MDN’s Energy Stories of Interest: Mon, Apr 27, 2026
OTHER U.S. REGIONS: Q1 Dallas Fed energy survey gets update; NATIONAL: U.S. natural gas falls as market frets over storage; Climate shakedown lawsuits threaten U.S. energy dominance; Leftists fake tears about high energy prices, but ignore foreign-funded lawfare; INTERNATIONAL: Oil falls on renewed Iran talk hopes; Canada approves Enbridge’s $3 billion Westcoast gas-pipeline expansion; Hormuz crisis is ‘biggest energy disruption ever,’ Yergin says; The billion-barrel Hormuz oil shock is about to crash demand; Alternative routes for Middle East oil and gas to bypass the Strait of Hormuz. Read More “MDN’s Energy Stories of Interest: Mon, Apr 27, 2026”

The Marcellus/Utica region received 22 new drilling permits last week, Apr. 13 – 19, down 15 from the 37 issued two weeks ago. Pennsylvania issued 11 of last week’s permits. Ohio issued no new permits. And West Virginia issued the other 11 new permits last week. The drillers who received new permits last week included: Antero Resources, Arsenal Resources, CNX Resources, EQT, Expand Energy, JKLM Energy, Range Resources, Repsol Oil & Gas, and Seneca Resources.
Last November, the Buckeye Environmental Network, backed by lawyers from the controversial Earthjustice, sued the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) over permitting two new shale wastewater injection wells in the Marietta area, claiming the standard used to evaluate the wells was old and out-of-date (see
CNX Resources Corporation issued a press release yesterday to highlight its 2025 sustainability achievements, marking the first full year (2025) of “dynamic ESG reporting,” moving from annual reports to quarterly scorecards and continuous website updates. This approach, rooted in the company’s “Radical Transparency” philosophy and “Appalachia First” strategy, provides timely, transparent disclosures on environmental stewardship, including emissions data, expanded public notice of violations, and community investments.
The Golden Pass LNG terminal is a liquefied natural gas terminal and regasification facility in Sabine Pass (Port Arthur), Texas. It is among the largest LNG facilities in the world. It can accommodate up to 15.6 million metric tons (MT) of LNG per year, the equivalent of approximately 2 billion cubic feet of natural gas per day (Bcf/d). Earlier this week, MDN told you that the facility’s very first official cargo carrier had arrived to “fill ‘er up” (see 

EQT Corporation delivered its latest quarterly update yesterday for the first quarter of 2026. EQT sees the materialization of “in-basin demand growth” improving Appalachian market conditions through the end of the decade. The company says it is positioned as a preferred partner for large-scale power, midstream, and data center projects in the region. EQT plans to continue drilling and completing a significant number of wells throughout 2026, indicating ongoing development in the Marcellus and Utica regions. However, the company is curtailing (restricting) 10-15 Bcf (billion cubic feet) of production during the second quarter due to current low prices.
Range Resources issued its first quarter 2026 update yesterday. Range’s production averaged 2.21 Bcfe/d in 1Q, approximately 32% liquids and 68% natural gas. Range used one rig and one completion crew to drill ~143,000 lateral feet across 9 wells, while turning to sales ~267,000 feet across 17 wells. 1Q26 drilling and completion expenditures were $130 million. In addition, Range spent approximately $5 million in acreage and $4 million in infrastructure, pneumatic upgrades, and other investments. The company maintains it will push production to 2.5 Bcfe/d by the end of this year, even though it’s only using a single rig and frac crew.
How many times over the years have we reported on (and cheerleaded for) gas-fired power plants to get built in West Virginia? MANY times. Dozens, maybe hundreds of posts about this topic. Yet, in all the time we’ve been writing MDN (since January 2009), not a single, solitary *new* gas-fired power plant has been built in the Mountain State (although there are four existing, older gas-fired plants). Not one new plant! Until now. Kindle Energy yesterday announced it has broken ground at Wolf Summit Energy, a previously announced fully contracted, 600-megawatt greenfield combined-cycle gas turbine (CCGT) power generation facility in Harrison County, WV.
Williams has commenced construction of its Transco Northeast Supply Enhancement (NESE) project, extending through northeast Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York (see
Earlier this year, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) approved the Williams Transco Southeast Supply Enhancement Project (see
PowerTransitions, an independent power producer specializing in redeveloping legacy power facilities, has agreed to acquire five New York gas-fired power plants — Batavia, Hillburn, Massena, Shoemaker, and Sterling — totaling 323 megawatts (MW) from Alliance Energy Group affiliates. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. The deal marks PowerTransitions’ entry into the New York market, bringing its total portfolio to approximately 550 MW across seven stations spanning multiple NYISO zones. PowerTransitions says the acquired sites offer “brownfield redevelopment potential” for new power generation and battery storage. Frankly, this one is a head-scratcher for us.
The rumor mill is chattering once again. Bloomberg reports that Arsenal Resources, a private natural gas producer focused on the Marcellus Shale, is considering a potential sale of itself valued at approximately $1.5 billion. The company, owned by its creditors since emerging from bankruptcy in late 2019 (see