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    Southwestern 3Q17: Huge Swing to Profit, Drilled 43 Marc Wells

    Southwestern Energy, one of the biggest drillers in the Marcellus/Utica, delivered their third quarter 2017 update on Friday. Financially speaking the company displayed a remarkable turnaround. In 3Q15 Southwestern lost $1.8 billion! In 3Q16 Southwestern lost $735 million–trimming loses in half. In 3Q17, the company made a profit of $43 million, a swing of more than 3/4 of a billion dollars year over year and a swing of nearly $2 billion if you go back to 2015. Production in the Marcellus/Utica soared in 3Q17, up 26% over last year–to 153 billion cubic feet equivalent (Bcfe). That works out to 1.7 Bcfe per day. Southwestern has a lot of irons in the fire. They’ve drilled their second Utica well (happy with the results). They’re actively drilling in northeast PA, southwest PA and West Virginia. Overall, across the entire Marcellus/Utica patch, Southwestern drilled 43 wells, completed 25 wells and brought online into production 33 wells–in the past three months. The company also began work on a water infrastructure project–in the Panhandle area of West Virginia. The water project is expected to reduce well completion costs by $500,000 per well beginning in late 2018, and lower Southwestern’s break-even gas price by $0.25 per Mcfe. Yeah, a lot of irons. And they own a lot of acreage throughout the play. But the company does a good job in juggling all of the competing priorities. Below is the full 3Q17 update, followed by comments from Southwestern’s senior VP of E&P operations, John Bergeron…
    Read More “Southwestern 3Q17: Huge Swing to Profit, Drilled 43 Marc Wells”

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    EQT CEO Signals Company Likely to Split in Two After Rice Merger

    It looks like all of the agitating and nasty letters and lobbying by corporate raiders has had an effect on EQT. In June, EQT and Rice Energy announced that EQT will buy out and merge in Rice Energy, to create (in EQT) the largest natural gas-producing company in the United States (see EQT Buys Rice Energy in $8.2B Deal, Becomes #1 Gas Producer in US). A few weeks later, so-called “activist investor” (i.e. corporate raider) Jana Partners, in league with the Cohen family (Atlas Energy) started a proxy fight to block EQT’s takover/merger with Rice (see Proxy Fight: Jana Partners, Atlas Tries to Stop EQT/Rice Deal). A vote is scheduled for Nov. 9 on the merger deal–expected to pass. From the beginning, Jana has used bullying tactics to try and pressure EQT into abandoning the buyout/merger, and instead split itself into two companies–upstream (i.e. drilling) and midstream (i.e. pipelines). The language thrown around is called “sum of the parts”–as in if EQT splits apart into two separate companies (the parts) the two would be worth more to investors, each company’s stock would preform better, than continuing on as a single company. Other EQT investors, like corporate raider D.E. Shaw Group, have also lobbied for the same split. Under pressure, EQT announced in September that it will move up the timeline to consider such a split (see Under Pressure, EQT Moves Up Timeline to Explore Splitting Co.). Last week EQT issued their third quarter update and held an analyst phone call. In response to a question from an analyst, EQT CEO Steve Schlotterbeck all but said the company will split in two after a special committee formed to explore that option makes it final recommendation…
    Read More “EQT CEO Signals Company Likely to Split in Two After Rice Merger”

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    PA PUC Hands ME2 Pipeline Rare Defeat re SWPA Valve Station

    Sunoco Logistics has been slapped down in a ruling by the Pennsylvania Public Utility Service (PUC) with respect to a valve station, part of the Mariner East 2 (ME2) pipeline project. In March, MDN told you about an attempt by liberal anti-pipeliners in West Goshen (Chester County) to block the ME2 project (see West Goshen’s Last Stand to Stop Mariner East 2 Pipeline). West Goshen signaled it would deny Sunoco a zoning permit to build a valve station for the pipeline. Sunoco politely, but firmly, told West Goshen the pipeline doesn’t need a permit from the town because it’s a state-permitted project. Sunoco said it would move forward at the appropriate time with a valve station installation. In early July, West Goshen tried again, by filing a 135-page petition with the PUC, asking the PUC for an emergency order to stop construction of the new valve station that Sunoco was set to begin work on at any time (see West Goshen Pulls Legal Stunt in Attempt to Stop ME2 Pipeline). But the PUC responded “no thanks” to West Gosehn, they appealed the PUC decision to an administrative law judge who promptly put a temporary halt on building a new valve station (see Judge Temporarily Stops ME2 Valve Station in West Goshen). The whole issue revolves around which side of the road to build the valve station. West Goshen wants it built next to an existing, Mariner East 1 valve station, but Sunoco wants to build the new station across the street, citing safety concerns. After reviewing the judge’s order, the PUC has now flipped and supports the judge. In a decision issued last Thursday, the PUC told Sunoco they will need to honor an agreement previously made with West Goshen to build the valve station on the ME1 site…
    Read More “PA PUC Hands ME2 Pipeline Rare Defeat re SWPA Valve Station”

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    PA Sev Tax Dead in This Year’s Budget, Gov Wolf Trash Talks House

    For some reason Tom Wolf has successfully cultivated a public persona of a genteel, non-partisan businessman–from the very beginning of his race for the governor’s chair even through today. We weren’t fooled, but many were. He’s proven to be just what we thought he was: a vicious partisan liberal, a spoiled rich kid who grew up to be a spoiled rich adult. Someone who throws a fit when he doesn’t get his own way. The severance tax is a perfect example. From his first day in office, Wolf lobbied hard for a severance tax. Such a tax was thought to be an easy way to pour billions of dollars into “education.” It was Wolf’s quid pro quo with Philadelphia teacher’s unions. They voted him into office, and he would repay them with big money–getting it from an “easy mark”–the Marcellus industry. Turns out the industry wasn’t such an easy mark after all. It has been a long, bloody fight, but the fight (for this year) is now over and Wolf has lost, third year in a row, to get a severance tax passed. His anger bubbled over last week and Wolf revealed his true character. When asked about the budget process, Wolf’s office issued this statement about House Republicans, attributed to Wolf: their opposition to a severance tax “has revealed the worst of Harrisburg.” In other words, Wolf just called House Republicans, his principled opponents, “the worst of Harrisburg.” His comment is the political equivalent of a five year-old stomping his feet and throwing himself on the floor when he doesn’t get his own way. Thank God for House Republicans who held the line against this insane severance tax, and shame on Senate Republicans who turned traitor. Hopefully they’ve learned a lesson from their courageous House colleagues about holding the line…
    Read More “PA Sev Tax Dead in This Year’s Budget, Gov Wolf Trash Talks House”

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    Study: Marcellus Shale Cut PA Residential Gas Bills 40% in 10 Years

    Last week the University of Pennsylvania published “Pennsylvania’s Gas Decade,” a study looking at the impact of the Marcellus Shale on the state’s utility customers over a ten-year period, from 2007-2016 (full copy below). The study shows that on average, PA customers now pay 40% less for natural gas than they did ten years ago. The study also shows electricity customers are paying less–thanks to the Marcellus. Before Marcellus drilling began, PA produced 1% of the nation’s natural gas supplies. Today? PA produces 16% of our country’s natgas supplies. Thank you Marcellus! The study’s author predicts the trend toward lower natgas prices for PA residents will reverse–eventually. Why? The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has approved a staggering 53 interstate pipeline projects that cross PA (more than twice that of any other state). Once/if those projects are built, more gas will flow out of the state, meaning prices for gas will rise. Hey, drillers aren’t sticking around in PA just to break even or lose money. They are in the state to make money, and part of making money is getting the gas to other markets. In the meantime, before the plethora of pipelines are built, PA residents should enjoy the low prices they’re paying…
    Read More “Study: Marcellus Shale Cut PA Residential Gas Bills 40% in 10 Years”

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    Another Radical Anti Tapped to Head Radical PennFuture

    Photo credit: Brandon Reefer

    How many times can we fit the word “radical” into a story? We’re not sure, but we may break the record today. We can’t stress enough just how radical the so-called environmental organization PennFuture really is. Let’s define terms. According to Google, “radical” is defined as, “Advocating…complete political or social change; representing or supporting an extreme or progressive section of a political party.” Perhaps we could summarize it this way: a radical is someone who is far outside the mainstream, someone who wants to fundamentally change the way you live. That’s PennFuture. The organization is dedicated to ending the use of fossil fuels, period. That’s extreme. That’s not normal. That’s lunatic, in our humble opinion. PennFuture has spawned a number of far-left political types who have populated the Tom Wolf administration in Pennsylvania. Former employees of PennFuture who have worked in high level positions in liberal Democrat Tom Wolf’s administration include: John Quigley, Secretary of the Dept. of Environmental Protection (now gone); John Hanger, Secretary of Policy and Planning (now gone); and Cindy Dunn, Secretary of the Dept. of Conservation and Natural Resources (still there). The current CEO of PennFuture, Larry Schweiger, is retiring. So it’s time to appoint a new radical to replace him. That enviro radical would be Jacquelyn Bonomo, a Penn State English major whose credentials to lead PA’s “leading environmental organization” seem to be bird watching and hiking…
    Read More “Another Radical Anti Tapped to Head Radical PennFuture”

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    Trump’s FERC Commissioners Disagree on Grid Reliability Plan

    Several weeks ago U.S. Energy Secretary Rick Perry sent a letter to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) directing the agency to complete action on a “grid resiliency” pricing rule within 60 days. The proposed rule Perry proffered to FERC would put in place regulations that favor electric generating plants powered by coal and nuclear. That is, it would allow unprofitable ventures to pass along new costs, making them profitable–in the name of protecting the electric grid. The theory Perry (and by extension President Trump) subscribe to is that if the free market drives out coal and nuke plants, the electric grid would be “vulnerable” to far fewer sources to power it. If coal and nukes are all but gone, and all of sudden there’s a natural gas shortage, or prices spike for natural gas, it would endanger the electric supply in this country. On one side of the argument are those who believe the free market sometimes needs a helping hand (via regulation), and on the other those who believe the free market will sort it all out and we are not vulnerable. It’s no surprise that the coal and nuclear lobbies are celebrating Perry’s action, and the oil & gas lobby along with electric grid operators, are not (see Appalachian Grid Operators: We Don’t Need Trump’s Reliability Plan). The focus now is on FERC and what they will do. President Trump has appointed two members (so far) out of the three sitting FERC commissioners, with two more on the way. What do Trump’s appointees think, in general, about Perry’s grid reliability plan to favor coal and nukes? Neil Chatterjee, former aid to Kentucky Sen. Mitch McConnell (from coal country) and currently FERC Chairman, appears to favor the concept, going by remarks he made on Friday. However Rob Powelson, from Pennsylvania’s gas country, does not appear to favor Perry’s plan, going by remarks he made last week. Looks like Trump’s appointees may be headed for their first argument since getting hitched…
    Read More “Trump’s FERC Commissioners Disagree on Grid Reliability Plan”

  • Marcellus & Utica Shale Story Links: Mon, Oct 30, 2017

    The “best of the rest” – stories that caught MDN’s eye that you may be interested in reading. In today’s lineup: Plant manager hired for Tenaska SWPA electric plant; FirstEnergy dumping coal & nukes regardless of what govt does; latest CNG station opens in Beaver County, PA; PA House hearing on DRBC frack ban tomorrow; Haynesville production through the roof; the Clean Power Plan is irrelevant; US gas exporters rush to sell LNG to China; and more!
    Read More “Marcellus & Utica Shale Story Links: Mon, Oct 30, 2017”

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    Federal Court Says Chesapeake Royalty Deductions Allowed in Ohio

    The U.S. District Court in Akron, OH has just made a major ruling that affects all Utica landowners and drillers. In 2015, the Ohio Supreme Court accepted a case that will sound familiar to readers of MDN. The case, known as Lutz v. Chesapeake Appalachia, is about whether or not drillers (Chesapeake in this case) are allowed to deduct certain post-production costs from landowner royalty checks. The Ohio Supremes were asked to decide whether Ohio follows the “at the well” rule, which permits the deduction of post-production costs, or if the state follows the “marketable product” rule, which limits the deduction of post-production costs under certain circumstances. The Supremes came down off Mount Olympus in November 2016 to render their verdict (see OH Supreme Court: Royalty Deductions Decided Case-by-Case). The court said, in so many words, “We’re not deciding.” In other words, each royalty case should be litigated individually, case-by-case, in a trial court. There is no one-size-fits-all with respect to deducting expenses from royalty checks. Each case will depend on how the contract is written, and the success of lawyers litigating it. The Supremes refused to tackle the ultimate issue, which is: What does “at the well” really mean? How is it defined? The U.S. District Court in Akron did tackle that issue. The federal court took up the Lutz case and has now defined what is meant by “at the well.” The court’s decision means that Chesapeake Energy (and by extension other drillers) CAN deduct post-production expenses from landowner royalty checks…
    Read More “Federal Court Says Chesapeake Royalty Deductions Allowed in Ohio”

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    EQT 3Q17: Profit $23.3M, 2.3 Bcfe/d Production, Rice Merger on Track

    Yesterday one of the biggest Marcellus/Utica drillers, EQT, issued their third quarter 2017 update. EQT will soon be THE biggest Marcellus/Utica driller, indeed the biggest shale gas producer in the United States (surpassing Chesapeake Energy), once a deal to buy Rice Energy consummates later this year. But what about just EQT in 3Q17? The company reports making a profit of $23.3 million during the quarter, versus losing $8 million in the same quarter last year. EQT produced 205.1 billion cubic feet equivalent (Bcfe) of natural gas during the quarter–which works out to be 2.3 Bcfe per day. Here are some interesting stats from the update: Since EQT began drilling shale wells, they have drilled (called “spud” in the industry) 1,288 shale wells. Of those wells drilled, 1,060 are online, making the company money. Below we have the full update, a copy of the transcript from the analyst phone call, the latest slide deck loaded with charts and graphs, and a bit of amusing analysis about the update/phone call…
    Read More “EQT 3Q17: Profit $23.3M, 2.3 Bcfe/d Production, Rice Merger on Track”

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    Mountain Valley Pipeline: “We Don’t See Any Major Obstacles”

    Yesterday EQT provided an update for both its drilling and midstream operations. On the midstream side, EQT had an interesting comment about it’s biggest project on the books–the Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP). MVP is a $3.5 billion, 303-mile natural gas pipeline that will run from Wetzel County, WV to the Transco Pipeline in Pittsylvania County, VA. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) issued a final approval for the project two weeks ago (see FERC Approves Atlantic Coast, Mountain Valley Pipeline Projects). However, the West Virginia Dept. of Environmental Protection (WVDEP) which had issued a federal water crossing permit for the project in March, withdrew the permit in September (see Trouble for Mountain Valley Pipe: WV DEP Withdraws Water Permit). The permit process has now restarted in WV. Committed radicals in Virginia are pressuring the state’s Dept. of Environmental Quality to reject the project (see 19 Radicals Arrested for Blocking DEQ Building in Richmond, Va.). Apparently the absence of permits in WV and VA isn’t bothering the brass at EQT because yesterday they said this about the project: “We don’t see any major obstacles”…
    Read More “Mountain Valley Pipeline: “We Don’t See Any Major Obstacles””

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    Mountaineer NGL Storage Spending Up to $500M on Ethane Facility

    Mountaineer NGL Storage wants to build a new underground NGL storage facility in Monroe County, Ohio, near Clarington, along the Ohio River (see New Company Announces Open Season for NGL Storage in Ohio Utica). The project, which will store primarily ethane but also propane and butane, still needs to build a 3.25 million barrel brine pond, used to pump out stored NGLs. Mountaineer is waiting for a clearance from the Ohio Dept. of Natural Resources to build the pond. At a recent industry event, Mountaineer CEO David Hooker said 20 drillers are interested in storing ethane at the facility, when it gets built (see Mountaineer NGL Says 20 Drillers Interested in Ethane Storage). Hooker keeps the NGL storage project front and center in the news. Yesterday he announced plans to spend an initial $150 million, and potentially as much as $500 million, to build the facility. To the best of our recollection that’s the first time numbers have been offered for how much money it will take to fund the project. Hooker also gave a new timeline for the project, saying he expects all permits to be in hand “within the first six months of 2018,” and after that, construction will begin…
    Read More “Mountaineer NGL Storage Spending Up to $500M on Ethane Facility”

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    The Circuitous Route Marcellus Gas Takes to Get to Nova Scotia

    Yesterday MDN brought you the exciting news that Marcellus shale gas molecules have been/are finding their way all the way to Nova Scotia, Canada (see Marcellus Gas Now Flows All the Way to Nova Scotia). A paper mill in Nova Scotia has been buying Marcellus gas since this summer to power the plant, via a now-reversed portion of the Maritimes & Northeast Pipeline (M&NE). Today we spotted a different article that sheds more light on how our gas is getting to our Canadian cousins. In yesterday’s post, the paper mill operator was quoted as saying: “For the majority of the summer I’ve been importing Marcellus Shale gas from Pennsylvania and some from an exchange in Ontario.” Which we thought odd. We searched every map resource we could find and found no pipelines from Ontario to Nova Scotia–they don’t exist. The only pipeline into (out of) Nova Scotia is M&NE. Enter the article we spotted today. The article below chronicles the fight in Weymouth, Mass. to block the expansion of a compressor station there. Enbridge (i.e. Spectra Energy) plans to expand the compressor as part of the Atlantic Bridge project. Atlantic Bridge will flow more Marcellus gas north into Maine, and potentially beyond Maine into Canada, via the M&NE. The compressor is needed to flow more gas along the existing pipeline. While the article is largely about the fight over the compressor station and implications of further delays in building it, it is the other details that supplied the missing pieces of the puzzle that explain how our gas currently gets all the way to Nova Scotia…
    Read More “The Circuitous Route Marcellus Gas Takes to Get to Nova Scotia”

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    PA DEP Enviro Justice Office Head Leaves to Work for Radical Group

    This is the perfect illustration of how parts of state government, like the so-called Environmental Justice division of the Pennsylvania Dept. of Environmental Protection (DEP), get co-opted by Big Green groups. In 2015 then-Secretary of the DEP, John Quigley, “reactivated” the Office of Environmental Justice at the DEP to give poor folks and minorities an important new weapon to oppose shale drilling (see Environmental “Justice” for Some, Not for All, Courtesy PA DEP). If you live in a community where at least 20% of the people are below the poverty line, or if the community is composed of at least 30% minorities (defined as “non-whites”), the so-called Office of Environmental Justice will give you special treatment if you claim to have been harmed somehow by the Marcellus industry. Everyone else gets ordinary/regular environmental “justice”–no special treatment if you’re white or middle class. The radical Quigley (later fired for colluding with environmental groups) hired an equally radical person to head up the Office of Environmental Justice–Carl Jones, an African-American lawyer from Philadelphia. Jones stuck around after Quigley got canned, but now Jones is out too. He resigned to become the staff attorney for the ultra-radical Earthjustice. You see how it works in Harrisburg? It’s a revolving door between the administration of Tom Wolf and radical environmental organizations like Earthjustice and PennFuture (John Quigley, John Hanger, Cindy Dunn, Katie McGinty, Carl Jones)…
    Read More “PA DEP Enviro Justice Office Head Leaves to Work for Radical Group”

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    Doddridge, WV Drilling & Processing is Marcellus-Central

    Doddridge County, WV

    There’s no question that Doddridge County is one of the most active counties in West Virginia, with respect to the Marcellus/Utica industry. Doddridge is home to MarkWest’s Sherwood complex, the single largest gas-processing complex in the Northeast with eight cryogenic processing facilities. Antero Resources, an active (really big) driller in Doddridge, is building a huge wastewater recycling facility in the county. As we reported in September, the tax base in the county has tripled over the past seven years (see Doddridge County, WV Tax Base Triples in 7 Yrs Thx to M-U Shale). Dominion Energy also has a large presence in the county with hundreds of miles of gathering and interstate pipelines. Yes, Doddridge is a happenin’ place when it comes to the Marcellus. We’d call it “Marcellus-Central” in WV…
    Read More “Doddridge, WV Drilling & Processing is Marcellus-Central”