TVA Investing $1B to Build New Natgas-Fired Electric Plants
The Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) is a federally-owned electric utility corporation in the U.S. TVA’s service area covers all of Tennessee, portions of Alabama, Mississippi, and Kentucky, and small areas of Georgia, North Carolina, and Virginia. TVA is the sixth-largest power supplier and the largest public utility in the country. We have some GREAT news: TVA is spending over $1 billion to replace six coal-fired plants with natgas-fired turbines.
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MARCELLUS/UTICA REGION: Crestwood and Con Edison announce closing of Stagecoach Gas Services divestiture; Long Island power plant to be site of hydrogen-natural gas hybrid fuel experiment; OTHER U.S. REGIONS: For affordable electricity, keep natural gas; NATIONAL: US drillers add oil, gas rigs for second consecutive week; INTERNATIONAL: Oil prices in flux as OPEC+ remains deadlocked; Global liquefied natural gas trade was flat in 2020 amid pandemic.

An analyst writing on the Seeking Alpha investors website confirms our concerns over the potential merger between Marcellus driller Cabot Oil & Gas and Permian driller Cimarex Energy (see
According to S&P Global Platts, a widening gas storage deficit in the Eastern U.S. is “raising alarm in the Northeast downstream market area” where winter 2021-22 forwards prices are up sharply since the start of injection season beginning April 1st. In particular, the forward contracts (prices negotiated now for future delivery of natural gas) for January 2022 in Boston and New York City are through the roof. It’s pretty plain why this is happening–no new pipelines.
We’ve made no bones about the fact we’re dubious of most so-called ESG (environmental, social, governance) initiatives by any company, including shale oil and gas drillers. But there are many in our industry who have (seemingly overnight) embraced ESG with open arms. One of them is the chairman of the board for DJ Basin producer Civitas/managing partner at the Kimmeridge Energy Management, Ben Dell. Dell presents a vision of the shale energy future like this: There are 10-15 shale drillers nationwide, and every one of them is operating with net zero carbon emissions. What may sound like nirvana to Dell sounds like dystopia to us.
We recently spotted an article in the Wall Street Journal about the prospect of combining horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing (collectively called “fracking”) with geothermal energy. The article claims fracking could be used to generate energy with “no carbon emissions.” Green nirvana! At last!! But is this really possible? Is it actually economical? Let’s take a closer look.
Consumers Energy, Michigan’s second-largest power provider, will quit burning coal to produce electricity by 2025 and instead will purchase four existing natural gas-fired power plants for $1.3 billion. At least if the company can get approval from state regulators. The company says buying existing gas-fired plants (instead of building new plants) will help it transition to carbonless energy over the next 20 years. Buying instead of building means the company won’t have “stranded assets” when (we say if) they eventually foreswear using fossil fuels to generate electricity.
Back in January MDN told you that UGI Corporation, one of Pennsylvania’s largest natural gas utility companies, wants to buy Mountaineer Gas Company, one of West Virginia’s largest natural gas utility companies, for $540 million (see
Last week MDN told you that Detroit-based utility company DTE Energy was about to spin off its pipeline assets into a new/separate company called DT Midstream (see 