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Marcellus Drilling News
  • Coterra Energy (Cabot O&G) | Energy Companies | Hydraulic Fracturing | Industrywide Issues | M&A

    Coterra Buys More Permian Acreage, Automates Fracking with AI

    January 9, 2025January 9, 2025

    We have two stories about Coterra Energy to share. Coterra was formed in 2021 by the merger of the Marcellus-focused Cabot Oil & Gas and the Permian/Anadarko-focused Cimarex Energy. Unfortunately (for the M-U), the merged company has chosen to concentrate new drilling outside of the northeast Pennsylvania Marcellus until the price of natgas improves (see Coterra Expands Curtailments in Marcellus, Drilling & Fracking Stop). Last November, the company announced it would buy “certain assets of Franklin Mountain Energy and Avant Natural Resources” located in the Permian (see Siren Song: Coterra Energy Buys Permian Assets for $4 Billion). Now comes word via an SEC filing that Coterra is spending $43 million to buy another 1,670 net royalty acres from Franklin Mountain Energy in the Permian. Read More “Coterra Buys More Permian Acreage, Automates Fracking with AI”

  • Commodity Price | Industrywide Issues

    2024 NatGas Prices “Put Through the Wringer” – Lowest Spot Price EVER

    January 9, 2025January 9, 2025

    We have a post-mortem for the price of natural gas in 2024, and it ain’t pretty. With respect to the “front month” NYMEX futures price average during 2024, BofA (Bank of America) Global Research said in a report that the Henry Hub natural gas price averaged just $2.41 per MMBtu last year. It was “the lowest level since 2020 and second lowest level in at least 25 years.” Ouch. The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) did a review of the Henry Hub spot (physically traded) price for 2024 and found it averaged $2.21 per MMBtu. That’s the lowest average annual price in inflation-adjusted dollars EVER reported. Double ouch. Read More “2024 NatGas Prices “Put Through the Wringer” – Lowest Spot Price EVER”

  • Anti-Drilling/Fossil Fuel | ESG | Industrywide Issues

    Largest Bank in U.S. Drops Out of UN’s Net Zero Banking Alliance

    January 9, 2025January 9, 2025

    Last week, MDN brought you the great news that five of the six largest banks in the United States have now canceled their memberships in the awful Net Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA), a group of woke banks under the umbrella of the equally terrible United Nations (see U.S. Big Banks Drop Out of the UN’s Net Zero Banking Alliance). Our country’s largest bank, JPMorgan Chase, was still a member of the NZBA. We said, “We wonder when (not if) JPMorgan will resign its membership.” Prescient. Yesterday, JPMorgan announced it was leaving the NZBA, too. Read More “Largest Bank in U.S. Drops Out of UN’s Net Zero Banking Alliance”

  • Best of the Rest

    Other Stories of Interest: Thu, Jan 9, 2025

    January 9, 2025January 9, 2025

    OTHER U.S. REGIONS: Texas oil, natural gas industry breaks record with $27.3B paid in taxes, royalties; Report from seven New England states outlines “staggering costs” of green energy policies; NATIONAL: Energy sector goes from S&P 500’s ‘worst to first’ in 2025 start; How Madoff’s Ponzi beneficiaries are funding climate lawfare; INTERNATIONAL: Oil slips below $74 amid resistance at key technical level; European imports of liquefied natural gas from Russia at ‘record levels’. Read More “Other Stories of Interest: Thu, Jan 9, 2025”

  • Electrical Generation | Industrywide Issues | Litigation | Pipelines

    DC Circuit Sides with FERC Approval of 24-Mile Gas Pipe in Indiana

    January 8, 2025January 8, 2025

    In June 2021, MDN told you about CenterPoint Energy, a power generator looking to shutter portions of its coal-fired generation fleet and build two natural gas combustion turbines in Indiana (see Will New 460 MW Gas-Fired Plant in Indiana Get Approved?). The two units would provide a combined 460 megawatts (MW) of electricity as a backup to CenterPoint’s wind, solar, and battery storage. Antis tried to strangle the project by challenging a 24-mile pipeline that would feed it (see Antis Attack Pipe Expansion to Feed NatGas to Indiana Power Plants). Finally, after nearly four years and multiple appeals, a three-judge panel of the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals issued a decision yesterday that sided with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) in an appeal of the agency’s decision approving the pipeline. In other words, FERC was correct to approve it, and now (finally) the project can go forward. Read More “DC Circuit Sides with FERC Approval of 24-Mile Gas Pipe in Indiana”

  • Anti-Drilling/Fossil Fuel | Electrical Generation | Industrywide Issues

    “Green” New England Burns NatGas, Coal, Oil to Keep the Lights On

    January 8, 2025January 8, 2025

    Liberal New England, one of the bluest (Democrat) areas of the country, continues to do the opposite of what they preach. For years, New England states like Massachusetts, Vermont, and Connecticut have blocked new natural gas pipelines that would carry Marcellus molecules from a few hundred miles away into their states, claiming they seek to phase out fossil energy to be more “green.” Yet, as of this morning, 41% of the electricity flowing through New England’s grid comes from fossil fuels—natural gas (33%), oil (7%), and coal (1%). Another 4% comes from burning garbage and wood, which emits as much or more carbon dioxide as fossil fuels! How much electricity is being produced from solar and wind right now in New England? A piddly 9%. Read More ““Green” New England Burns NatGas, Coal, Oil to Keep the Lights On”

  • Alternative Energy | Electrical Generation | Industrywide Issues

    Canceled Conn. Gas-Fired Plant Blocking Battery Plant at Same Site

    January 8, 2025January 8, 2025

    Here’s a story in the karma-is-a-boomerang department… In July 2019, the Connecticut Siting Council approved the Killingly Energy Center gas-fired power plant project after initially rejecting it (see Connecticut Approves New Natgas-Fired Electric Plant in Killingly). The Killingly project would have built a 650-megawatt gas-fired plant in eastern Connecticut. The Siting Council recognized that some 6,000 megawatts of older, less-efficient power plants in the region are retiring, and without new plants coming online to provide electricity, Connecticut and its neighboring New England states will begin to experience rolling blackouts without new supplies of electricity. Yet the radical left blocked Killingly with a flurry of lawsuits and regulatory challenges. Now, an Israeli firm wants to build a battery farm at the same location but can’t because the site was authorized to build the gas-fired plant, and the authorization (permit/certificate) for Killingly is still valid and not rescinded. Read More “Canceled Conn. Gas-Fired Plant Blocking Battery Plant at Same Site”

  • CNG/LNG | Commodity Price | Exporting | Industrywide Issues

    U.S. Natural Gas Markets (and Prices) Now Linked with Rest of World

    January 8, 2025January 8, 2025

    According to CME Group, the worldwide natural gas market has evolved, and trading activity has grown in the past few years. The trading volume of Henry Hub Natural Gas (NG) futures during non-U.S. hours has more than doubled from a couple of years ago. We are truly interconnected worldwide. However, there are implications and consequences to being interconnected. Namely, the U.S. gas market is less shielded from global events due to the global linkage created by our LNG exports. It becomes imperative for U.S. gas traders to understand and monitor what’s happening around the globe and how world events may cause volatility. Traders need to monitor for sudden shifts in global demand-and-supply balance, changes in weather patterns, and geopolitical risk. Read More “U.S. Natural Gas Markets (and Prices) Now Linked with Rest of World”

  • Industrywide Issues | Weather

    Wind, Not a Carbon Dioxide Canopy, Controls Temps on Mother Earth

    January 8, 2025January 8, 2025

    At its core, the theory of man-made global warming (renamed to “climate change”) is easy to understand. The theory says when we burn fossil fuels (or wood, or garbage, or any carbon-based source), carbon dioxide is released and floats up into the atmosphere. If there’s too much CO2 floating up there, it creates a canopy trapping the heat that rises from the earth, warming the entire planet. If it’s true that more CO2 creates a canopy, the question becomes, how much is too much CO2? Strong arguments are made that a slightly warmer planet benefits all life and is not necessarily a bad thing. However, a veteran energy analyst, in responding to the memes that natural gas should be phased out due to fear of global warming, offers a blunt assessment: CO2 is not the key factor that controls the temperatures we experience on the surface of our planet. The key factor is wind. Read More “Wind, Not a Carbon Dioxide Canopy, Controls Temps on Mother Earth”

  • Electrical Generation | Industrywide Issues

    CO2 from Gas-Fired Plants Record High, Yet Overall Emissions Down

    January 8, 2025January 8, 2025

    For the first time, over 1 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) was discharged from U.S. gas-fired power plants in a single year in 2024. It marks a new pollution threshold for the world’s largest gas producer and consumer of natural gas. Yet, because natgas has replaced coal and other higher-polluting sources of electric power, U.S. power emissions from all fossil fuels were up only 0.5% in 2024 from 2023, to 1.64 billion tons. And get this: Overall emissions from all sources were down 19% last year versus 2015. Using natural gas to produce electricity makes the country “greener,” something the media ignores. Read More “CO2 from Gas-Fired Plants Record High, Yet Overall Emissions Down”

  • About MDN

    MDN Editor Jim Willis Interviewed on The Crude Life Podcast (Video)

    January 8, 2025January 8, 2025

    We’re not much into self-promotion, likely to our detriment. Jim doesn’t like the limelight. However, every now and again, Jim agrees to be interviewed on podcasts, radio shows, etc. Yesterday was one of those days. Jason Spiess, founder and producer of The Crude Life podcast, asked to interview Jim about what’s happening in the Marcellus/Utica, especially in New York State with Gov. Hochul’s recent effort to bill oil and gas companies $75 billion. We discussed a variety of issues affecting the Appalachian region. Below is that 47-minute interview. Read More “MDN Editor Jim Willis Interviewed on The Crude Life Podcast (Video)”

  • Best of the Rest

    Other Stories of Interest: Wed, Jan 8, 2025

    January 8, 2025January 8, 2025

    OTHER U.S. REGIONS: Exxon sues California AG, environmental groups over ‘smear’; NATIONAL: U.S. DOE picks nine organizations for energy democracy initiative pilot; WTI climbs as U.S. freeze fuels demand; Brent crude oil prices traded in a narrow range in 2024; Trump says he will oppose new wind projects in second term; Trump’s going places with energy, but Biden’s the backseat driver; INTERNATIONAL: Europe races to refill as gas reserves dwindle. Read More “Other Stories of Interest: Wed, Jan 8, 2025”

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

    No Change in M-U, Nat’l Baker Hughes Rig Counts 2nd Week in a Row

    January 7, 2025January 7, 2025

    The venerable Baker Hughes national rig count was 589 active rigs last week—which is FIVE weeks in a row. Very unusual. The Marcellus/Utica rig count was a combined 34 last week—the same number for FOUR weeks in a row. The national count remains rangebound between 581 and 589 since June 2024 (except for Sep. 13, when it hit 590 for a single week). The M-U remained static last week, with PA at 15 rigs, OH at 9 rigs, and WV at 10 rigs. Read More “No Change in M-U, Nat’l Baker Hughes Rig Counts 2nd Week in a Row”

  • Berkshire Hathaway | Centre County | Clinton County | Energy Services | Franklin County | Industrywide Issues | Loudoun County | Pennsylvania | Pipelines | Regulation | Virginia

    BHE’s Eastern Gas Pipe Proposes Expansion to Flow M-U Gas to D.C.

    January 7, 2025January 7, 2025

    It’s always a red-letter day here at MDN HQ when we happen across a new pipeline project in the Marcellus/Utica region. Today is one of those days! Eastern Gas Transmission and Storage, a subsidiary of billionaire Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Energy (BHE), filed a new project with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) in December to beef up three existing compressor stations in Centre County, Clinton County, and Franklin County in Pennsylvania, and one existing compressor station in Loudoun County, Virginia, with the aim of flowing more Marcellus molecules to the Washington, D.C. area. Read More “BHE’s Eastern Gas Pipe Proposes Expansion to Flow M-U Gas to D.C.”

  • Hydrogen | Industrywide Issues | Ohio | Pennsylvania | Regulation | Statewide OH | Statewide PA | Statewide WV | West Virginia

    Register Support for M-U Hydrogen Hub at Scoping Hearing or Online

    January 7, 2025January 7, 2025

    Last August, MDN told you that the Appalachian Regional Clean Hydrogen Hub (ARCH2) officially received its first $30 million from the Bidenistas (see EQT & Others Enter “Phase 1” of Hydrogen Hub; DOE Cuts $30M Check). ARCH2 is getting $925 million from a $7 billion pot. ARCH2, one of seven projects to win approval, was selected specifically because it will use Marcellus/Utica shale gas as the feedstock to create hydrogen (so-called “blue” hydrogen). The project got an official HQ last year at the West Virginia University (WVU) Innovation Corp. center in Morgantown, West Virginia (see ARCH2 Hydrogen Hub Gets an Official Headquarters in Morgantown, WV). Residents from WV, PA, and OH who want to register their concerns, opposition, or (most importantly) support for ARCH2 and the projects that are part of the plan can do so either at an online scoping hearing on Jan. 16 or by submitting comments via email (or in writing) by Mar. 3. Read More “Register Support for M-U Hydrogen Hub at Scoping Hearing or Online”

  • Duke Energy | Electrical Generation | Energy Services | Industrywide Issues | North Carolina | Regulation

    NC Approves Duke Energy Replacing Coal Plants with Natural Gas

    January 7, 2025January 7, 2025

    We’re just now learning the good news about decisions by two different North Carolina agencies to approve four new gas-fired power plants that utility giant Duke Energy wants to build at two different N.C. sites. In early December, the N.C. Utilities Commission issued orders deeming the gas plants necessary at both sites. Then, on Dec. 20, the N.C. Department of Environmental Quality granted air quality permits for the four plants. All four will be fed by Marcellus/Utica molecules and are important new customers for our gas. Read More “NC Approves Duke Energy Replacing Coal Plants with Natural Gas”

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