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Marcellus Drilling News
  • CNG/LNG | Exporting | Industrywide Issues | Research

    EIA Predicts More M-U Molecules Will Feed Gulf Coast LNG Exports

    July 30, 2025July 30, 2025

    In the U.S. Energy Information Administration’s (EIA) Today in Energy online publication, the EIA lays out the case that more Marcellus/Utica molecules will help supply Gulf Coast LNG export facilities in the future. The EIA says the economics of producing more gas in the Appalachian Basin are more favorable. It’s just cheaper to produce natural gas in the M-U. The EIA’s models show that natural gas is and will transit through the Eastern Midwest region on the way to the Gulf Coast. Pipelines will carry our molecules over (to the Midwest) and then down (to the Gulf Coast). It’s a beautiful thing! Read More “EIA Predicts More M-U Molecules Will Feed Gulf Coast LNG Exports”

  • Industrywide Issues | Regulation

    EPA Officially Proposes to Overturn Obama “Endangerment Finding”

    July 30, 2025July 30, 2025

    In 2009, during the Obamadroid administration, the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) adopted a major regulatory rule called the “endangerment finding.” The finding concluded that six so-called greenhouse gases — carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O), hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), perfluorocarbons (PFCs), and sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) — constitute an endangerment to public health and welfare due to their contribution to global warming (which is a complete hoax). The finding gave the EPA the power to regulate those gases under the Clean Air Act. Yesterday, EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin released a proposal to rescind the 2009 endangerment finding, which has been used to justify over $1 trillion in regulations, including President Autopen’s electric vehicle (EV) mandate. Read More “EPA Officially Proposes to Overturn Obama “Endangerment Finding””

  • AI | Anti-Drilling/Fossil Fuel | Industrywide Issues | Pennsylvania | Regulation | Statewide PA

    PA Antis Hate Fossil Fuels, Shale Drilling, and Now…Data Centers

    July 30, 2025July 30, 2025

    “The haters gonna hate, hate, hate, hate, hate…shake it off, shake it off.” – Taylor Swift

    The environmental left in Pennsylvania once again shows its true colors as anti-intellectual and anti-progress. Two weeks ago, President Trump and PA U.S. Senator Dave McCormick announced an amazing $92 billion of private (no taxpayer funding) investment in the Keystone State, mainly in the data center sector (see Pittsburgh Energy Event Truly Mind-Blowing, $92B+ Investments for PA). It’s astonishing. It’s astounding. It’s almost unbelievable! Yet, it’s true and it’s happening. The investment will bring with it tens of thousands of jobs and an infusion of money into local and regional economies that will be staggering. Yet a bunch of ninny nannies on the environmental left don’t want it. They reject it. All of it. And (poor things), they have no way to officially object unless the state Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) gives them a way. Read More “PA Antis Hate Fossil Fuels, Shale Drilling, and Now…Data Centers”

  • Electrical Generation | Industrywide Issues

    LG&E and KU Still Trying to Build 2nd Gas-Fired Power Plant

    July 30, 2025July 30, 2025

    In December 2022, Louisville Gas and Electric Company (LG&E) and Kentucky Utilities Company (KU), both subsidiaries of PPL Corporation, announced a plan to replace 1,500 megawatts of aging coal-fired generation (nearly one-third of Kentucky’s coal fleet) with two 645-MW natural gas combined-cycle units along with several unreliable, intermittent solar projects (see PPL Replacing Coal-Fired Power Plants with NatGas in Louisville, KY). The Kentucky Public Service Commission (PSC) issued its decision on the request in November 2023 (see Kentucky PSC Votes to Retire 2 Coal Plants, Replace w/Gas-Fired). LG&E/KU got some, but nowhere near all of what they requested. It appears that LG&E/KU is making a new attempt at convincing the PSC to reconsider those parts of the plan it denied in 2023—namely, permission to build a second gas-fired power plant, permission to build a selective catalytic reduction facility to lower NOx emissions, and extending the life of a currently-operating coal-fired plant. Read More “LG&E and KU Still Trying to Build 2nd Gas-Fired Power Plant”

  • Industrywide Issues | Jobs

    Energy Industry to Add 32M Jobs Next 10 Years – Find a Career Now

    July 30, 2025July 30, 2025

    As energy demand grows and infrastructure evolves, the U.S. energy industry expects to add more than 32 million jobs over the next decade. The Center for Energy Workforce Development (CEWD) is leading the effort to fuel the talent pipeline, working alongside industry workforce experts to encourage individuals across all communities to explore dynamic, well-paying, and purpose-driven careers. Careers span the full spectrum of the industry—from electricians, lineworkers, and pipefitters to cybersecurity analysts, IT specialists, and customer service professionals. And don’t forget roughnecks and truck drivers! CEWD has launched a new dedicated website to help people explore career options and (yes), even find a job in the energy sector. Read More “Energy Industry to Add 32M Jobs Next 10 Years – Find a Career Now”

  • Industrywide Issues | Research

    Dept. of Energy Releases Climate Science Report Based in Realism

    July 30, 2025July 30, 2025

    The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) yesterday released a new report, “A Critical Review of Impacts of Greenhouse Gas Emissions on the U.S. Climate” (full copy below), evaluating existing peer-reviewed literature and government data on climate impacts of Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Emissions and providing a critical assessment of the conventional narrative on climate change. The report was developed by the 2025 Climate Working Group, a group of five independent scientists assembled by Energy Secretary Chris Wright with diverse expertise in physical science, economics, climate science, and academic research. Among the key findings, the report concludes that CO2-induced warming appears to be less damaging economically than commonly believed, and that aggressive mitigation strategies may be misdirected. Additionally, the report finds that U.S. policy actions are expected to have undetectably small direct impacts on the global climate, and any effects will emerge only with long delays. Read More “Dept. of Energy Releases Climate Science Report Based in Realism”

  • Industrywide Issues | Regulation

    Bipartisan SPEED Act for Permitting Reform Introduced in Congress

    July 30, 2025July 30, 2025

    Permitting reform—shortening the amount of time and eliminating some of the onerous regulations that stand in the way of permitting new energy projects—has been a hot topic for at least the last three years, if not longer. Before leaving the Senate last year, West Virginia’s then-Senator, Joe Manchin, tried to get a bill passed to address permitting reform (see Barrasso, Manchin Release Bipartisan Energy Permitting Reform Bill). It never advanced. However, it’s baaaaaack! This time, a permitting reform bill has been introduced in the House. And once again, it’s bipartisan. Read More “Bipartisan SPEED Act for Permitting Reform Introduced in Congress”

  • Best of the Rest

    MDN’s Energy Stories of Interest: Wed, Jul 30, 2025 [FREE ACCESS]

    July 30, 2025July 30, 2025

    OTHER U.S. REGIONS: Spire to acquire Tennessee Piedmont Natural Gas business from Duke Energy; Hyperscale data subsidiary agreement with local utility for Michigan data center; NATIONAL: Baker Hughes to acquire Chart Industries; Trump’s AI executive order sets the stage for trillion-dollar investment; U.S. natural gas futures recover ground; North American LNG exports poised to set a record; Less than 400 EV charging ports built under $7.5 billion U.S. infrastructure program; INTERNATIONAL: Crude futures soar; OPEC+ oil gambit looking a little less costly, for now; Rigzone holds exclusive AI Q&A with BP; Shell-led LNG Canada faces problems as it ramps up production; FLNG capacity to jump. Read More “MDN’s Energy Stories of Interest: Wed, Jul 30, 2025 [FREE ACCESS]”

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Most Recent Articles

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  • Duke Energy’s Large-Scale Powergen Expansion Adding 14 GW by 2031
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  • AlphaGen & ArcLight Close on Buying DC-Area Gas-Fired Power Plant

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