The Difference Between High and Low Electric Prices: Regulation

An American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) report reveals that local state laws, rather than market forces, dictate retail electricity prices. Expensive states, like those in New England, suffer from distorting policies: Renewable Portfolio Standards, carbon capping, and net metering. These mandates force utilities to purchase costly generation, driving up rates. In contrast, affordable states like Florida and Louisiana maintain low rates by rejecting climate mandates and fostering market competition. Recently, Louisiana significantly improved its affordability ranking by legally classifying nuclear power and natural gas as green energy, proving that realistic state laws can successfully protect consumers from high utility energy bills. Read More “The Difference Between High and Low Electric Prices: Regulation”

In March 2024, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), corrupted by the Bidenistas, voted 3-2 (three Democrats vs. two Republicans) to issue a final rule forcing all publicly traded companies to disclose their so-called greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and the imaginary climate risks their businesses face (see
NATIONAL: U.S. natural gas futures snap 3-session winning streak; Gas generator maker ERock aims for $5 billion valuation in US IPO; U.S. rooftop solar bust and journalistic misdirection; ‘Masculinity and the Metacrisis’ – going weird on climate; Princeton endowment backs out of oil and gas divestment pledge; INTERNATIONAL: Crude surges on Iran tensions; Danish shipyard still servicing LNG tankers for Russia trade; LNG deliveries to China rebound in May.
From the very first whisper of the rumor that Devon Energy was sniffing around a buyout and merger with Coterra Energy, we wondered, speculated, and worried about what such a merger would mean for Coterra’s considerable Marcellus assets in northeast Pennsylvania. From the outset, activist investor Kimmeridge (with a stake in both Coterra and Devon) has pressured Devon to consider selling the Marcellus assets (see
The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection issued an air quality permit on May 18, 2026, to MarkWest Liberty Midstream, authorizing the expansion of its Harmon Creek Natural Gas Processing Plant in Washington County. The MarkWest name is still used, although the company is now MPLX. The DEP permit approval allows the addition of a third cryogenic plant and a second de-ethanization plant. A number of Big Green groups colluded in an attempt to block the permits, but their demands were ignored. 

U.S. shale producers face limited ability to rapidly boost crude output because drilled-but-uncompleted wells, or DUCs, have fallen to record lows. DUCs can bring production online in six to nine weeks, faster and cheaper than drilling new wells, making them a key industry buffer during supply shocks. Since the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran disrupted Middle Eastern oil flows, U.S. exports and refinery runs have surged, drawing down crude inventories sharply. But years of DUC depletion have reduced shale’s flexibility. Operators are now adding rigs and completion crews, especially in the Permian, to rebuild inventories as higher future oil prices support new drilling.
Last week, the combined Marcellus/Utica Baker Hughes rig count remained at 36 active rigs for the third week in a row. The M-U’s chief competitor, the Haynesville, maintained its count of 55 active rigs, operating 19 more than the M-U. The national count added 4 rigs last week, bringing the total to 562 rigs. That’s the sixth week in a row the national count has added rigs, driven by new oil-focused rigs. Baker Hughes said oil rigs rose by four to 429 last week, their highest since June 2025, while gas rigs held steady at 125 and other miscellaneous rigs held steady at 8.
The Marcellus/Utica region received 15 new drilling permits last week, May 18 – 24, down from 23 permits issued two weeks ago. Pennsylvania issued 7 of last week’s permits. Ohio issued no new permits. West Virginia issued 8 new permits last week. The drillers who received new permits included: Antero Resources, Clean Energy E&P, EQT, Expand Energy, and PennEnergy Resources.
Pennsylvania Republican gubernatorial candidate Stacy Garrity (currently the State Treasurer) yesterday called for a “total pause” on Pennsylvania A.I. data center development, arguing communities need time to update zoning, protect neighborhoods and farmland, strengthen noise rules, and secure transparency on water, energy, health, infrastructure, taxpayer, and ratepayer impacts. While we have expressed similar sentiment that common-sense guidelines are needed for data centers regarding water, noise, and energy use, we strongly disagree with a total statewide (and indefinite) “pause” on new projects. It sends the exact WRONG signal to the tech industry — that both Republicans and Democrats in the state are now blocking data centers in the Keystone State. Pausing or blocking data centers jeopardizes $92 billion worth of private investment in the state.
Ohio Governor Mike DeWine announced on May 27, 2026, that he has directed the chair of the Ohio Tax Credit Authority to pause consideration of any new data center tax exemption requests. The pause comes while the Ohio General Assembly’s Joint Data Center Committee “studies” the growth of data centers in the state. DeWine noted that data centers previously granted sales and use tax benefits reported a total capital investment of $27.2 billion in 2025. The Tax Credit Authority will stop accepting new exemption proposals after a meeting next Monday, where it will consider one final proposal. DeWine said the move is a suspension of new exemptions, NOT a data center ban. 
In April 2025, MDN told you about a new greenfield expansion of Kinder Morgan’s (KM) Elba Express pipeline into South Carolina to serve growing demand for natural gas in the state (see
The oil and gas industry not only benefits from the AI (data center) sector by supplying natural gas to power plants, it also benefits by *using* AI in its operations. Like just about every other business on the planet, O&G companies are now using (embedding) AI into their business. Here’s a startling statistic: In 2025, O&G companies worldwide spent a cumulative estimated $25 billion on AI, according to Rystad Energy. By 2035, that number will be an estimated $50 billion per year. Amazing! Are you looking for a hot hot hot job? Look at AI in O&G.