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Marcellus Drilling News
  • Anti-Drilling/Fossil Fuel | Energy Services | Industrywide Issues | Litigation | Pennsylvania | Pipelines | Statewide PA | Sunoco Logistics

    Desperate Antis Try One Last Legal Maneuver to Stop Mariner East 2

    December 21, 2016December 21, 2016

    You may recall our story about the daughter of a Huntingdon County, PA landowner, radicalized by Big Green groups (as evidenced by her association with well known protesters previously arrested), who took to a tree on her mom’s property in order to illegally stop crews working on tree clearing for the Mariner East 2 pipeline (see PA Anti Literally Goes Up a Tree to Stop Mariner East 2 Pipeline). It ultimately didn’t matter, because Sunoco came back and cut down the few trees they need to cut anyway (see Sunoco Tricks Radicalized Protester – Returns and Cuts More Trees). Eventually law enforcement got around to arresting the daughter, and the mom (who also trespassed during tree clearing). Law enforcement also arrested a serial criminal trespasser/anti who aided and radicalized them. Unfortunately, in a miscarriage of justice, the charges against all three were dropped (see Charges Dismissed Against Tree Sitting Anti in Huntingdon County). The up-a-tree girl and her mom, with backing by Big Green money, continue to litigate. They are being used by Big Green, and fossil fuel-hating Big Green lawyers for the mom and daughter think they’ve found a clever legal tactic to stop Mariner East 2–not just from their property, but from being built across the state period. It is their final “hail Mary” pass…
    Read More “Desperate Antis Try One Last Legal Maneuver to Stop Mariner East 2”

  • Baker Hughes | Energy Services | Ohio | Pennsylvania | Statewide OH | Statewide PA | Statewide WV | West Virginia

    Cool Tool Shows Where Working Rigs are Located in M-U

    December 21, 2016December 21, 2016

    The GoMarcellusShale Forum where landowners and others interested in shale drilling hang out and swap messages back and forth was recently updated to become ShaleForum.com. It’s an excellent site with lots of great chatter going on for those with an interest in shale-related matters, including a very active Marcellus/Utica discussion. One of those discussions recently caught our eye. A poster on ShaleForum provided a link to an interactive map application hosted by Baker Hughes. We had not previously seen the app and found it to be very useful. The app shows where all of the active rigs currently drilling are located–across the entire country. You can filter the app to show only states or regions you are interested in. We played with it a bit to show you maps for PA, WV and OH where shale rigs are currently located…
    Read More “Cool Tool Shows Where Working Rigs are Located in M-U”

  • Best of the Rest

    Marcellus & Utica Shale Story Links: Wed, Dec 21, 2016

    December 21, 2016December 21, 2016

    The “best of the rest” – stories that caught MDN’s eye that you may be interested in reading. In today’s lineup: Drilling facts ignored; Pittsburgh law firms adjust to down energy market; PA firms poised to benefit from Shell cracker plant; o&g 2016 year in review; ten things to know about EPA’s final fracking/groundwater report; natural gas price in denial; China’s LNG imports hit record high, again; and more!
    Read More “Marcellus & Utica Shale Story Links: Wed, Dec 21, 2016”

  • Eclipse Resources | Energy Companies | Monroe County | Noble County | Ohio

    Eclipse Sells 9,900 “Non-Core” Acres in OH for $6,444/Acre

    December 20, 2016December 20, 2016

    Eclipse Resources, a Marcellus/Utica pure play driller headquartered in State College, PA that drills mostly in Ohio, announced yesterday they sold 9,900 net acres in eastern Noble County and western Monroe County, OH for $63.8 million to an undisclosed buyer. That works out to be $6,444 per acre. The assets are in areas that are (currently) undeveloped, according to the company, and not in the “core” of where Eclipse wants to drill. Here’s the company announcement…
    Read More “Eclipse Sells 9,900 “Non-Core” Acres in OH for $6,444/Acre”

  • Eclipse Resources | Energy Companies | Flat Rock Development | Gulfport Energy | Lease & Royalty Payments | Ohio | Statewide OH

    OH Wayne National Forest – List of Auction Winners

    December 20, 2016January 6, 2017

    As we previously noted, last week the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) proceeded with an online auction for BLM-controlled land in Ohio’s Wayne National Forest (see BLM Auction Leases 17 Parcels, 719 Acres in OH Wayne Natl Forest). The BLM plan was to auction 33 parcels totaling 1,600 acres. As it turns out, only 17 parcels totaling 719 acres actually got auctioned. At the last minute the BLM withdrew 881 acres (16 parcels) because there are remaining issues with ownership title of the mineral rights. Who purchased and how much? Just four drillers won the bids, which totaled $1.7 million. Three of the four have active drilling programs in the Utica Shale. Here is who won, and how much they paid (by parcel)…
    Read More “OH Wayne National Forest – List of Auction Winners”

  • Energy Services | Industrywide Issues | Kinder Morgan | Pipelines | Regulation

    KM Files to Reverse Louisiana Pipe, Send Marcellus Gas to Gulf

    December 20, 2016December 20, 2016

    Seems like every few weeks we read about yet another pipeline either getting built, or reversed, in order to send Marcellus/Utica gas to other parts of the country. The latest one that surprised us (hadn’t heard of it before) is Kinder Morgan’s plan to add bidirectional capacity to their Kinder Morgan Louisiana pipeline (KMLP) to flow gas to Cheniere Energy’s Sabine Pass LNG export facility. KMLP is a pipeline in Louisiana–how does reversing it get Marcellus gas to Sabine Pass? As you might have guessed, KMLP connects with other pipeline systems, including Columbia Gulf Transmission and ANR Pipeline. Both of those pipeline systems, which flow Marcellus gas, are adding bidirectional capacity as well. When it’s all done, (more of) our gas will head to Sabine Pass for liquefaction and then export to other countries. How cool is that? Here’s an update on KMLP changing directions…
    Read More “KM Files to Reverse Louisiana Pipe, Send Marcellus Gas to Gulf”

  • Enbridge | Energy Services | Industrywide Issues | M&A | Spectra Energy

    Spectra, Enbridge Shareholders Approve $28B Merger

    December 20, 2016December 20, 2016
    Combined infrastructure – click for a larger version

    In September MDN told you about the proposed deal by Canadian pipeline operator Enbridge Inc. to buy out pipeline operator Spectra Energy (based in Houston) in an all-stock deal (see Canadian Enbridge Buying US Spectra Energy for $28B). Spectra has a number of critical pipeline infrastructure projects under way or planned in the Marcellus/Utica region, including the planned Access Northeast pipeline to New England, the mighty NEXUS pipeline planned to span Ohio, the currently under construction Algonquin Incremental Marketing (AIM) pipeline project, and three projects (Access South, Adair Southwest and Lebanon Express) under way to expand one of the largest natural gas pipelines in the U.S. (and in the northeast)–the Texas Eastern Transmission (Tetco) pipeline. This is a big deal for our region. Last week the shareholders of both companies voted to approve the proposed buyout/merger. Provided everything goes according to plan, the marriage will take place in 1Q17…
    Read More “Spectra, Enbridge Shareholders Approve $28B Merger”

  • Chesapeake Energy | Energy Companies

    Chesapeake Energy Out of Bankruptcy Danger, Hedges for 2017

    December 20, 2016December 20, 2016

    In a rare sit-down interview, Chesapeake Energy’s CEO, Doug “the ax” Lawler told reporters the company is stable, strong and growing, and that is will not need to file for bankruptcy, as many had predicted would happen. Through hard work (and axing thousands of employees) Chesapeake has managed to cut an astonishing $10.9 billion worth of debt and leverage from its balance sheet. Hats off to Lawler. Total debt for the company has gone from $21 billion to $9 billion. At its height, Chessy employed 13,000 people. Today? Just 3,500 people. Hence our moniker for Lawler of “the ax” (see Chesapeake’s Doug Lawler Gave Himself a Raise After Firing 1,500+). As part of the “new” Chesapeake, the company recently dumped its old logo and replaced it with a butt-ugly new logo (see Chesapeake Energy Gets New Logo – Dumps Blue NatGas Flame). Chessy plans to stay out of the bankruptcy woods. They’ve cut deals to sell 2017 estimated production at pre-arranged prices (called hedging). Chesapeake has hedged 63% of its estimated 2017 natural gas production for a sale price of $3.07 per thousand cubic feet (Mcf). They’ve hedge 50% of their estimated oil production at $49.68 per barrel. Here’s an update on Chesapeake Energy’s exit from bankruptcy woods…
    Read More “Chesapeake Energy Out of Bankruptcy Danger, Hedges for 2017”

  • Anti-Drilling/Fossil Fuel | Dominion Energy | Energy Services | Industrywide Issues | NEXUS Pipeline | Pipelines | Regulation

    Sierra Club Targets Marcellus Pipe Projects Using Antitrust Laws

    December 20, 2016December 20, 2016

    The litigious and environmentally radical Sierra Club, backed by Big Green money from billionaires like Tom Steyer, is attempting to block two important pipeline projects in the Marcellus: Dominion’s $5 billion, 594-mile Atlantic Coast Pipeline (ACP), a natural gas pipeline that will stretch from West Virginia through Virginia and into North Carolina; and DTE Energy/Spectra Energy’s NEXUS Pipeline, a $2 billion, 255-mile interstate pipeline that will run from Ohio through Michigan and eventually to the Dawn Hub in Ontario, Canada. It’s no secret groups like the Sierra Club have tried to stop such projects. But their latest strategy in opposing these two projects is worthy of examination. The Clubbers are claiming that ACP and NEXUS have an unfair competitive advantage over alternative energy sources, like wind and solar, and therefore should be stopped. That is, the Sierra Club is attempting to use U.S. antitrust laws dating back to the late 1800s in an attempt to claim these pipelines are anti-competitive and therefore should be canceled. Talk about chutzpah…
    Read More “Sierra Club Targets Marcellus Pipe Projects Using Antitrust Laws”

  • Energy Services | Industrywide Issues | NEXUS Pipeline | Pipelines

    NEXUS Pipeline Gets a President – Jim Grech

    December 20, 2016December 20, 2016
    James “Jim” Grech

    The NEXUS Pipeline project is a $2 billion, 255-mile interstate pipeline that will run from Ohio through Michigan and eventually to the Dawn Hub in Ontario, Canada. It is a critically needed pipeline to move Utica and Marcellus Shale gas from an over-saturated market in the northeast to markets in the Midwest and Canada. It is a joint venture between DTE Energy and Spectra Energy. Earlier this month we brought you the great news that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) has approved the project (see FERC Approves NEXUS Pipeline, Project on Track for 2017). As we get close to beginning construction, which will happen sometime early next year, the project needs a leader. It now has one. James “Jim” Grech, formerly an executive vice president at CONSOL Energy, is the new president of NEXUS Pipeline…
    Read More “NEXUS Pipeline Gets a President – Jim Grech”

  • CNG/LNG | Energy Services | Exporting | Industrywide Issues | Kinder Morgan | Regulation

    Elba Island LNG Update: Non-FTA Exports Approved, Dump Truck City

    December 20, 2016December 20, 2016
    Elba Island LNG

    Kinder Morgan’s Elba Island, Georgia (near Savannah) proposed LNG export facility received a green light from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) in June (see KM’s Elba Island LNG Export Plant Approved by FERC). Kinder has since started construction at the site. Further good news: the U.S. Dept. of Energy has just granted Elba Island permission to export LNG to non-Free Trade Agreement countries. What does the Georgia’s Elba LNG plant have to do with Marcellus/Utica? The Williams Transco pipeline runs through Georgia. Kinder owns and operates the 200-mile Elba Express pipeline, which connects the LNG facility to the Transco. Currently Elba Island imports LNG, getting it to market via the Transco. However, Williams has been on a mission to send Marcellus gas south–including to Georgia (see Marcellus Gas Heading to Georgia via Transco Pipeline). Marcellus Shale gas will, via the Transco, be at least some of, if not the primary, source for gas exported from the Elba Island facility. After getting FERC approval, Kinder began work on the expansion project last month. Currently some 325 dump trucks come and go every day at the site (7,800 per month!). Below is the news about DOE granting permission for non-FTA exports to Elba, along with an update on the frenetic pace of activity to build the new facility…
    Read More “Elba Island LNG Update: Non-FTA Exports Approved, Dump Truck City”

  • CNG/LNG | Energy Companies | Exporting | Industrywide Issues | Total

    French Supermajor Total Buys 23% Stake in Tellurian LNG

    December 20, 2016December 20, 2016
    Charif Souki

    Total, a French multinational integrated oil and gas company and one of the six “Supermajor” oil companies in the world, has just purchased a 23% stake in Tellurian Investments for $207 million. Tellurian is building the Driftwood LNG export facility in southern Louisiana (see Fired Cheniere Energy CEO Charif Souki’s Revenge: Driftwood LNG). Tellurian CEO Charif Souki was fired one year ago this month by Carl Icahan from Cheniere Energy, the LNG exporting company he co-founded (see Evil Corporate Raider Carl Icahn Claims Another CEO Scalp). We used to feel bad for Souki, but no more–not since he made an ass of himself by saying in a CNBC interview he would reconsider his American citizenship if Donald Trump won the presidency (see Will Charif Souki Renounce His American Citizenship?). We’re still waiting for Souki to go back to his native Egypt–or perhaps now, to France. That would be fitting. At any rate, here’s the details on Total investing in Souki’s Tellurian investments, which is a play to get in on the hot LNG export action in the U.S….
    Read More “French Supermajor Total Buys 23% Stake in Tellurian LNG”

  • Best of the Rest

    Marcellus & Utica Shale Story Links: Tue, Dec 20, 2016

    December 20, 2016December 20, 2016

    The “best of the rest” – stories that caught MDN’s eye that you may be interested in reading. In today’s lineup: OH Utica Shale counties to watch in 2017; rig count keeps climbing in PA; Cheniere’s Corpus Christi project close to 50% done; Gulf oil rigs stagnate as shale rigs increase; a December to remember for natgas; Halliburton 2016 in review; Aramco snapping up refineries may end under Trump; and more!
    Read More “Marcellus & Utica Shale Story Links: Tue, Dec 20, 2016”

  • Air Quality | Beaver County | Energy Companies | Ethane | Industrywide Issues | Pennsylvania | Processing Plants | Regulation | Shell | Statewide PA

    Shell Seeks to Horse Trade Air Pollution Credits for Cracker Plant

    December 19, 2016December 19, 2016

    In June 2015, a full year ahead of Shell’s final investment decision (FID) to build a multi-billion dollar ethane cracker plant complex in Beaver County, PA, the PA Dept. of Environmental Protection issued the project air quality permits–which was a “critical” requirement for Shell before making their decision (see Shell Receives Air Quality Permit from PA DEP for Cracker Plant). Two months later, two litigious Big Green environmental groups with deep pockets–the Philadelphia-based Clean Air Council and the Washington, DC-based Environmental Integrity Project–tried to scuttle the project by appealing the DEP’s issuance of the air quality permits (see Big Green Groups File to Block Shell Cracker Air Quality Permit). Fortunately the DEP blew off the Big Green appeal. However, the issue of air pollution is not yet totally resolved. In order for Shell to build the plant–a plant that will have a fair amount of emissions–they need to buy pollution credits from other plants. That is, if other plants are installing new air pollution controls, or shutting down, Shell can buy their emissions allotments, and use them for the cracker project. In the end, it’s all about controlling how much of the nasty stuff, like volatile organic compounds (VOCs) gets pumped into the air in a given region. But there’s a problem. Shell can’t find enough VOC credits to buy, so they’re proposing a deal with the DEP to buy a different kind of credit instead–NOx or nitrogen oxides. Will the DEP allow Shell to horse trade NOx for VOCs? That’s the billion dollar question…
    Read More “Shell Seeks to Horse Trade Air Pollution Credits for Cracker Plant”

  • Energy Services | Industrywide Issues | Pipelines | Rockies Express Pipeline | Tallgrass Energy

    REX Pipeline Adds Yet More Capacity, Now Flowing Extra 450 MMcf/d

    December 19, 2016December 19, 2016

    Last Wednesday MDN (via a story from NGI) brought you the good news that the Rockies Express Pipeline (REX) had begun to flow an extra 200 million cubic feet per day (MMcf/d) of natural gas from East to West along the pipeline–moving more Utica and Marcellus gas from Ohio to places like the Chicago area (see Reversed REX Pipeline Goes from 1.8 Bcf to 2.0 Bcf). REX previously filed a plan with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to add another 800 million cubic feet per day (MMcf/d) of capacity along the reversed portion of the pipeline. In late November, FERC gave REX the go-ahead to start additional compressors added at three locations along the route. The plan is to have all of the extra 800 MMcf/d flowing by the end of this year. On Wednesday, as we noted, 200 MMcf/d of additional capacity kicked in. Then on Friday, NGI reported another 250 MMcf/d was added, meaning 450 MMcf/d was added to REX’s capacity in a single week. That’s another 450 MMcf/d of yummy, clean-burning fracked Utica/Marcellus shale gas flowing to the Midwest that wasn’t a week ago. We love it when a plan comes together…
    Read More “REX Pipeline Adds Yet More Capacity, Now Flowing Extra 450 MMcf/d”

  • Industrywide Issues | Litigation | Pennsylvania | Regulation | Statewide PA

    PA Drillers Don’t Have to Plug Old Wells Before Fracking, For Now

    December 19, 2016December 19, 2016

    On Oct. 8, after five years in the making, Pennsylvania adopted new shale drilling regulations (see PA’s New Chapter 78a Drilling Regs Go into Effect Oct 8). Although the regs were ready at the end of the Gov. Tom Corbett Administration, Corbett fumbled the ball and the regs didn’t get adopted, which left them vulnerable to the incoming left-leaning Tom Wolf. Wolf’s people mangled the regulations under the Dept. of Environmental Protection Dictator/Secretary John Quigley, who got fired over unethical collusion with Big Green groups (see Smoking Gun: Copy of the Email that Got John Quigley Fired). Some of the good stuff remained, but onerous new elements were introduced. One of the onerous new regulations has to do with abandoned and orphaned wells. PA is dotted with hundreds of thousands of oil and gas wells drilled since the first well drilled in 1859. The problem is that the state has only mapped and is aware of under 10,000 of those wells. If a driller happens to horizontally drill through one of those old wells, water and chemicals (more likely methane) can take an express elevator to the surface and come out where it shouldn’t–perhaps contaminating water supplies, among other unfortunate outcomes. The new Chapter 78a regulations attempted to handle the situation by requiring drillers to map and plan for how they will avoid that outcome–by avoiding and plugging any abandoned or orphaned wells up to 1,500 feet away. The problem for drillers is that they often do not own the lease rights and have no legal right to enter land up to 1,500 feet away to conduct surveys and plug wells–a catch 22 situation. And plugging a well isn’t cheap. Should drillers today have to pay for something someone else did decades ago? The Marcellus Shale Coalition (MSC), on behalf of its shale drilling members, sued to stop abandoned well provision (along with several other provisions), which a judge agreed to do, at least for now until a full trial can decide the issue (see PA Judge Temporarily Blocks Some DEP Chapter 78a Drilling Regs). The judge put a temporary order blocking the abandoned/orphaned well provision in November, and upheld that block again in December. For the time being, Marcellus drillers do not have to map and plug old wells that don’t belong to them…
    Read More “PA Drillers Don’t Have to Plug Old Wells Before Fracking, For Now”

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