Baker Hughes U.S. Rig Count Down 1 @ 539; M-U Unchanged @ 36
Last week, the Baker Hughes U.S. rig count continued its downward trend, losing another rig to end at 539 active rigs nationwide. The count has been down 14 of the last 15 weeks, with the only slight increase happening a month ago. The Marcellus/Utica count remained the same (after gaining one rig three weeks ago) at a combined 36 active rigs. PA is running 18 active rigs. OH is running 11 rigs. And WV is operating 7 rigs. There were 24 rigs targeting the Marcellus and 12 rigs targeting the Utica last week. Read More “Baker Hughes U.S. Rig Count Down 1 @ 539; M-U Unchanged @ 36”

EOG Resources, one of the largest oil and gas drillers in the U.S. (with international operations in several other countries) announced at the end of May it had made a deal to buy Encino Energy and Encino’s massive Ohio Utica Shale assets for $5.6 billion (see
George Soros-backed Big Green groups are not happy with New York Governor Kathy Hochul and her concession to Donald Trump to allow new pipeline projects to proceed in the state (see
We have some disturbing news to share, and not a lot of details (yet). Executive Order 1996-1 in Pennsylvania requires all agencies under the jurisdiction of the Governor to submit for publication (twice a year) an agenda of regulations under development or consideration. The agendas are compiled to provide members of the regulated community and the general public with advanced notice of regulatory activity. The Josh Shapiro administration published such a semi-annual list over the weekend in the Pennsylvania Bulletin. The Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) includes an item in its list of proposed new regulations that “proposes to establish an annual fee for unconventional operations.”
According to an article on the Fortune magazine website, “AI’s endless thirst for power is driving a natural gas boom in Appalachia—and industry stocks are booming along with it.” It looks like the roles are reversing. For all of oil and gas history, oil has been the belle of the ball, the more sought-after hydrocarbon. A change is happening, at least in places like the Marcellus/Utica, where natural gas is the more sought-after commodity. And because of that, the stock price for companies that focus on gas drilling is soaring. The market capitalization (stock value times the number of outstanding shares) for M-U companies has soared 25% to 75% over the past 12 months. Wow!
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
The two U.S. companies that export ethane, Energy Transfer and Enterprise Products Partners, are both saying that the Trump administration’s temporary block on shipping ethane to China in June gave our export industry a black eye, and China is much less likely to contract for more of our ethane shipments. (Cue the violins.) However, when you consider that China buys half (50%) of our ethane exports, and that ethane exports represent a good chunk of revenue for both companies (both with operations in the Marcellus/Utica), it’s not nothing.
OTHER U.S. REGIONS: How Phil Murphy caused New Jersey electricity prices to soar; Judge shuts down Charleston climate case, warns of “boundless” liability; Gavin Newsom flinches as California’s war against oil produces a crisis; NATIONAL: U.S. natural gas futures settle under $3; As electric bills rise, evidence mounts that data centers share blame; EPA cancels $7 billion Biden-era grant program to boost solar energy; On the CO2 fertilization effect (real science for EPA); INTERNATIONAL: Oil holds steady as traders assess possible Ukraine war truce; China defends buying Russian oil; Environment groups are too white and middle class, says green boss.