| | | |

Upper Burrell Plans to Block Injection Wells with New Policy

Upper Burrell, PA

Upper Burrell (Westmoreland County, PA) town supervisors have historically been receptive (or at least tolerant) to the Marcellus Shale industry that has so blessed their town and Westmoreland County. But attitudes seemed to change last December, at least with respect to wastewater injection wells (see Upper Burrell Twp Makes Moves to Ban Wastewater Injection Wells). The town’s Board of Supervisors instructed the town solicitor to draft an ordinance with stricter rules for the use of abandoned wells in the township. At a board meeting on Wednesday, members of the community (Big Green shills?) lectured the supervisors that the proposed draft needs tightening to ensure absolutely no new injection wells are possible in the town. Read More “Upper Burrell Plans to Block Injection Wells with New Policy”

| |

Do Landowners Get Money for Lithium Extracted from Wastewater?

Lithium extracted from Marcellus shale wastewater (brine) has been in the news over the past week or so. Last week, we brought you the exciting news that a Boston-based company, Gradiant, is working on building a lithium production facility in an undisclosed PA location, which we were able to identify as Susquehanna County (see Integrated Lithium Production Plant Coming to PA Marcellus in 2026). Two days later we brought you the news that Vancouver-based Rain City Resources Inc. is already testing lithium-from-brine technology at a different facility in Susquehanna County (see Successful Lithium-from-Brine Pilot Test in Susquehanna County, PA). The news has sparked a flurry of inquiries to MDN asking this question: Will landowners receive compensation for wastewater sales that contain lithium? Read More “Do Landowners Get Money for Lithium Extracted from Wastewater?”

| | | |

Fight in SC Turns Nasty with One Pipeline Company Attacking Another

We hate to see internal fighting and bickering within the oil and gas industry. We (as an industry) have a hard enough time battling the crazies of the environmental left. Yet infighting has erupted over a plan to run a pipeline to a proposed gas-fired power plant in South Carolina. In February 2024, the South Carolina Public Service Commission approved a proposed project to build a 1,020-megawatt (MW) gas-fired power plant in the state’s Lowcountry, in Colleton County (see SC PSC Approves Gas-Fired Power Plant Proposed for Edisto River). The project is a 50/50 partnership between Dominion Energy (formerly South Carolina Electric & Gas) and Santee Cooper (South Carolina’s state-owned electric and water utility). The plan calls for Texas-based Kinder Morgan (KM) to build a pipeline to feed the plant. However, there are no details about that pipeline (so far). Another pipeline company, South Carolina-based Carolina Gas Transmission (CGT), wants to build it and called out Dominion and Santee Cooper in a full-page ad. Read More “Fight in SC Turns Nasty with One Pipeline Company Attacking Another”

| |

What is #1 “Renewable” Energy Source? Hint: It’s Not Wind or Solar

The number crunchers at the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) had some time on their hands with the upcoming July 4th holiday, so they researched and wrote a post examining how U.S. energy use has changed since 1776. As it happens, the post is quite interesting! It chronicles the rise of fossil energy and how fossil fuels have dominated the modern era (leading to the highest standard of living in human history). However, it was a section on so-called renewable energy sources that caught our attention. In particular, one “renewable” has been around since the beginning of our country. That same renewable energy source today produces more energy than either wind or solar. And no, it’s not hydro. The renewable we’re talking about is burning wood. Read More “What is #1 “Renewable” Energy Source? Hint: It’s Not Wind or Solar”

|

Methane-Sniffing Satellite Lost in Space, Goes Dark After 14 Months

We’re trying not to snicker and laugh out loud, but it’s hard. In May of last year, the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), a Big Green group dedicated to eliminating the use of fossil fuels, launched a methane-sniffing satellite called MethaneSAT (see EDF Gets Ready to Launch Satellite to Sniff Out Fugitive Methane). MethaneSAT uses algorithms from Google to estimate how much methane is leaking. In other words, the data collected is a guess and not real science. We don’t have to worry about any more wrong guesses. MethaneSAT has “gone dark” and quit communicating with Earth. It’s officially lost in space. Read More “Methane-Sniffing Satellite Lost in Space, Goes Dark After 14 Months”

|

United Nations Calls for Banning Free Speech re Fossil Fuel Energy

We’ve chronicled some of the antics and borderline violent behavior of the environmental left. We’ve also told you how some on the left seek to ban free speech and put you in jail if you support fossil fuels. The United Nations, in a new report, calls for criminalizing “fossil fuel disinformation” (i.e., expressing support for fossil fuels). It calls for prohibiting fossil fuel companies from lobbying or advertising (no free speech for them). It goes on to call for making the spread of “climate disinformation” a crime. That would mean locking up MDN’s Jim Willis. The report even calls for countries to force-brainwash citizens against fossil fuels—just call it what it really is, reeducation camps. Can anyone tell us why we should remain in the UN? We can’t think of a single good reason. Read More “United Nations Calls for Banning Free Speech re Fossil Fuel Energy”

MDN’s Energy Stories of Interest: Thu, Jul 3, 2025 [FREE ACCESS]

OTHER U.S. REGIONS: Texas oil regulator launches DOGE Task Force; Oil, gas activity contracted in Q2 on higher US steel tariffs, Dallas Fed survey shows; NATIONAL: The weather is hot, but not man-made; Decline of the great North American decarbonization charade; Four reasons why this 4th of July is better; Despite warnings, Biden’s energy department disbursed $42 billion in its final hours; INTERNATIONAL: Oil jumps on Vietnam trade deal; European Commission proposes 90 pct emissions cut by 2040. Read More “MDN’s Energy Stories of Interest: Thu, Jul 3, 2025 [FREE ACCESS]”