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Marcellus Drilling News
  • Arsenal Resources | Ascent Resources | Belmont County | Blackhill Energy | Bradford County | Energy Companies | EQT Corp | Expand Energy | Greene County (PA) | Guernsey County | Infinity Natural Resources | Monroe County | Ohio | Pennsylvania | Taylor County | Weekly Permits | West Virginia | Wetzel County

    24 New Shale Well Permits Issued for PA-OH-WV Feb 2 – 8

    February 13, 2026February 13, 2026

    The Marcellus/Utica region received a combined 24 new drilling permits last week, Feb. 2 – 8, up 2 from the permits issued two weeks ago. Pennsylvania issued 10 new permits, Ohio issued 10, and West Virginia issued 4. The drillers receiving new permits last week included: Arsenal Resources, Ascent Resources, Blackhill Energy, EQT, Expand Energy, and Infinity Natural Resources. Read More “24 New Shale Well Permits Issued for PA-OH-WV Feb 2 – 8”

  • Antero Resources | Energy Companies | Statewide WV | West Virginia

    Antero 4Q: HG Energy Purchase Propels Co. from 3.4 to 4.2 Bcfe/d

    February 13, 2026February 13, 2026

    Antero Resources, the largest Marcellus/Utica (M-U) driller in West Virginia, released its Q4 2025 update yesterday. In 2025, Antero Resources underwent a “transformational expansion” highlighted by the acquisition of HG Energy, the largest acquisition in Antero’s history, which the company closed on just last week (see Antero Closes on Buying HG Energy for $2.8B, Borrows $1.5B from RBC). CEO Michael Kennedy noted that this move, along with increased well interests, significantly increases the company’s scale and dry-gas exposure in West Virginia. Read More “Antero 4Q: HG Energy Purchase Propels Co. from 3.4 to 4.2 Bcfe/d”

  • Electrical Generation | Industrywide Issues | Regulation

    Trump & Zeldin Cut Obama Climate Rule, Save Americans $3,800 Each

    February 13, 2026February 13, 2026

    President Donald Trump and EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin announced the “largest deregulatory action in American history” yesterday by officially revoking the Obama EPA’s 2009 “endangerment finding.” This move eliminates the legal mandate for the federal government to regulate greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide. The administration claims the rollback will save taxpayers over $1.3 trillion and reduce vehicle prices by approximately $2,400 by stripping away emission standards for cars and trucks. More importantly, it takes away the left’s ability to block coal- and natural gas-fired power plants. While Trump hailed the decision as a victory for consumer choice and the economy, anti-fossil fuel fanatics vowed to challenge the repeal in court. Read More “Trump & Zeldin Cut Obama Climate Rule, Save Americans $3,800 Each”

  • CNX Resources | Energy Companies

    Victory! CNX Resolves Defamation Lawsuit with Capital & Main

    February 13, 2026February 13, 2026

    Capital & Main is a left-leaning news outlet based in California. The publication has repeatedly targeted CNX Resources to smear the company and its Radical Transparency initiative. In September, we brought you Capital & Main’s latest hit piece alleging CNX’s operations are polluting and causing ill health for those who live nearby. The article also said CNX’s drilling program is anything but transparent (see Leftists Rattled by CNX’s Real Science and Radical Transparency). That article, CNX said, crossed the line and defamed the company. So, CNX filed a lawsuit against Capital & Main (see CNX Files Lawsuit Against Capital & Main for Defamation re Article). Both sides have now settled, with Capital & Main printing a statement that amounts to a retraction. Victory! Read More “Victory! CNX Resolves Defamation Lawsuit with Capital & Main”

  • Electrical Generation | Industrywide Issues | Pennsylvania | Regulation | Statewide PA

    PJM Grid Caves to PA Gov. Shapiro Bullying Again, Caps Prices 2 Yrs

    February 13, 2026February 13, 2026

    PJM Interconnection, the electrical grid operator that covers Pennsylvania (along with all or parts of 12 other states and the District of Columbia), has once again caved to the political demands of PA Gov. Josh Shapiro to artificially cap prices in its upcoming capacity auctions for the next two years. PJM caved for the July 2025 auction (see PJM Grid Caves to PA Gov. Shapiro Bullying, Blackout Risk Rises). And now, they’ve extended the same cap for another two years. It means electric ratepayers won’t see as high an increase in their electric rates (a good thing), but it also means the risk of a blackout has just gone WAY up. It means fewer gas-fired power plants will be built in the PJM region, which desperately needs them. Read More “PJM Grid Caves to PA Gov. Shapiro Bullying Again, Caps Prices 2 Yrs”

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

    The Sad Story of Quebec: Huge Utica Deposits, Imports All NatGas

    February 13, 2026February 13, 2026

    The Canadian province of Quebec has significant natural gas potential in the Utica and Lorraine shale formations and on the Gaspé Peninsula, yet these resources remain untapped due to politics. The left has hoodwinked residents into believing hydraulic fracturing is from Satan and that it will pollute groundwater and cause earthquakes. Quebec became the first jurisdiction to permanently ban oil and gas exploration in 2022, prioritizing climate mythology over energy development. Consequently, the province imports nearly all its supplies from Western Canada and the United States. The province’s future strategy focuses on transitioning to renewable natural gas (which emits as much CO2 when burned as shale gas) and hydrogen, while maintaining a strict moratorium on local extraction. Read More “The Sad Story of Quebec: Huge Utica Deposits, Imports All NatGas”

  • Best of the Rest

    MDN’s Energy Stories of Interest: Fri, Feb 13, 2026

    February 13, 2026February 13, 2026

    MARCELLUS/UTICA REGION: Core Natural Resources bets on AI data center power demand surge; OTHER U.S. REGIONS: Virginia would be wise to remain out of RGGI; The Sunshine State is a heavyweight in natural gas consumption; NATIONAL: U.S. natural gas settles higher after storage miss; The Super Bowl without EVs tells you everything; Mom-and-pop shops remain the heart of the retail propane industry; Recognizing failure, some liberals are reshaping their climate messaging; INTERNATIONAL: Oil drops amid supply and equity jitters; Global exploration signaling ‘early recovery’; India will buy US LNG if offered at reasonable price, Petronet CEO says; Japanese oil and gas group Inpex sees LNG supply shortfall in Asia in 2035. Read More “MDN’s Energy Stories of Interest: Fri, Feb 13, 2026”

  • Energy Companies | Hydraulic Fracturing | Industrywide Issues | Marion County | Monongalia County | Northeast Natural Energy | West Virginia

    Northeast Natural Energy Taps Evolution’s E-Fracking Solution for WV

    February 12, 2026February 12, 2026

    Evolution Well Services, headquartered in Houston with a regional office in Pittsburgh, specializes in “electric” fracking — using natural gas from the well pad (instead of diesel fuel) to power turbines to create electricity that drives fracking pumps. We’ve written about Evolution’s e-fracking work in the Marcellus/Utica for years (see our stories here). The company does work for many of the largest drillers in the M-U. Evolution can add another customer to the list: Northeast Natural Energy, which drills and fracks on 60,000 contiguous acres in north-central West Virginia, primarily in Monongalia and Marion counties. Read More “Northeast Natural Energy Taps Evolution’s E-Fracking Solution for WV”

  • Electrical Generation | Industrywide Issues

    Missouri to Get Gas-Peaker Coupled with Battery Backup Fed by M-U

    February 12, 2026February 12, 2026
    A rendering of Ameren Missouri’s proposed Big Hollow Energy Center (click for larger version)

    State regulators have approved Ameren Missouri’s Big Hollow Energy Center, a dual-facility project featuring an 800-megawatt natural gas plant and a 400-megawatt battery storage system. Located at the former Rush Island coal site (Jefferson County, MO), the project leverages existing grid infrastructure to meet surging electricity demand driven by new data centers. While antis raise empty environmental concerns regarding methane emissions, Ameren emphasizes that the battery component supports carbon-free goals for major clients like Google. And yes, there is a direct connection to the Marcellus/Utica. Read More “Missouri to Get Gas-Peaker Coupled with Battery Backup Fed by M-U”

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

    Antis Get Fired Up Over Potential Duke Gas Plant in Davidson, NC

    February 12, 2026February 12, 2026

    Anti-fossil fuelers are raising concerns (and stoking fear with county residents) about a potential Duke Energy natural gas power plant in Davidson County, NC, after the project appeared in the company’s long-range planning documents. We first told you about this project three weeks ago (see Duke Energy Considers 1,360-MW Gas Plant for Davidson County, NC). A transmission cluster study in Duke’s 2025 Carolinas Resource Plan has identified a proposed 1,394-megawatt natural gas facility in Davidson County. Time for antis to ask their foreign funders for money to support a campaign against this project. Read More “Antis Get Fired Up Over Potential Duke Gas Plant in Davidson, NC”

  • Electrical Generation | Industrywide Issues | Maryland | Statewide MD

    Big Utilities Seek to Re-Enter Powergen in MD, Reduce Competition

    February 12, 2026February 12, 2026

    Maryland State Senator Kevin Harris (D-Prince George’s) recently introduced legislation that would allow Big Utilities, such as Exelon, to build and operate power-generation infrastructure using ratepayer funds. The Alliance for Competitive Power (ACP) recently released a study that finds allowing Big Utilities to re-enter the powergen market in Maryland would shift financial risks and cost overruns to ratepayers, whereas competitive markets protect consumers by ensuring shareholders, not the public, bear investment risks. ACP argues that allowing Big Utilities to re-enter power generation would reduce competition and raise prices for ratepayers. Read More “Big Utilities Seek to Re-Enter Powergen in MD, Reduce Competition”

  • AI | Electrical Generation | Industrywide Issues | Regulation | Statewide VA | Virginia

    Va.’s Democrat Legislature Wants to Raise Data Center Fees by 16%

    February 12, 2026February 12, 2026

    Virginia Senate Bill 253, introduced by State Senator Louise Lucas (D-Portsmouth), aims to shift energy infrastructure costs from residents to data centers, potentially saving households a whopping $65 annually. The legislation requires data centers—which account for 20% of Dominion Energy’s sales—to fund their own electrical substations and cover specific “capacity costs.” If the bill becomes law and the proposals in it receive approval from the State Corporation Commission (SCC), the typical monthly energy bill for data centers would rise by about 16%, while the typical bill for residential and other customers would decrease by 3% to 3.5%. Looks like Virginia, with more data centers than any other state in the union, is now closed for data center business. Too bad. Read More “Va.’s Democrat Legislature Wants to Raise Data Center Fees by 16%”

  • Industrywide Issues | Pipelines

    U.S. Factories Can’t Get Enough Natgas Due to Lack of Pipelines

    February 12, 2026February 12, 2026

    Despite record-breaking domestic production, U.S. manufacturers increasingly face gas shortages and price spikes during extreme weather. While the shale boom promised cheap energy, insufficient pipeline infrastructure prioritizes residential heating, power plants, and long-term export contracts over industrial users. This disparity forced companies like Evonik and International Paper to halt production or pay exorbitant spot prices during recent winter storms. Consequently, manufacturing trade groups are urging federal regulators to reform pipeline contracting and prioritize domestic supply over exports. Read More “U.S. Factories Can’t Get Enough Natgas Due to Lack of Pipelines”

  • Best of the Rest

    MDN’s Energy Stories of Interest: Thu, Feb 12, 2026

    February 12, 2026February 12, 2026

    OTHER U.S. REGIONS: February 2026 NY Climate Act issues; NATIONAL: U.S. natural gas futures edge up ahead of inventory data; The EPA’s plan to relax CO2 regs is not a nefarious plot; EIA forecasts lower oil prices in 2026 and 2027 due to persistent stock builds; House Ways & Means Committee spotlights foreign funding in U.S. litigation; USA labor market report underpins energy demand; INTERNATIONAL: Oil gains as Middle East tensions rise; U.S. shale majors take fracking global; Dumbing energy down – interruptible power as social policy; Dear President Trump, take their oil. Read More “MDN’s Energy Stories of Interest: Thu, Feb 12, 2026”

  • Commodity Price | Industrywide Issues | Research

    EIA Feb. STEO Makes Huge Change (+$0.85) re 2026 Avg Spot Price

    February 11, 2026February 11, 2026

    The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) issued its latest monthly Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO) yesterday. The STEO is the agency’s monthly best estimate of where energy prices and production will head over the next 12 months. There was a major revision to the agency’s prediction about the spot price (at the Henry Hub) for natural gas in 2026. Just last month, EIA predicted the HH spot price would average $3.46 per million British thermal units (see EIA Jan. STEO Predicts HH Spot Price Avg $3.46 2026, $4.59 2027). Yesterday, given the sharp price spike due to Winter Storm Fern and an expected drawdown in gas in storage, the EIA said its new estimate is that the HH spot price will average $4.31/MMBtu. That’s an 85-cent (a full 25%) increase in just one month. Haul out the EIA price dartboard! Read More “EIA Feb. STEO Makes Huge Change (+$0.85) re 2026 Avg Spot Price”

  • Duke Energy | Electrical Generation | Energy Services | Industrywide Issues

    Duke Energy 4Q25: Advances 7.5 GW of New NatGas Powergen Projects

    February 11, 2026February 11, 2026

    Duke Energy, headquartered in Charlotte, N.C., is one of the largest U.S. energy holding companies, serving 8.7 million electric customers and 1.8 million gas customers across six states as of early 2026. While the company dabbles in unreliable renewables like solar and wind, its bread-and-butter, go-to source for new electric power generation is natural gas, which it gets from the Marcellus/Utica. We’ve reported on many of Duke’s announced new gas-fired power plant projects (see our stories here). The company issued its fourth quarter 2025 update yesterday, which is a good opportunity for us to share a detailed list of the active gas-fired power projects Duke is pursuing. Read More “Duke Energy 4Q25: Advances 7.5 GW of New NatGas Powergen Projects”

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