Mcf (or 195.14 Bcf) of production during the quarter, which works out to an average of 2.17 Bcf/d. Ascent’s production accounted for 40% of the state’s natural gas production. The top oil producer in the state, by far, was Encino Energy, with 5,360,199 barrels of oil during the quarter, which works out to an average of 59,557 barrels per day. Encino’s oil production was 49% (nearly half!) of Ohio’s entire oil production during 1Q25. Of course, Encino’s days as a standalone producer are numbered as EOG Resources is buying the company. Read More “Ohio Utica 1Q25 Production – Top O&G Wells, Drillers, Counties”

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Marcellus/Utica Set to Grow Thanks to LNG, Data Centers, Southeast

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It’s been no secret that natural gas production in the Marcellus/Utica has stalled over the past few years. Since 2021, the M-U has been rangebound in producing somewhere between 34 and 37 Bcf/d (see the chart). The main reason we haven’t expanded our production is the lack of transportation (pipelines) to move our molecules to the markets that can use them. However, the ceiling for M-U production appears to be shattering. New pipeline projects to move more of our molecules are one, but not the only, factor in what may be another growth spurt in M-U production. Another factor is a growing market adjacent to the M-U (the Southeastern U.S.) with extra volumes needed for utility companies to distribute to new customers. Read More “Marcellus/Utica Set to Grow Thanks to LNG, Data Centers, Southeast”

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Enviros Call for PA to Reject Amazon’s $20B Data Center Plan

This is funny, and sad. Yesterday, we brought you the news that Amazon has pledged to spend at least $20 billion to build multiple data centers in Pennsylvania (see Amazon Investing $20 Billion to Build AI Data Centers in Eastern PA). We opened our post with this statement (emphasis added): “Yesterday, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro took credit for brokering a deal that will see Amazon build at least three huge data centers (which Democrats typically dislike) in eastern Pennsylvania, investing $20 billion to do so.” Right on cue, the Better Path Coalition and No False Climate Solutions PA, two far-left, Democrat-controlled organizations, released a statement criticizing the deal and one of its own, Democrat Governor Josh Shapiro, claiming the announced data centers will continue to contribute to mythical man-made global warming. Read More “Enviros Call for PA to Reject Amazon’s $20B Data Center Plan”

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EIA’s June STEO Predicts NatGas Spot Price to Average $4 in ’25

The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) issued its latest monthly Short-Term Energy Outlook yesterday, the agency’s monthly best guess about where energy prices and production will go in the next 12 months. In this latest assessment, EIA once again dropped its estimates for the Henry Hub spot price for 2025. The agency expects the HH price to average $4.00 per million British thermal units (MMBtu) in 2025, $0.10 lower than last month’s forecast (and $0.30 less than the forecast from two months ago). However, EIA expects the annual average price in 2026 to be $4.90/MMBtu, which is $0.10 higher than last month’s forecast and $0.30 higher than the forecast from two months ago. An interesting dichotomy—that prices will trend lower this year but higher next year. Read More “EIA’s June STEO Predicts NatGas Spot Price to Average $4 in ’25”

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H&B Bank Survey Predicts NatGas Price $3.50-$3.75 Range Thru ’26

Banks remain confident in long-term energy fundamentals despite significant trade policy turbulence, according to the Spring 2025 Haynes Boone Energy Bank Price Deck Survey (full copy below). The survey, now in its 12th edition, is a leading source of information for energy lenders and producers, providing crucial details on commodity price expectations. Based on internal data from 28 banks, the latest survey indicates that while oil and gas prices have fluctuated in the short term, long-term forecasts remain consistent with past projections, suggesting that banks view recent economic changes as temporary. Banks expect natural gas prices to stay strong, in the $3.50-$3.75/MMBtu range through 2026, due to high LNG export demand and growing energy needs from artificial intelligence infrastructure. Read More “H&B Bank Survey Predicts NatGas Price $3.50-$3.75 Range Thru ’26”

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Morningstar Report Says Summer Heat, LNG Exports Will Tighten Gas

Here’s a third natural gas price prediction, from Morningstar DBRS, a top company that gives independent credit ratings and opinions for businesses, governments, banks, and financial projects worldwide. Earlier this week, Morningstar published a commentary/report called: “Summer Heat Likely to Add to High LNG Export Demand, Tightening the North American Gas Market” (full copy below). In the report, Morningstar analysts write that they expect the North American natural gas supply and demand balance to tighten from summer heat-driven peak electricity demand and expanding LNG exports, supporting higher bids for spot gas prices. Analysts believe the average price for natural gas will hit $3.50/MMBtu both in 2025 and in 2026. Read More “Morningstar Report Says Summer Heat, LNG Exports Will Tighten Gas”

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Maintenance at 2 LNG Export Plants Lowers U.S. Feedgas Demand

U.S. LNG feedgas demand slipped last week to its lowest level since mid-December due to ongoing maintenance at the Sabine Pass and Cameron LNG export facilities along the Gulf Coast. Two trains were offline at Sabine Pass, and one train was offline at Cameron, resulting in feedgas demand of 13.28 Bcf/d for the week (down 7% from the previous week). In something of a miracle, Freeport LNG was online with all trains producing! Read More “Maintenance at 2 LNG Export Plants Lowers U.S. Feedgas Demand”

MDN’s Energy Stories of Interest: Wed, Jun 11, 2025 [FREE ACCESS]

OTHER U.S. REGIONS: NJ wind project that Trump dubbed a disaster is canceled; Developers propose more than 100 new gas power plants in Texas; NATIONAL: The shale macro and evolving production dynamics; DOE announces new supercomputer powered by Dell, NVIDIA; Produced water – one man’s garbage is another man’s gold; Granholm says Democrats must ‘do a better job’ selling clean energy; Trump energy adviser slams renewables, says focus is on fossil fuels; AEA urges Congress to act on $9.4 billion rescission package; INTERNATIONAL: EU proposes Nord Stream ban, lower oil cap to hit Russia; Oil edges lower as traders await result of US-China trade talks; Germany embraces LNG as it weans itself off Russian gas; Soviet-era gas crater ‘Door to Hell’ is finally dying down after 50 years of burning. Read More “MDN’s Energy Stories of Interest: Wed, Jun 11, 2025 [FREE ACCESS]”