PA AG Sells Out Landowners in Royalty Settlement with Chesapeake
Chesapeake Energy has screwed over landowners in northeastern Pennsylvania (and elsewhere) for years. Under the provisions of a “settlement” just brokered by PA’s shale-hating Attorney General, Josh Shapiro, Chesapeake will get away with settling the royalty case for pennies on the dollar. The average landowner will get just over $300 from this “settlement.” What a cruel joke. This is all about headlines and showmanship for Shapiro who hopes to run for governor next year. Don’t fall for his “I’m the savior of landowners” schtick. He just sold landowners down the river in return for a headline his campaign can use.
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Two Democrat federal judges with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia (D.C. Circuit) are second-guessing a long-completed and flowing natural gas pipeline in the St. Louis, MO area–a pipeline that flows Marcellus/Utica gas to residents, businesses, and electric generating plants in the region. Why are we not surprised?
Masquerading as a nonpartisan, independent nonprofit, the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) reportedly “conducts research and analyses on financial and economic issues related to energy and the environment.” The Institute’s stated mission is “to accelerate the transition to a diverse, sustainable and profitable energy economy.” In other words, they’re anti-fossil fuel, populated by biased Democrats with a vested interest in seeing Big Oil and Big Gas bankrupted. It’s no surprise the IEEFA just released a “report” saying the financial rationale for building the Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) has “evaporated” and, you know, Equitrans (the builder) should just forget about finishing the project and write off the billions already spent.
Here’s something you don’t read about every day. A couple of leading Democrats are not only supporting natural gas as the best way to help America “transition” to “clean energy,” they’re saying so in a very public way, attempting to influence the debate about it. In an opinion piece appearing in the Washington, D.C. The Hill (required reading for all political swamp dwellers), two members of the Progressive Policy Institute (PPI) tout the benefits and virtue of using natural gas, calling for an end to the silly talk about gas bans.
According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), in 2020 U.S. exports of propane reached record levels, increasing 13% and surpassing distillate fuel oil as the country’s top petroleum product export. U.S. exports of distillate fuel oil fell to its lowest level since 2016. Propane is one of the NGLs produced in (and exported from) the Marcellus/Utica.
This is a cautionary tale that highlights what we have preached over the years. From some of our earliest posts here on MDN, we have cautioned landowners (and rights owners) to treat the lease signing bonuses and royalties they receive in the Marcellus/Utica as an investment and not spend all the money as it comes in on the assumption it will always be there. We have an example of what happens if you spend it as soon as you get it: Greene County, PA.
The oil and natural gas industry has always been a “boom and bust” business. O&G cycles between times of “drill like crazy”, and “sweeping layoffs.” It is the nature of our market. Last year as the coronavirus pandemic set in and countries around the world shut down portions of their economies, particularly with travel all but ending, anti-fossil fuel zealots pronounced the death of fossil fuels (oil in particular). They said the race to replace fossil fuels with “renewables” had accelerated because of COVID (they were actually glad COVID hit). Antis could not have been more wrong about the prospects for oil and gas…
We are so sick of the left and their twisted view of everything! For years we’ve covered a recurring claim from the left in their misguided attempt to smear natural gas and the pipelines that flow it. The left claims every time a pipeline runs near or through an area where the population is African American, or Hispanic, or rural poor (in other words, just about everywhere), that pipeline is automatically assumed to be racist.
Richard “Dick” Glick became a Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) commissioner in 2017, hand-picked by Sen. Chuck Schumer (see
Last summer MDN brought you the news that the Sierra Club lost a lawsuit aimed at blocking a landfill in New York State from accepting oil and gas drill cuttings from Pennsylvania (see
For the week ending March 3, the Enverus U.S. rig count soared by another 30 rigs, an indicator that activity is picking up in the oil and gas sector. The vast majority of the rigs (27) were brought online in oil-focused plays (12 of them in the Permian alone). Just 3 net rigs were brought online in gas-focused plays. The Utica Shale increased by 2 active rigs, while the M-U’s chief rival for rigs, the gassy Haynesville, added 3 rigs. (Obviously, some gas rigs were idled in other plays if there were +5 brought online in the Utica and Haynesville.)
There is finally movement in Ohio to repeal an odious law passed by Ohio’s Republican-controlled legislature called House Bill 6, which funnels over $1 billion from Ohio ratepayers to FirstEnergy Corporation in order to keep the company’s unprofitable nuclear power plants running (while disadvantaging other power sources, like gas-fired plants). FirstEnergy is accused of bribing legislators to pass, and keep passed, HB 6 by paying out $60 million in bribes (see
Whether or not you agree with Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf’s idiotic plan to join something called the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI), a carbon tax that will force PA residents to pay $2.36 billion in higher electric costs over a 10-year period (and shut down coal and gas-fired power plants), there is one thing we can all agree on: The way Wolf is attempting to enroll the state in RGGI is wrong. Wolf is denying the state legislature (controlled by Republicans) a role in approving whether or not this new carbon tax will be assessed on PA citizens.
Duke Energy has plans to build multiple new clean-burning natural gas-fired power plants to supply its grid over the next 15 years–some 4.7 gigawatts of new gas-fired plants (see
Just two weeks ago we reported on the historical, insanely high natural gas spot prices being paid across the country (see