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Marcellus Drilling News
  • CNG/LNG | Exporting | Industrywide Issues

    “Cool Down Cargo” Arrives at Golden Pass LNG, Startup Coming

    December 11, 2025December 11, 2025
    Golden Pass LNG Cool Down Cargo Safely Arrives in Sabine Pass

    The arrival of a “cool down” liquefied natural gas (LNG) cargo from Qatar at the Golden Pass LNG terminal marks a pivotal step toward the facility’s first production. This delivery supports the $10 billion project’s commissioning phase by providing necessary LNG to pre-cool storage tanks and equipment. Signaling significant progress for the Sabine Pass facility, Golden Pass LNG projects that exports from Train 1 will officially commence early next year. Read More ““Cool Down Cargo” Arrives at Golden Pass LNG, Startup Coming”

  • Industrywide Issues | Research

    Argus Media’s 10 Key Commodity and Energy Market Themes for 2026

    December 11, 2025December 11, 2025

    Argus Media is the leading independent provider of market intelligence to the global energy and commodity markets. Headquartered in London with nearly 1,500 staff, Argus is an independent media organization with 30 offices in the world’s principal commodity trading hubs. Argus published a list of 10 key commodity and energy market themes (and challenges) it sees coming for 2026. Among their predictions about natural gas, Argus says Germany may close key underground gas storage sites next year due to shrinking profit margins, potentially reducing Europe’s supply buffer by 60 LNG cargoes annually. This shift would deepen reliance on global LNG, increasing price volatility and winter spike risks as Europe competes with Asia for slower-responding supplies. Read More “Argus Media’s 10 Key Commodity and Energy Market Themes for 2026”

  • Best of the Rest

    MDN’s Energy Stories of Interest: Thu, Dec 11, 2025 [FREE ACCESS]

    December 11, 2025December 11, 2025

    NATIONAL: U.S. natural gas picks up ahead of storage data; Kinder Morgan expects to ride on LNG, power demand growth; Democrat lawmakers renew push to regulate natgas pipeline emissions; Exxon’s low carbon cuts mesh with Trump’s energy priorities; INTERNATIONAL: Crude rises after US seizes Venezuelan tanker; COP30 – 50,000 participants for what?; Hydrogen dreams meet reality as oil and gas groups abandon projects; Former UK Prime Minister says Europe ‘insanely jealous’ of US economy. Read More “MDN’s Energy Stories of Interest: Thu, Dec 11, 2025 [FREE ACCESS]”

  • Anti-Drilling/Fossil Fuel | Hydraulic Fracturing | Industrywide Issues | Pennsylvania | Regulation | Statewide PA

    EQB Votes to Consider Ban on Marcellus Drilling Via Crazy Setbacks

    December 10, 2025December 10, 2025

    The Pennsylvania Environmental Quality Board (EQB) held a meeting yesterday to consider whether or not to accept a petition by radical green groups, including the Clean Air Council and Environmental Integrity Project, to “study” the issue of increasing setbacks for shale drilling so far that it would ban ALL new Marcellus/Utica drilling in the Keystone State (no exaggeration). The EQB tabled a decision on whether to accept the petition back in April (see PA EQB Votes to Delay Consideration of Marcellus-Banning Setbacks). The hectoring groups kept up the pressure, and with the election now behind us, the Shapiro EQB voted 12-5 yesterday to accept the petition and begin studying the concept of blocking all new shale drilling by increasing setbacks to crazy distances under the (false) pretense of “safety.” Read More “EQB Votes to Consider Ban on Marcellus Drilling Via Crazy Setbacks”

  • Industrywide Issues | Pennsylvania | Statewide PA | Taxation

    2 Philly Dems Intro Bill to Slap Severance Tax on Top of Impact Tax

    December 10, 2025December 10, 2025

    Here we go again. Pennsylvania Democrat State Reps. Chris Pielli, (Chester), and Tarik Khan, (Philadelphia), have introduced a bill that would establish a severance tax on natural gas production. Specifically, the legislation introduces a per-volume severance tax on natural gas operations. The bill would place the new severance tax on top of the existing impact fee (i.e., tax), creating a double tax on the Marcellus industry. Adding a severance tax to the existing impact fee would instantly make PA’s tax on natural gas extraction the highest in the nation. The purpose is not revenue generation but the death of the Marcellus production in the Keystone State. Do the Dems never tire of attacking the Marcellus industry? Read More “2 Philly Dems Intro Bill to Slap Severance Tax on Top of Impact Tax”

  • Commodity Price | Crude Oil | Industrywide Issues | Research

    EIA Dec. STEO Raises Winter HH Spot Gas Price Forecast by 40 Cents

    December 10, 2025December 10, 2025

    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. In this latest assessment, EIA forecasts the cold snap hitting the United States this month will drive the Henry Hub natural gas spot price to average almost $4.30 per million British thermal units (MMBtu) this winter, which is 40 cents/MMBtu higher than its November forecast of $3.90. The price increase is driven by increased natural gas consumption for space heating. Read More “EIA Dec. STEO Raises Winter HH Spot Gas Price Forecast by 40 Cents”

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

    PA Bill Would Expand 1971 Tax Credit to NatGas-Fired Power Plants

    December 10, 2025December 10, 2025

    Pennsylvania has a big problem. The state is retiring older coal- and gas-fired power plants faster than it can add new plants. Plus, the state needs to *grow* its electric generation capacity to meet new demand from AI data centers. PA State Senator Gene Yaw has a solution: modify the existing 1971 Economic Development for a Growing Economy (EDGE) tax credit program by adding a provision granting a tax credit for any $400+ million investment in “baseload power generation” (i.e., gas-fired power generation). Yaw wants to make it a no-brainer for power plant builders to make the Keystone State their destination for new projects. Read More “PA Bill Would Expand 1971 Tax Credit to NatGas-Fired Power Plants”

  • Coterra Energy (Cabot O&G) | Encana Energy | Energy Companies | Industrywide Issues | M&A

    Rystad Analysts Talk Up Potential Merger of Coterra with Ovintiv

    December 10, 2025December 10, 2025

    We’ll open this post with this statement: There are no active rumors (that we are aware of) that Permian/Anadarko/Marcellus driller Coterra Energy is considering a merger with Permian/Anadarko/Monteny driller Ovintiv (formerly Encana). We did spot a post by Rystad Energy analysts who theorize that both companies (peers) would make a great combined company. The comments are part of a post titled “US shale braces for next consolidation wave as smaller players seek scale.” Rystad’s theory is that we will soon see smaller independents begin to merge to defend against the recent merger mania by larger companies, including ExxonMobil, Diamondback, Occidental, and ConocoPhillips. Read More “Rystad Analysts Talk Up Potential Merger of Coterra with Ovintiv”

  • AI | Electrical Generation | Industrywide Issues

    What is Hype and What is Reality re Data Center Power Demand?

    December 10, 2025December 10, 2025

    A new RBN article takes a stab at distinguishing between the hype of future data center power demand and the reality of current grid consumption. Despite projections of massive energy usage, verifying actual draw is difficult due to utility confidentiality and behind-the-meter generation. RBN’s analysis reveals that today’s largest consumers are long-established campuses rather than new builds; specifically, Google’s Council Bluffs and Microsoft’s Quincy facilities top the list with estimated loads of 500–600 MW. The article concludes that because substantial capacity takes over a decade to scale, the market should remain skeptical of new facilities claiming immediate, massive power consumption. Read More “What is Hype and What is Reality re Data Center Power Demand?”

  • AI | Electrical Generation | Industrywide Issues | LDCs | Pipelines

    Spare Gas Pipe Capacity from Utilities Could Power AI Data Centers

    December 10, 2025December 10, 2025

    The rapid expansion of data centers, driven by AI and cloud computing, is creating a surge in energy demand that exceeds renewable capabilities, forcing a shift toward natural gas. Good news for the Marcellus/Utica. However, building new pipelines to handle the extra gas needed is not an overnight process. Industry experts at the recent LDC Gas Forums’ Nat Gas to Power event proposed an ingenious solution that uses existing pipelines to move more gas to new data center customers. Read More “Spare Gas Pipe Capacity from Utilities Could Power AI Data Centers”

  • Best of the Rest

    MDN’s Energy Stories of Interest: Wed, Dec 10, 2025 [FREE ACCESS]

    December 10, 2025December 10, 2025

    OTHER U.S. REGIONS: Venture Global hits back at Shell’s fraud claims in LNG arbitration battle; Dem-leaning group roasts NY’s green energy law as an ‘undeniable’ failure; NATIONAL: U.S. natural gas extends pullback on shifting weather outlook; A different inconvenient truth (this one is true); EIA to ditch some existing reports and launch new surveys on minerals, data centers; U.S. LNG feedgas demand at record levels; Datacenter boom drives rapid power grid innovation; INTERNATIONAL: Oil falls again on oversupply signs; BMI analysts make 2026 oil demand prediction. Read More “MDN’s Energy Stories of Interest: Wed, Dec 10, 2025 [FREE ACCESS]”

  • Industrywide Issues | Pennsylvania | Statewide PA | Taxation

    PA IFO Predicts Impact Tax Revenue to Soar 46% in 2025

    December 9, 2025December 9, 2025

    Pennsylvania assesses an impact fee (PA’s version of a severance tax) on shale drillers, raising revenues that are paid to local municipalities (60% collected) and the black hole of Harrisburg politicians (40%). Yesterday, the PA Independent Fiscal Office (IFO) issued an estimate of how much the impact fee will raise this year, with the funds distributed in April of next year. The IFO says it expects, based on the price of natural gas and the number of new and existing wells, that PA will generate $239.9 million from the impact fee in 2025, a huge $75.3 million (46%) increase from 2024. The average fee per well generated will be $19,056 in 2025, up from $13,560 (41%) in 2024. Read More “PA IFO Predicts Impact Tax Revenue to Soar 46% in 2025”

  • Electrical Generation | Industrywide Issues | Pennsylvania | Regulation | Snyder County

    PA DEP Prepares to OK “Uprate” of 3 Gas Turbines at Hummel Station

    December 9, 2025December 9, 2025
    Representation of the gas turbines used in the Hummel Station (click for larger version)

    Earlier this year, Capital Power Corporation, based in Edmonton (Alberta), Canada, a power producer with approximately 10 gigawatts (GW) of power generation at 30 facilities across North America, closed on buying two gas-fired power plants from LS Power, including the Panda Hummel Marcellus-fired power plant in Snyder County, PA (see Canada’s Capital Power Buying 2 PJM Gas-Fired Plants in PA, OH). At Senator Dave McCormick’s big data center event in Pittsburgh in July, Capital announced a $3 billion investment over 10 years to upgrade and expand the Hummel plant (see Capital Power Investing $3B in Hummel Gas-Fired Plant Shamokin Dam). Capital is making good on its promise. Read More “PA DEP Prepares to OK “Uprate” of 3 Gas Turbines at Hummel Station”

  • Industrywide Issues | Pennsylvania | Regulation | Statewide PA

    PA DEP Proposes Revision to Erosion & Sediment Permit for O&G

    December 9, 2025December 9, 2025

    The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) published proposed revisions to its Chapter 102 Erosion and Sediment Control permit. The DEP is now accepting comments on the changes until January 20. The primary goal of the revision is “regulatory alignment.” Since the original policy was written in 2012, Pennsylvania passed the Chapter 78a (Unconventional) regulations (in 2016) and updated the ESCGP-4 permit (in 2024). The new draft updates the policy to match these legally binding rules rather than creating entirely new standards. The most significant change coming is an increase in setbacks to”support facilities” from 900 feet to 1,320 feet. Read More “PA DEP Proposes Revision to Erosion & Sediment Permit for O&G”

  • Commodity Price | Industrywide Issues

    NYMEX Gas Price Falls 38 Cents to $4.91, But Remains High

    December 9, 2025December 9, 2025

    We are checking in as we regularly do on the price of natural gas—both the futures price and the spot price in the Marcellus/Utica. Yesterday, the NYMEX futures price for natural gas got clobbered, falling 37.7 cents (-7.13%) to $4.9120 per million British thermal units (MMBtus). We’re still delighted that the price is so high! Don’t be bummed. But why did it fall? In a word, a new weather forecast showed U.S. temperatures warming mid-month, potentially curbing natgas heating demand. It can’t stay cold forever. (We woke up to 0 on the thermometer here in the Southern Tier of New York. We’re ready for warmer weather!) What about the spot (physical) price at various trading hubs in the M-U region? They’ve gone down a bit since last week, but we’re still thrilled where they are, too. Read More “NYMEX Gas Price Falls 38 Cents to $4.91, But Remains High”

  • Industrywide Issues | New York | Regulation | Statewide NY | Wastewater

    NY Gov. “Gassy Kathy” Hochul Vetoes Bill Banning Brine on Roads

    December 9, 2025December 9, 2025

    The left is so amusing when it turns against one of its own. New York Governor Kathy Hochul is a card-carrying leftist. She has done her best to phase out the use of fossil fuels, including natural gas, throughout the state. She tried to force the state to abandon using natural gas and oil for heating and cooking in new construction (currently on hold in the courts). Under her direction, the Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) rejected permits for multiple existing (and new) gas-fired power plants. She’s forcing anyone who does connect to natural gas to pay the cost of running the pipeline to the house (or business). She signed a law banning the use of CO2 for fracking. She hates oil and gas! Yet by allowing two gas pipelines and vetoing a bill last week that would have banned the use of brine on roads during winter, the left turns against her and labels her “gassy Kathy.” Hilarious! Read More “NY Gov. “Gassy Kathy” Hochul Vetoes Bill Banning Brine on Roads”

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List of All Daily Issues

Most Recent Articles

  • New 953-MW Utica-Fired Power Plant Goes Online in Lordstown, OH
  • FERC Gives OK for MVP Southgate Construction to Begin in N.C.
  • PA Anti-Shale Groups Push for Bill that Defacto Bans Data Centers
  • Residents in NEPA Town Sell to Data Centers, Get Rich, & Move
  • MSC Analysis Destroys Antis’ Lies re Setbacks, Wastewater Radiation
  • URTeC Speakers Debate Whether U.S. Shale Industry has Peaked
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  • New England Power Generators Won’t Support Expanded Algonquin Pipe
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