EQT Adding 125-150 New Wells, 400 MMcf/d Pipe from PA to OH in ’26
EQT Corporation delivered its latest quarterly update yesterday for the fourth quarter of 2025 (and with a look at what’s coming in 2026). CEO Toby Rice opened the earnings call by emphasizing “2025 was another stellar year for EQT, one in which we were able to clearly demonstrate the power of our platform” and highlighted the company’s focus on operational excellence, financial strength, and scale. Rice stated, “Production consistently topped expectations throughout 2025, driven by compression project outperformance and robust well productivity.” Rice continued, “Winter Storm Fern created extremely challenging weather conditions over the past several weeks, but seamless coordination between our midstream, upstream, and gas marketing teams resulted in negligible impact to EQT’s production.” EQT production for 4Q25 was 609 Bcfe (billion cubic feet equivalent), or 6.62 Bcfe/d. Read More “EQT Adding 125-150 New Wells, 400 MMcf/d Pipe from PA to OH in ’26”

President Donald Trump’s proposal for a $33 billion, 9.2-gigawatt gas power plant in Ohio—funded by Japanese investment, including SoftBank—aims to address soaring energy demands from data centers (see
Today, we revisit a topic that (at first glance) is a bit complex: a federal EPA regulation called Subpart OOOOc (“Quad O”), which addresses methane emissions from existing sources. Under the Biden administration, Quad O was twisted and used in an attempt to force oil and gas drillers, especially small conventional drillers, out of business. The policy was set, and the individual states were instructed to bring their own regulations and policies into compliance. But then the Democrats lost the White House. No worries…the Dems running the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) eagerly developed onerous regs to comply with the Biden EPA’s Quad O standards. The DEP’s regs are ready to go and could be adopted at any time. However, the Trump EPA delayed implementation of Quad O until 2027 while it works to revise or scrap it.
Despite political rhetoric scapegoating data centers for rising electricity costs, EIA data reveals that electricity price hikes began long before the data center industry’s expansion. States with high concentrations of data centers, such as Virginia and Texas, maintain residential electric rates below the national average, while Vermont has the fewest facilities but significantly higher costs. An excellent article appearing on RealClearEnergy identifies systemic issues—including aging infrastructure and regulatory inertia—as the true drivers of rising bills. Rather than blaming data centers, the article argues for modernizing the grid and aggressively increasing energy production to meet growing demand. Technology can actually create a more efficient, lower-cost electrical system.
Natural gas markets are currently facing significant storage deficits for the first time in a year, following the severe disruptions caused by Winter Storm Fern. Record-breaking withdrawals, including a weekly high of 360 Bcf, have pushed inventories 130 Bcf *below* the five-year average due to spiked heating demand and production freeze-offs. This supply-demand imbalance triggered a 300% surge in Henry Hub prices, which peaked at nearly $14.00. However, as production recovers and forecasts predict warmer late-February temperatures, analysts expect market volatility to stabilize and cash prices to gradually converge with front-month contracts as supply concerns ease.
J.P. Morgan recently facilitated a $5 billion financing package for VoltaGrid, a U.S. energy company specializing in advanced natural gas and behind-the-meter microgrid solutions (think small gas-fired power generators). This funding, comprising $2 billion in senior secured notes and a $3 billion asset-based loan, supports VoltaGrid’s goal to deploy 4 gigawatts of power by 2028. These decentralized energy systems address surging electricity demands from AI and data centers by providing resilient, on-site generation that reduces grid strain. And yes, there is a connection to the Marcellus/Utica region.
Yeah, well, you knew this was coming. Last week, President Trump and EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin announced the “largest deregulatory action in American history” by officially revoking the Obama EPA’s 2009 “endangerment finding” (see
MARCELLUS/UTICA REGION: INR appoints Thomas Marchetti as VP of investor relations; Ohio school launches oil field safety training program; OTHER U.S. REGIONS: New England lawmakers weigh plug-in solar as Europe’s model spreads; NATIONAL: U.S. natural gas futures end lower in choppy trade; Why data centers don’t have to be the villain; USA renews threat to withdraw from IEA; Which USA oil major produced the most in 2025?; EPA begins rolling back Biden’s “good neighbor” rule; After years of buybacks, Big Oil is drilling again; Solar and wind aren’t real power sources, they’re intermittent fuel-savers; INTERNATIONAL: Crude surges as Iran risks grow; Amsterdam to enact ban on fossil fuel and meat advertising in public spaces; ‘Climate cult’ hurts Europe’s economy, US energy secretary tells AFP; Gavin Newsom and UK’s Ed Miliband aim to burn their nations on the altar of eco-lunacy.