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M-U Molecules Head to Midwest with TETCO Throttling to Southeast

Earlier this month MDN brought you the sad news that Enbridge’s Texas Eastern Transmission (TETCO) pipeline is being flow-restricted by the Pipeline and Hazardous Material Safety Administration (PHMSA). Some 40% of the Marcellus/Utica molecules that flow through TETCO’s pipeline to destinations in the southeastern U.S. have disappeared and will stay that way until the end of September (see TETCO Pipe Throttling 40% of M-U Southbound Gas to Last All Summer). So do drillers just shut-in wells in the meantime? No! They find other markets–in this case in the Midwest.
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TETCO Pipe Throttling 40% of M-U Southbound Gas to Last All Summer

Traders are crediting news from Enbridge’s Texas Eastern Transmission (TETCO) pipeline that a recent flow restriction enforced by the Pipeline and Hazardous Material Safety Administration (PHMSA) will continue through the end of summer with helping to spike the Henry Hub futures price of natgas, up 4.5% on Friday to close at $3.30/MMBtu.
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Solution to TETCO (& Other) Southbound Pipes? New NE Refineries

As we report today, Enbridge’s Texas Eastern Transmission (TETCO) pipeline will not be back to full pressure flowing Marcellus/Utica gas south (some of it to the Gulf Coast) until the end of summer. Last week MDN brought you the news that TETCO was denied permission to continue operating its pipeline system (three pipelines, actually) at full pressure (see PHMSA Forces TETCO Pipe to Throttle 40% of M-U Southbound Gas). The reduced pressure of 20% means some 40% of the gas that was flowing from the Marcellus/Utica to the Gulf Coast via TETCO is now gone. Following that post, we received an email from one of our favorite industry observers, Garland Thompson, who proposes the ultimate solution to the problem of decreased flows on TETCO (and other pipelines) to the Gulf Coast.
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PHMSA Forces TETCO Pipe to Throttle 40% of M-U Southbound Gas

Enbridge’s Texas Eastern Transmission (TETCO) pipeline is a major conduit for Marcellus/Utica gas to flow southward, all the way to the Gulf Coast. It is a vital link south, especially since Equitrans’ Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) won’t be ready until the middle of 2022. Unfortunately the Pipeline and Hazardous Material Safety Administration (PHMSA) has denied TETCO approval to continue operating at its maximum allowable pressure, which means roughly 3/4 of a billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) of capacity is now gone for the foreseeable future. That equals some 40% of the pipeline’s southbound capacity.
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Weymouth Compressor Shuts Down Again (4th Time), Antis Pounce

Every time the Weymouth, Massachusetts compressor station experiences an unplanned shutdown, as it did for the fourth time last week, it gives anti-fossil fuel activists more ammunition to try and convince the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), Congress, and anyone else who will listen that this compressor should be permanently shuttered. Shutting it down now would have dire consequences for natural gas customers in places like Maine (see Maine PUC Says Shutting Weymouth, MA Compressor a Really Bad Idea), but antis don’t give a flip about humans. Will this latest shutdown give antis what they finally need to keep the station offline?
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Maine PUC Says Shutting Weymouth, MA Compressor a Really Bad Idea

In February the Democrat-controlled Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) said it would accept comments from the public on whether or not the Commission should willy nilly shut down a legally permitted, already built, and successfully running compressor station in Weymouth, Massachusetts (see FERC Considers Canceling Already Built/Running Weymouth Compressor). Nothing like changing the rules of the game after the game has already been played, right? The comments on whether to shutter the Weymouth compressor have come in fast and furious. Among those who don’t want the compressor shut down is the entire state of Maine.
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Weymouth Compressor Coming Back Online After Apr 6 Shutdown

On April 6 the Weymouth, Mass. compressor station experienced its third “unplanned release” of methane and was shut down (see 3rd “Unplanned Release” of NatGas at Weymouth Compressor Station). The builder and owner, Enbridge, has alerted the state it will likely vent more natural gas between tomorrow and May 5th as it restarts operations at the plant. We’re glad the plant is restarting again. We had our doubts.
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Enbridge Expanding Texas Eastern Pipeline Capacity in PA

click for larger version

Canadian Midstream giant Enbridge, which owns the Texas Eastern Transmission Company (TETCO) pipeline system in the U.S., is expanding capacity along TETCO in Pennsylvania and beyond in order to flow more Marcellus gas to customers including UGI Utilities and utility companies in New Jersey. We first spotted a story about expanding TETCO in PA to UGI by an extra 18 MMcf/d, pulled on that thread and discovered several active TETCO projects in the M-U region.
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FERC’s Glick Confirms He’s Willing to Shut Down Active Pipelines

Richard “I’ll do what I want to do” Glick

What do you do with someone (actually an entire political party) willing to overturn the legal and binding decisions made in a previous administration? They simply wave their magic leftist wand and undo a project, like a legally permitted compressor station that’s already built and running. Just shut it down. It’s Third World stuff. Yet that’s precisely what Richard “Dick” Glick, Chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), says he’s willing to do, justifying his actions by saying he’s somehow “protecting the public.” This is what we warned you would happen in a Joe Biden administration–and now it is.
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3rd “Unplanned Release” of NatGas at Weymouth Compressor Station

This is not good. The Weymouth compressor, the final piece of the $452 million Atlantic Bridge expansion project experienced a third “unplanned release” of natural gas yesterday. No word yet on how much gas was released or why. The project is already under an intense microscope with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) threatening to shut it down after only went online in January (see FERC Considers Canceling Already Built/Running Weymouth Compressor).
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Massachusetts U.S. Senators Sponsor Bill to Block NatGas Exports

Talk about using a sledgehammer to kill a fly. The two U.S. Senators from Massachusetts, Elizabeth “Pocahontas” Warren and Ed “Lackey” Markey, have reintroduced a bill that would ban the use of compressor stations along natural gas pipelines if those pipelines happen to export some of the gas flowing through them to Canada or Mexico. Do these idiots understand how much gas is imported and exported with Canada and Mexico every single day? That they propose to shut down all of it, simply so they can shut down a single compressor station in Weymouth, Mass., is sick and twisted…
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GOP Senator Questions FERC on Weymouth Compressor Rehearing

Republican U.S. Senators (at least a few) have noticed the alarming situation at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) under new Chairman Richard “Dick” Glick. Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee Ranking Member Sen. John Barrasso is questioning FERC over its recent decision to reconsider whether or not the Weymouth, Mass. compressor station should have been approved. That’s after the station has been up and running with no problems. It is not right for a new administration to reopen an already-approved (under a different administration) project and threaten to cancel it. It’s not fair nor right in anybody’s book. It’s lawless. Sen. Barrasso tells FERC it has some splainin’ to do.Continue reading

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FERC Considers Canceling Already Built/Running Weymouth Compressor

There’s nothing like changing the rules of the game after the game is done and over. Sounds like something a petulant child would do, but in this case the petulant child is the Democrat-controlled Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) potentially rewriting rules (after the game was played) in an attempt to shut down a brand new, state-of-the-art, fully functional compressor station that’s delivering 133 MMcf/d (million cubic feet per day) of extra natural gas supply to New England and beyond. Welcome to the dystopian world of Joe Biden and Dick Glick.
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Antis Pressure FERC for Hearing to Shut Down Weymouth Compressor

Early last week MDN shared the great news that Enbridge’s Weymouth, Mass. compressor station finally, after years of government delays in building it, went online (see Weymouth, MA Compressor Station Now Online – Will it Stay Online?). As our headline last week teased, the question now is whether or not it will remain online. What could possibly cause it to shut down again? The answer may surprise you.
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Biggest M-U Pipeline Companies Pledge Net-Zero Emissions by 2050

Members of the Interstate Natural Gas Association of America (INGAA) announced yesterday a set of climate change commitments that outline in detail its mission to help address climate change, including working together as an industry towards reaching net-zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from natural gas transmission and storage by 2050. INGAA members pledging to hit that target include the biggest pipeline companies in the M-U, including Williams, Kinder Morgan, and Enbridge.
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Weymouth, MA Compressor Station Now Online – Will it Stay Online?

Finally! The Weymouth compressor station, the final piece of the $452 million Atlantic Bridge expansion project that has been years in the making, is either now online and flowing gas, or will be within a day or two at most. However, given a vote last week by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) questioning whether or not enough consideration was given to protesting antis, a cloud remains as to how long (in a Biden-controlled FERC) the compressor will remain online.
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