Black & Veatch NatGas Industry Report: Optimism Reigns; Should It?
Black & Veatch, a global engineering, consulting, construction, and operations company that is a major player in the oil and gas market, has just-released a new report: 2016 Strategic Directions: Natural Gas Industry Report (see a copy below). The new report tackles market outlooks for the upstream, midstream and downstream segments. One of the sections that caught our eye: power market opportunities, which explores how coal plant retirements and lower operating dispatch costs have moved natural gas to its place as the primary energy source in the United States. Also in the report, the attitudes of those working in the industry is optimistic. But the report authors issue a note of caution: “Yet, this optimism may be masking some substantial warning signs, particularly for upstream and midstream players. Tight controls on capital investments, tied to the low margins inherent in today’s pricing environment, have constrained new projects. Lower crude oil prices have revitalized petrochemical projects in the downstream sector, particularly in international markets, but investors still question long-term viability. This raises a key question for how organizations are, or are not, positioned to take advantage of an eventual pricing correction.” In other words, drillers and pipeline companies shouldn’t be popping the cork on the champagne bottle just yet. Here’s the fifth annual natgas update from B&V…
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Carrizo Oil & Gas, a Houston-based driller, actively drills in the Eagle Ford Shale in South Texas, the Delaware Basin in West Texas, the Niobrara Formation in Colorado, and until mid-year in 2015, they did have an active drilling program in the Ohio Utica and Pennsylvania Marcellus. No more. They haven’t drilled in Appalachia since 3Q15. That trend continues. It seems other plays have lured Carrizo’s heart, and money. Yesterday the company announced it is floating 6 million new shares of stock, hoping to raise $225 million. The reason? To buy another 15,000 acres of leases–in the Eagle Ford oil play in Texas. Once again Carrizo ignores the Mighty Marcellus. Their loss. Here’s an update on new stock and a new land deal in the Lone Star State…
A couple of legal beagles from the Fox Rothschild law firm (in NJ) are sounding the alarm that two bankruptcy court decisions in New York State are threatening to up-end the midstream industry across the country. We tend to agree with them. Earlier this year, MDN brought you the news that a NY bankrutpcy court judge had allowed Sabine Oil & Gas, going through bankruptcy, to cancel a pipeline gathering contract with Cheniere’s Nordheim Eagle Ford Gathering in Texas (see 
The “best of the rest” – stories that caught MDN’s eye that you may be interested in reading. In today’s lineup: Getting the nextgen into the oilfield in OH; PA destructive new energy policies; energy groups slam Obama over Dakota pipeline; drillers tapping DUCs; and more!
Stone Energy, an independent oil and natural gas exploration and production company (E&P) headquartered in Lafayette, Louisiana drills mainly in the Gulf of Mexico but also has a presence in the Marcellus/Utica Shale with 90,000 acres of leases. Last year Stone quit drilling in the northeast and actually shut-in part of their production due to low prices (see
Tim Greene is owner of Land & Mineral Management of Appalachia and a former West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection inspector. He knows a thing or two about leasing and drilling in the Mountain State. As part of a recent article, Greene was asked about the many leases signed five years ago that are coming up for renewal (or release). Greene said five years ago landowners in WV and OH were getting signing bonuses of $5,000 per acre and more, with royalties going as high as 20%. As those leases come up for renewal, Greene cautions landowners that they won’t see anywhere near those terms if they sign again. What will they see?…
We’ve written a number of stories about Pennsylvania House Bill (HB) 1391 that would guarantee landowners receive a 12.5% minimum royalty on the gas extracted from their land, regardless of post-production costs. The issue has led to what MDN calls a civil war between landowners (particularly in Bradford County, PA) and the drilling industry. The clock is ticking and this week is it for this legislative session in PA. If supporters of HB 1391 don’t get the bill passed this week, it will have to be reintroduced and go through the entire process again next year. Supporters like Doug McLinko, a Bradford County commissioner, have warned of serious consequences for the industry if the bill doesn’t get passed. The industry appears to have convinced enough lawmakers to keep the bill bottled up so it doesn’t come to the floor for a vote, which riles landowners. HB 1391’s supporters in the legislature are sounding like it’s already over for this year, and that they will have to fight again next year. We’re concerned what this ongoing situation will do for what has, in the past, been good relations between landowners and drillers. That relationship appears to be souring, at least for some landowners…
Inspired by the criminal actions of eco-terrorists in North Dakota (see
The Ohio Oil & Gas Association’s (OOGA) director of public relations recently attended and spoke at a meeting of the Columbiana County Port Auhority. His words for Columbiana County? Drilling will (eventually) return to the county in bigger numbers. He said drilling has never really stopped in the county–it’s just slowed down, a lot. But that trend will reverse sooner or later. The county is blessed with wet gas, but wet gas (natural gas liquids, or NGLs) has currently fallen out of favor. That too shall pass. Here’s a bit of the pep talk OOGA gave at the meeting, with a good description of Utica drilling in Columbiana County and the many benefits of drilling in the county…
Last week Jason Pigott, vice president of operations for Chesapeake Energy, addressed analysts at a conference and disclosed that the company ran an experiment by pumping 25,000 tons (i.e. 50 million pounds) of sand down a single shale well bore. Incredible! And they found by doing so that output from the well was 70% higher than it normally would have been. Sand acts as a proppant to “prop open” cracks and holes in the fractured rock, allowing gas trapped in small pockets to escape. Chessy is calling the experiment “propageddon.” Catchy. At the conference Pigott said, “What we’re doing is unleashing hell on every gas molecule downhole.” Strong words! The well they tried it with is located in Louisiana. We highlight this story because what they learn there will no doubt come to the Marcellus/Utica as well…
Two weeks ago MDN told you that TransCanada is attempting to block Marcellus/Utica gas from entering the eastern Canadian market by lowballing pipeline transportation costs from western Canada (see
Here’s a story you have to go to a non-US (i.e. objective) newspaper to find. Stephen Tindale is a “lifelong green” and once ran the organization Greenpeace, for five years. He’s written and published an op-ed in the UK Sun titled, “As a lifelong Green, I’M convinced fracking’s the only solution to energy problems.” You read that right! Here’s someone with a brain–someone willing to open his mind and willing to objectively view the evidence before his eyes. And what does he see? Fracking shale formations is the answer, not the problem. Here’s what he said last week…
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce recently launched a “What If…?” series to counter the radical “keep it in the ground” movement–a movement that irrationally hates the use of fossil fuels. In August the Chamber released their first such report, titled “What If…Energy Production was Banned on Federal Lands and Waters?” (see
Events related to drilling in the Marcellus and Utica Shale, primarily pro-drilling.