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    Shale Insight 2017 – Day Two News Roundup

    Shale Insight 2017 is now in the books. Another year, another great show. MDN editor Jim Willis is back in the office, chained to his computer. Next week Jim will share notes he took at the conference. For now, below are highlights from other news source from Day Two of the event. Unfortunately Jim had to leave before the closing keynote, given by former Trump White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer. But others were there to hear what Spicer had to say. Day Two began with a focus on the Shell ethane cracker. Members of the Shell team were on hand to describe how this critical project affects the region, and where it fits in the Marcellus/Utica landscape. One of the Shell team members said the skyline at the Beaver County site will change dramatically over the next 12 months as the buildings housing the various components are built. It was a fascinating talk with lots of information. Below is a roundup from Day Two…
    Read More “Shale Insight 2017 – Day Two News Roundup”

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    Maine Wants Canada to Build NatGas Pipeline, Bypass MA, NH, NY

    This story makes us angry–not at Maine Gov. Paul LePage, but at the obtuse governors and officials in Massachusetts, New Hampshire and (yes) New York. For years LePage, a Republican, has advocated for more natural gas pipelines to his state and to the entire New England region. Back in 2014 all of New England’s governors were on board with supporting Kinder Morgan’s Northeast Energy Direct (NED) pipeline extension of the Tennessee Gas Pipeline (see Blue State Blues: 6 New England States Want New Natgas Pipeline). But then radical environmentalist took over, and the others lost their nerve–and their minds–eventually killing the project two years later (see NED is Dead – Kinder Morgan Suspends $3.3B New England Pipeline). Every pipeline project floated for the New England region meets with the same obtuse, frankly idiotic resistance. And LePage has had enough. If Massachusetts, New Hampshire and New York won’t let pipelines pass through their stats to reach Maine, then LePage wants the Canadians to build a pipeline south across the border Maine shares with Quebec. You can’t blame LePage–he’s doing what he has to in the best interests of his residents. The real shame is that cheap, abundant American shale gas from the Marcellus/Utica could be the gas flowing to Maine. But now, it appears it will be Canadian gas instead. Maddening!…
    Read More “Maine Wants Canada to Build NatGas Pipeline, Bypass MA, NH, NY”

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    GlobeLTR Energy Inc. Rebrands Itself as Gravity Oilfield Services

    This one is follow the bouncing ball. In February 2017 Permian-based oilfield service company Light Tower Rentals merged with Globe Energy Services and became GlobeLTR Energy Inc., which is one of the portfolio companies of Clearlake Capital Group. Clearfield is the money and likely offers “advice” (i.e. directives) on how to run the business. After all, it’s their money on the line. Earlier this week GlobeLRT Energy changed names again, and has become Gravity Oilfield Services. It is a “comprehensive rebranding effort,” according to the announcement. Why do we care? Because Gravity nee GlobeLRT nee Globe Energy has operations in the Marcellus/Utica region. In fact, in addition to the mighty Permian oil play, they also operate in the Eagle Ford Shale, SCOOP/STACK, Williston Basin, DJ Basin, Marcellus Shale and Haynesville Shale–among others. Sometimes you need a score card to keep track of who does what and what they call themselves…
    Read More “GlobeLTR Energy Inc. Rebrands Itself as Gravity Oilfield Services”

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    Gas Traders Go After M-U’s Local Hubs for Higher Returns

    The greater the risk, the greater the reward. You’ve heard that bromide multiple times in your life. And for good reason–it’s true. Our entire stock and financial markets are based on that truism. Gas traders, those who trade futures contracts for natural gas, are like any other traders–they big price swings. It is when the price of the underlying commodity swings that (i.e. when risk rises) that traders make the most money. Don’t know if you’ve noticed, but the price of natural gas hasn’t really swung much at all over the past few years–at least at the Henry Hub, which is where most contracts are pegged. Why? We have a “glut” of natural gas. As soon as the price creeps up a bit, more gas floods the market. But as we’ve written many times in the past, there isn’t just “one price” when it comes to natural gas. There are hundreds of prices–gas is traded at hundreds of different trading points along major pipelines across North America. While the price of gas is steady and doesn’t change much (i.e. no real opportunity to profit from risk) at Henry Hub, such is not the case at all trading hubs. Particularly in the Marcellus/Utica. In our region, prices have been much lower than the Henry Hub–and much more volatile. Wider swings up and down. Now that Rover is flowing, prices are going up in some areas of our region. Other pipelines have a similar effect. So gas traders are beginning to leave contracts pegged to Henry Hub behind and trying their hand at contracts pegged at other trading hubs–some in our region, some in other regions. Bloomberg gives us the low down on a trend that has the power to affect the price of natural gas across the country–particularly in our region…
    Read More “Gas Traders Go After M-U’s Local Hubs for Higher Returns”

  • MDN About to Get a Facelift

    MDN is about to get a face lift–long overdue and badly needed. When you click on a headline in the daily email to visit the site to read full stories today, you will notice the font styles have changed. That’s a temporary change. Fonts, colors and more will be changed starting next week. We have selected a new, cleaner (more modern) “theme” for the site, that will launch sometime next week.

    Why the change? A variety of reasons–the biggest being that we haven’t changed the look and feel of the website since it began in 2009. MDN looks like an eight-year-old website! A lot has changed since then, most noticeably, half or more of our readers now read MDN on a smart phone (or tablet, or other non-computer device). The site needs to automatically change and respond to whatever device is being used to read it–something called “responsive design” in the business.

    What will change? The overall structure will, for now, not change. We hate it when we arrive at a favorite/familiar website to see everything is rearranged, with no prior warning. That won’t happen with MDN. The same overall architecture remains, with stories on the left of the page, links to various things on the right. Same drop-down menus along the top. Basically what we are doing is giving the site a new coat of paint. The fonts will change, and the font colors will change (a darker font, to make it easier to read). Better use of white space. The date of a post, which has always been part of the post (but hard to find at the bottom) will be moved to the top, much easier to spot. Little things, basically, will be tweaked and changed to make reading full articles a more pleasant experience. At least, that’s what we hope!

    We will alert you when the changes roll out. As always, we appreciate your feedback and ideas on how to make it a better site. Stay tuned for what’s coming next week!

  • Marcellus & Utica Shale Story Links: Fri, Sep 29, 2017

    The “best of the rest” – stories that caught MDN’s eye that you may be interested in reading. In today’s lineup: PA budget talks advance, WITHOUT a severance tax; drone inspections of pipelines may soon be reality; Cheniere asks FERC for permission to fire up Train 4 LNG export; Microsoft launches gas-powered data center in Seattle; Congress probes Russian ads targeting energy markets; US regulatory climate “wobbles”; Shale-Zilla knocking at crude oil price door; the future of oil prices; it’s been a tough week for peak oil theorists; and more!
    Read More “Marcellus & Utica Shale Story Links: Fri, Sep 29, 2017”

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    Shale Insight 2017 – Day One News Roundup

    MDN is once again attending the Shale Insight event–in Pittsburgh. Yesterday was the first day of the event. The crowd was definitely smaller than last year when then-candidate Trump spoke to attendees. However, Day One saw a number of heavy-hitting speakers, including Secretary of Labor Alexander Acosta, Deputy Secretary of Energy Dan Brouillette, XTO Energy President Sara Ortwein, Chevron Appalachia President Stacey Olson, and People’s Natural Gas CEO Morgan O’Brien. Marcellus Shale Coalition President Dave Spigelmyer served as master of ceremonies and seemed to be everywhere-present during the event (how does he DO that?). From the opening session to the exhibit floor to attending the breakout sessions, MDN editor Jim Willis made the rounds–and took lots of notes. In the coming days he will write up those notes and share them. For now, we have links and extracts of articles from other publications attending and reporting on this year’s Shale Insight…
    Read More “Shale Insight 2017 – Day One News Roundup”

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    Chevron & People’s Natural Gas Team Up to Map Out PA’s $60B Future

    One of the big announcements coming from Shale Insight 2017 on the first day was the release of a new study tag-team researched by Chevron Appalachia and People’s Natural Gas. As People’s CEO Morgan O’Brien explained it–everyone assumes “someone else” has a master plan, a statewide strategy for how to develop this phenomenal resource. But when you look around you come to the realization that no one has such a plan. So Chevron Appalachia CEO Stacey Olson approached People’s CEO O’Brien and asked for help to research and author a study that would provide such a plan–a plan to unlock what they believe is a $60 BILLION opportunity for Pennsylvania that will create 100,000 new jobs statewide. The result is a study called “Forge the Future: Pennsylvania’s Path To An Advanced, Energy-Enabled Economy” (full copy below), released yesterday. We now have, according to Chevron’s Olson and People’s O’Brien, the road map. What we need is for people in the industry to step up and seize the day and take action to create that amazing future…
    Read More “Chevron & People’s Natural Gas Team Up to Map Out PA’s $60B Future”

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    Bad Blood: Rover Pipe CEO Sends Caustic Letter to Ohio EPA, FERC

    Last week MDN brought you the news that Ohio EPA’s director, Craig Butler, has kind of tipped over into the deep end with his rantings and ravings about Rover Pipeline (see Ohio EPA’s Craig Butler Goes Nuts, Demands $2.3M from Rover Pipe). Butler held a conference call with the media where he made wild allegations. What seems to have precipitated Butler’s media bender is a decision by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) earlier in the week to allow Energy Transfer, builder of Rover, to resume horizontal directional drilling (HDD) in most Ohio locations, after banning it for several months (see FERC Lifts Rover Horizontal Drilling Ban, Pipeline Work Resumes). ET has responded to Butler’s tirade with a hard-hitting (we’d call it caustic) response. In a letter to Butler, carbon copied to FERC, Rover President & CEO Matthew Ramsey essentially says Butler and the OEPA is trying to cover its own mistakes in not requiring storm water permits for most of the project’s life–then coming along after the fact saying Rover didn’t apply for those permits (when OEPA never required them in the first place). Ramsey also said Butler “refuses to recognize the law” that FERC, and not OEPA, is in charge of this project. It gets better. Ramsey says he is “mystified by what you are trying to achieve” by requiring something (said storme water permits) Rover is now voluntarily doing–permits that OEPA itself has approved! This letter really takes the gloves off and (our words) calls Butler a lunatic. Read it for yourself and see what you think…
    Read More “Bad Blood: Rover Pipe CEO Sends Caustic Letter to Ohio EPA, FERC”

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    OH Landowner Wants High Court to Force Driller to Explore Shale

    Back in March MDN told you about an Ohio landowner with an old oil and gas lease where a conventional (vertical only) well was drilled–and still producing–suing the energy company, telling the company to either explore the shale layer, or severe the lease rights to shale so the landowner can lease it to someone who will go after the shale (see OH Supreme Court to Hear Appeal re Driller Who Won’t Explore Utica). The case went to the Ohio Supreme Court and on Tuesday the high court heard oral arguments. Can we divine which way the court may rule, based on comments by the justices? Perhaps…
    Read More “OH Landowner Wants High Court to Force Driller to Explore Shale”

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    Broome Virtual Pipe Project in Limbo, Fenton Board Refuses to Act

    In early September, a Broome County, NY judge ruled that the Town of Fenton (Binghamton area) Planning Board did not take a hard enough look at environmental and traffic issues related to their approval of NG Advantage’s plan to construct a facility in the town to compress and load natural gas onto tractor trailers for delivery to regional customers who desperately need the gas–what is called a “virtual pipeline” (see Judge Rules Against Broome Virtual Pipe, NG Advantage to Try Again). The lawsuit was brought by a local school district, which a Freedom of Information Act request reveals is paying approximately $40,000 in legal fees to high-priced lawyers to win the case, stopping the project (we hope Chenango Valley School District taxpapers appreciate their taxes going up to pay for it, and less money available in the budget to “educate” their precious children). NG must now resubmit the project for approval. On Tuesday night, NG did just that–re-applying to the Fenton Town Planning Board. A meeting was held at the local fire hall where some 250 people showed up. The crowd contained those both for and against the project. Unfortunately two of the seven Planning Board members were not present–possibly having resigned due to extreme pressure from bullying antis. So then there were five. Three of the five voted to become the lead agency to review the project, which is the first step in the process. However, three of seven is not a majority. Which puts the project in limbo, not able to go forward. What happens next?…
    Read More “Broome Virtual Pipe Project in Limbo, Fenton Board Refuses to Act”

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    Shale Support Holdings Expands M-U Frac Sand Business via Partnership

    Shale Support Holdings, which says it is a leading provider of frac sand and logistical solutions to the oil and gas proppant market (headquartered in Texas, with an operations center in Mississippi), is stepping up its presence in the Marcellus/Utica region with a partnership with Tidewater Logistics. The partnership will increase Shale Support’s operations in Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. Because Shale Support can ship sand direct from Mississippi, which is much closer than most other alternatives, the price for frac sand will be cheaper for customers. Here’s the good news about a new partnership benefiting Marcellus/Utica drillers…
    Read More “Shale Support Holdings Expands M-U Frac Sand Business via Partnership”

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    South Korean SK Group Buys a Piece of Eureka Midstream for $100M

    Eureka Midstream, which was once called Eureka Hunter (a subsidiary of Magnum Hunter Resources) popped back up on the radar screen earlier this month (see M-U Pipeline Co. Eureka Midstream Expands Line of Credit to $400M). Eureka, which operates exclusively in the Marcellus/Utica with ~200 miles of local gathering pipelines, announced it had expanded its line of credit from $225 million to $400 million, with an “accordion” option to further expand it to $500 million. Eureka’s former parent Magnum Hunter spun the company off into a standalone company last year, so Eureka did not get dragged through bankruptcy along with Magnum Hunter (see Magnum Hunter Emerges from Bankruptcy with CEO Gary Evans Gone). The newest news is that South Korean SK Holdings, the holding company of SK Group (one of the largest conglomerates in South Korea) has bought itself a piece of Eureka for $100 million…
    Read More “South Korean SK Group Buys a Piece of Eureka Midstream for $100M”

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    WV Sec Commerce Says State Unfriendly to Gas-Fired Power Plants

    WV Commerce Sec. Woody Thrasher

    West Virginia Secretary of Commerce Woody Thrasher had some harsh words when he gave a speech to House and Senate legislators about his own state. Thrasher said one of the reasons why WV is trailing both OH and PA economically is because WV treats natural gas-fired electric plant projects so poorly. Thrasher had data to back up his claim. In Ohio, 19 natgas-fired plants have been built. In PA? Some 22 natgas-fired plants! Although there’s been plenty of talk–for years–that such plants are coming in WV–the number of gas-fired plants that has actually broken ground to date in WV is…ZERO. Nada. None. Thrasher says power plant owners have concluded it’s just easier, due to regulations and fewer hoops to jump through, to avoid WV and build their projects in OH or PA. Thrasher’s comments were some verbal cold water splashed on the faces of WV’s legislators, in an attempt to get them to address the situation, or risk forever being behind the eight ball…
    Read More “WV Sec Commerce Says State Unfriendly to Gas-Fired Power Plants”

  • Marcellus & Utica Shale Story Links: Thu, Sep 28, 2017

    The “best of the rest” – stories that caught MDN’s eye that you may be interested in reading. In today’s lineup: OH rig count stands at 26; Sabine Pass LNG train 4 ready for service; Zinke says 1/3 of Interior staff disloyal to Trump (and the country); E&P profits shrink in Q1; crude by rail could hamper future pipeline investment; Exxon Mobil replaced by Russia’s Gazprom as world’s biggest energy firm; China continues to invest heavily in LNG; and more!
    Read More “Marcellus & Utica Shale Story Links: Thu, Sep 28, 2017”

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    2 Dimock Families Suing Cabot O&G Settle Out of Court

    Some big news that both Cabot Oil & Gas and the two families suing them seem to want to keep quiet: they’ve settled out of court. Brief background for those new to MDN and to the “Dimock” story: There were 14 families along the Carter Road area of Dimock Township, PA (Susquehanna County) that reportedly experienced turbidity in their water from methane migrating, supposedly from Cabot’s drilling operations nearby. The state Dept. of Environmental Protection (DEP) investigated in 2010 and declared Cabot guilty and imposed stiff fines and requirements, including a requirement to install permanent water treatment systems at each home and even an offer to each of the families to pay twice what their property was worth at the time (see PA DEP Takes Aggressive Action Against Cabot Oil & Gas over Dimock Township Methane Contamination). We won’t recount all of the twists and turns we documented over the years, including research that showed Cabot wasn’t responsible for the methane migration. All of the 14 properties either sold to Cabot or got their water systems repaired–except for two holdout families who were riding the horse of hope that they could sue Cabot for big money and retire millionaires. For a time, it appeared their plan worked. Last year, in March 2016, a trial took place in Scranton. It was a sham trial, with the lawyer for the two families engaging in borderline unethical practices in the courtroom in her attempt to influence the jury. One of the two families admitted, under oath on the witness stand, that their water had too much methane in it BEFORE Cabot Oil & Gas began to drill nearby. The same family, the Elys, later built a 22-room, $1 million mansion on the same property AFTER they admit there was trouble with the water. And yet the jury found Cabot at fault and awarded the Elys $2.75 million. The other family suing Cabot got $1.49 million (see Dimock Jury Levies $4.24M Judgement Against Cabot in Dimock Case). The verdict was obviously brain dead and a federal court judge threw the verdict and judgement out, saying a brand new trial would have to take place (see Fed Court Overturns $4.2M Dimock Judgement Against Cabot O&G). There will now be no new trial. Last week both sides settled the case “amicably”–whatever that means. We’ll tell you what it means. It means Cabot paid big bucks to make it all go away–although they won’t admit it…
    Read More “2 Dimock Families Suing Cabot O&G Settle Out of Court”