EIA Reveals Americans Using More NatGas than in Previous Years

We’ve read the standard, “received wisdom” about the market for natgas in the U.S. so many times we actually believed it. That old canard states that overall Americans use about the same amount of natural gas year in and year out, year after year. Turns out it isn’t actually true. The amount of natural gas used by Americans last winter led to the largest withdrawal from storage in four years. Yes, some of the increased use went for exports of LNG, but what EIA and the media whisper instead of shouting is that Americans are using more natgas for non-export items. Demand is growing for natgas–particularly in the electricity sector. So much for wind and solar taking over, eh?
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The so-called Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI), a tax on carbon dioxide emissions from coal and natural gas-fired power plants aimed at killing off those two sources of energy, is more expensive than ever. Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf is forcing PA to join the RGGI cabal of 11 states (most of them in the northeast), a move endorsed by the man who wants to replace him in November, PA Attorney General Josh Shapiro (see
From time to time we highlight deals by companies that purchase landowners’ (or rights owners’) royalty payments–giving them a lump sum payment upfront in return for signing over all future royalty payments to the company buying the rights. Buying future royalty payments is not unlike companies that approach and pay lottery winners who receive payouts over a long period (for life, or for a period of years), with the lottery winner selling his or her future payments for a single lump sum now. Two companies of the larger companies in this space are about to merge.
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In April the New York State Assembly passed Assembly Bill A7389C. Early Friday morning the New York State Senate, on the last day of the current session, passed the same bill, sending it to Gov. Kathy Hochul’s desk for a signature. A7389C (full copy below) slaps a two-year moratorium on cryptocurrency mining (i.e. bitcoin mining) powered by electricity generated from burning fossil fuels. Here’s how it works in New York (we’ve seen this multiple times): First comes a moratorium that lasts a year or two, then the moratorium gets extended, and eventually the moratorium turns into an outright, permanent ban. That’s how it worked with fracking, and that’s how it will work with bitcoin mining in New York, a state that has become extremely hostile to business.
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Last year the Bidenistas initiated a massive power grab of transferring the right of individual states to regulate local natural gas gathering pipelines to the federal government (see
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Follow This is a group of 8,000 far-left, radical investors who want to shut down the oil and gas industry by using big money invested in O&G companies to force board changes and new policies aimed at forcing “Big Oil” to self-harm. Follow This’ twisted vision of the future is forcing humanity back to Medieval Times when no oil and gas and plastics existed. Back to the time when humans lived to be about 35-40 years old and then died from disease or famine. Follow This and their ilk were having some success in forcing oil and gas companies to engage in self-harming activities (selling off assets, reduced drilling, investing in unreliable renewables, etc.). But since the pandemic and (now) since the war in Ukraine, many of the “advances” made by Follow This have evaporated.
Yesterday MDN brought you the news that Ohio Congressman Troy Balderson, Republican representing Ohio’s 12th Congressional District, recently introduced a resolution that officially recognizes American natural gas as a “green and clean” energy source (see