15-20% Inflation Hits M-U Gas Drillers, Profits Remain High So Far
According to a survey of both oil and natural gas drillers, inflation began to drive up production costs during the first quarter of 2022. According to Coterra Energy Inc. President and CEO Thomas Jorden, “We are seeing significant inflation in the oilfield.” Coterra is the former Cabot Oil & Gas which drills for natural gas in northeastern PA, in addition to drilling for oil in the Permian and Midcontinent. Southwestern Energy drills for natgas in both the Marcellus/Utica and in the Haynesville. Southwestern COO Clayton Carrell says he is seeing higher prices for labor and materials in both the M-U and the Haynesville. However, high inflation also benefits drillers. How?
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As we told you last week, Energy Transfer, during its first quarter update, spoke about the now-completed Mariner East pipeline system that flows NGLs, including ethane, propane, and butane, from eastern Ohio and southwestern Pennsylvania all the way to southeastern PA and the Marcus Hook terminal (see
At the end of the day, Joe Manchin, U.S. Senator from West Virginia, is still a Democrat and beholden to his party’s radical leftwing. We had hoped he was a different kind of Democrat, but alas, perhaps not. Bloomberg (often a fake news source) is reporting that Manchin is reaching out to Republicans in the Senate to gauge interest in spending a half-trillion dollars ($550 billion to be exact) on “climate and energy spending”–resurrected pieces of what had been Biden’s failed Build Back Better Act. The aim is to salvage something of Joe Biden’s tattered reputation ahead of the 2022 elections in November, so Dems are not completely obliterated (as we hope they are and deserve to be) this fall. No thanks, Sen. Manchin. We’re not interested in tacking on another 4-5% to the inflation numbers that are already at historic highs, which is exactly what such a bill would do.
You know how Big Banks have gone woke left, threatening to defund, divest, and refuse to loan money to oil and natural gas companies due to pressure from a small, vocal minority on the environmental left? Big Banks are now facing their worst nightmare: The oil and gas industry is making enough money, generating enough free cash flow, that it can walk away from loans from Big Banks. Goodbye and good riddance.
In the early days of the Marcellus and Utica Shale, a number of studies and predictions were made about how the industry would bring tens of thousands of jobs and inject billions of dollars into state economies. In Ohio, a Cleveland State University (CSU) report issued in 2012 predicted that Ohio’s then-growing fracking industry would add 66,000 direct and indirect jobs and $5 billion a year to the state’s economy by the end of 2014 (see
The Washington County, PA Chamber of Commerce held its State of The Economy event yesterday. One of the speakers, Denise Brinley (former executive director of Pennsylvania’s Office of Energy) said that southwestern Pennsylvania and the Pittsburgh region is a prime prospect to take advantage of establishing a $2 billion hydrogen hub. Western PA is in the “bullseye” of why funding was included in the recent federal infrastructure bill to establish four such hubs nationally, according to Brinley.
Founded in 1946, the Texas Independent Producers & Royalty Owners Association (TIPRO) represents nearly 3,000 individuals and companies from the Texas oil and gas industry. TIPRO is one of the country’s largest oil and gas trade associations and a strong advocacy group representing both independents and royalty owners in Texas. TIPRO generates some great research reports, including their latest annual “State of Energy Report” for 2022. The report, which looks at oil and gas across the country (not just Texas) finds that the O&G industry supported a total of 832,869 direct jobs in the U.S. last year. The U.S. O&G sector paid a national annual wage averaging $115,166 during 2021, 76% higher than average private sector wages!
In direct contravention to the advice, pressure, and bullying of Joe Biden’s “Special Presidential Envoy for Climate” John Kerry, who insists that banks and investors refuse to fund oil and gas companies, big banks around the world (and here in the U.S.) are disregarding Kerry’s hot air and, with $100/barrel oil almost here, opening up the door to the bank vault and showering oil and gas with money once again. Hey John, money talks and (you know what) walks…
The world’s (and North America’s) largest oilfield services companies, including Schlumberger, Halliburton, and Baker Hughes, are all saying the same thing: Drillers are getting ready to drill more this year. Some sub-sectors of the drilling market, like completions, are already “sold out” according to Halliburton. Good luck to drillers who want to add more completions crews right now. Prices are going up for fracking fleets and other services offered by OFS companies.
Barging along the Ohio River from Cincinnati to Pittsburgh (including the Allegheny, Monongahela, and Kanawha rivers) has always been a big business, critical to the economy of the Ohio River Valley region. Barging along the Ohio River is currently undergoing a transformation from coal and steel to petrochemicals and plastics. Why and how? In a phrase, the Marcellus/Utica shale is the reason.
We return, once again, to the story of New England (and New York) blocking new natural gas pipelines and in the process, hurting the residents of New England. Not only are residents harmed economically, but the environment is also harmed. As of 10 am yesterday morning, a full 20% of all the electricity generated in New England used either dirty oil or coal to do so. Normally the oil/coal generation number is less than one-half of one percent (<0.5%), not 20%. The price for electricity in New England is out of sight high right now too. Actions have consqeuences.
Economists are still analyzing the impact of the coronavirus pandemic from 2020, let alone assessing impacts from 2021. Cleveland State University researchers have run the numbers and have discovered something interesting. Of Ohio’s 88 counties, only 18 grew their economies in 2020. Of those 18, two counties stood head and shoulders above the rest for increases in economic activity. Both counties have something in common: Utica Shale drilling.
Even amid the increasingly shrill and irrational ramblings of so-called scientists who predict gloom and doom if we don’t dump fossil fuel use immediately (while they ignore even bigger sources of carbon emissions), the world’s biggest banks and investment houses, while talking about dumping fossil fuel investments, haven’t actually done so. And according to Bloomberg, big banks don’t intend to deny their fossil fuel clients (oil, gas and coal companies) anytime soon. That’s really good news.