Marathon 2016 Revenue Slips, Spending $1.3B on Marcellus in 2017
Marathon Petroleum, the refiner and midstream company based in Ohio (owner of what used to be MarkWest Energy) reported their fourth quarter and full year 2016 numbers yesterday. Overall revenue was down a bit, from $2.85 billion in 2015 to $2.21 billion in 2016 due to “a challenging commodity price and margin environment.” However, Speedway gas station/convenience stores (many of which used to be Hess gas stations) had “exceptional performance” and “set multiple records for the full-year 2016.” Of particular note for MDN, Marathon plans to spend $1-$1.3 billion in 2017 on new infrastructure projects in the Marcellus region. Good news indeed! Below we have yesterday’s update, along with a PowerPoint presentation Marathon used at the recent Marcellus-Utica Midstream event in Pittsburgh. We love the slides in that presentation, full of useful information…
Read More “Marathon 2016 Revenue Slips, Spending $1.3B on Marcellus in 2017”


We’ve always thought the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) was populated with environmental leftist with an agenda–a mission. And that support for the agency by groups, and even by businesses who come under their regulation, was driven by a warped philosophy. However, two recent bits of information now snap the picture into full focus. The reason the EPA is so zealously defended and promoted by those inside and outside the agency isn’t really about protecting humans and protecting the planet. Oh, that has something to do with it. But the primary motivator is (you guessed it), money. Greed. Graft. Payola. This began to come into focus for us when we ran a post yesterday that stated President Trump will “seek significant budget and staff cuts” and when an aide to Trump on the transition team “suggested it was reasonable to expect the president to seek a cut of about $1 billion from the EPA’s roughly $8 billion annual budget.” What does EPA do with all that money? “About half the EPA’s budget passes through to state and local governments for infrastructure projects and environmental cleanup efforts.” But that’s not all. The EPA also funnels money to researchers and even to private businesses in the form of grants. In other words, the EPA has been a gravy train for a good many people, and the train is about to come to a screeching halt…
Last year MDN told you about researchers in Argentina strapping methane backpacks on cows and hooking up hoses to their digestive tracts (reminding us of the Borg in Star Trek) in order to capture global warming methane emissions from bovines (see
The “best of the rest” – stories that caught MDN’s eye that you may be interested in reading. In today’s lineup: Managing fluids in the Marcellus/Utica; NY DEC gives $50K grants to enviro troublemakers; antis still not happy NY nuke shutting; training the next generation for o&g jobs in the Utica; how Trump’s Supreme Court pick could impact the Marcellus/Utica; Rex Tillerson confirmed as Sec State; Dems boycott Pruitt vote, stomp feet like babies; White House tries to ‘ease’ rattled EPA; NY Times says its readers are too dumb to understand global warming numbers; Japan may buy more U.S. energy; pipelines may face climate test in Europe; and more!
In December MDN reported on the huge West Virginia Supreme Court decision against driller EQT that disallows EQT from deducting post-production expenses from royalty checks, even with signed contracts in place (see
Yesterday CONSOL Energy released their fourth quarter 2016 results, along with a conference call to discuss those results. A few important items come out of yesterday’s activity. (1) The company lost $321 million in 4Q16. (2) CONSOL, originally a coal-only company, plans to either spin-off or sell the remaining coal assets it owns–this year–completing the process of transforming the company from coal to natural gas extraction. (3) CONSOL produced an average of 101.3 billion cubic feet equivalent of natural gas per day in 4Q16, up 6% from 4Q15. (4) The company shaved a dime off the costs to produce each thousand cubic feet (Mcf) of natgas–from $2.37/Mcf in 2015 to $2.27/Mcf in 2016. (5) Although the company lost money, the shale drilling business saw an increase in revenue in 4Q16 to $280.1 million (a 5.6% increase over 4Q15). (6) Although CONSOL has and continues to drill and complete wells in the Marcellus, their focus for new drilling is the Utica. Here’s the update…
MDN reported in September that American Electric Power is selling four electric generating plants to a newly formed joint venture of Blackstone and ArcLight Capital Partners (see
Finally, something is being done about draining the swamp that has been (until now) a rogue, out-of-control federal Environmental Protection Agency. As we previously reported, Trump could not have picked a better person to head the agency than Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt (see
The PBS “reporters” at the taxpayer-funded StateImpact Pennsylvania, like Marie Cusack, are as biased as bias gets. The frustrating thing is that they pretend to be journalists–pretend to be unbiased. They are, instead, radical leftists with an agenda, and it leaks through with every article. Some articles more than others. Take, for example, Cusack’s recent article railing against Donald Trump and his first days in office–and how poor enviro wackos have a fight on their hands. We thought it would be fun to append Cusack’s article with some truth, so you have the full context–to see what she leaves out. Enjoy!…
Recently a biased editorial ran in the biased Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, taking aim at methane. The editorial, penned by Brian O’Neill, misrepresented the facts about methane in PA, in an attempt to garner support for onerous new regulations put forward by Gov. Wolf’s Dept. of Environmental Protection. State Sen. Guy Reschenthaler, R-Jefferson Hills (representing parts of Allegheny County and Washington County), responded with his own editorial. To their credit, the Post-Gazette published it. Reschenthaler said the air is actually getting cleaner in PA, not dirtier, thanks to Marcellus Shale gas. And the new regulations being pedaled by Wolf will not make things better environmentally. The only thing the new regs will do is kill jobs…
As we reported yesterday, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) chairman Norman Bay has his knickers in a twist over getting a demotion by President Trump, who has named another sitting FERC Commissioner, Cheryl LaFleur, to become the chairwoman of FERC (see
World Oil calls itself “the premier trade publication for the international upstream industry.” Perhaps it is–who are we to say otherwise? The folks at World Oil have done us all a favor. They surveyed the upstream (i.e. drilling) oil and gas industry to find out what drillers are planning for 2017. Overall, they find drillers plan to drill 18,552 wells in North America this year–a big 26.8% jump from last year. In releasing a summary of the results, Wold Oil outlines region by region in the U.S. what they predict will happen this year, based on survey results. The northeast section caught our eye. World Oil predicts Pennsylvania will see a 29% increase in new well drilling this year (total of 774 new wells drilled). Ohio will see an increase of 19.1% in new well drilling (380 new wells). And West Virginia will see a big 21.9% increase (245 new wells). Here’s the full summary from World Oil…