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EQT Disses Haynesville in Jab at Chesapeake/Southwestern Merger

EQT Corporation, the largest natural gas producer in the U.S. (100% focused on the Marcellus/Utica), released its first quarter 2024 update yesterday. The company produced 5.87 Bcf/d (billion cubic feet per day) of natural gas in 1Q. Executives said they will continue the current curtailment (reduction) of 1 Bcf/d, in place since late February, until at least the end of May. A major focus of CEO Toby Rice’s comments is the coming demand for natgas from gas-fired power plants in the Southeastern U.S. Among the bigger pieces of news is that once EQT buys out and merges back in Equitrans (which it used to own), EQT plans to expand the Equitrans-owned Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) by another 0.5 Bcf/d.
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Toby Rice: NatGas Currently Oversupplied, But New Demand Coming

Following yesterday’s conference call with analysts to discuss EQT’s first quarter performance, CEO Toby Rice appeared on CNBC to answer questions (watch the segment below). As he did during the quarterly update call, Rice once again zeroed in on new demand markets coming from gas-fired power plants in the Southeastern U.S. He also said the market is currently oversupplied with natural gas, but he sees two catalysts to help lower the excess gas in inventory: hot summer weather and gas-fired powergen. And the powergen doesn’t just come from homes running AC to keep cool. He’s talking about new data centers appearing that operate artificial intelligence and need huge new amounts of electricity to operate all those computers.
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Deep Well Services & CNX Partner to Launch Flowback Services Co.

Two of our favorite companies in the Marcellus/Utica, one a driller (CNX Resources) and the other an oilfield services company (Deep Well Services), have partnered in a joint venture, creating a new company called AutoSep Technologies. The new JV uses groundbreaking new technology developed in CNX’s New Technologies unit that targets flowback, the “junk” that comes out of the borehole for the initial month or two after a well is drilled and fracked. Flowback includes methane and other hydrocarbons, sand, water, and fracking chemicals. All of the junk needs to be cleared so the well can start producing clean gas or oil. CNX has found a way to clean the junk that captures the methane (doesn’t escape into the air), is cheaper than current methods, and (most importantly) is safer. The process is being patented.
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Antis Ask DC Circuit to Cancel FERC Time Extension for MVP Southgate

In 2018, Equitrans Midstream, the builder of the 303-mile Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP), proposed to extend MVP (when it’s done) by an extra 75 miles from the current terminus in Pittsylvania County, VA, to Alamance County, NC, to provide natural gas for heating and electric generation. The 75-mile extension is called MVP Southgate. Last year, Equitrans asked the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to extend Southgate’s project timeline an extra three years. FERC agreed in December (see FERC Approves MVP Southgate Request for 3-Yr Extension to Build). A group of extreme left anti-fossil fuel organizations are now challenging that time extension in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia (DC Circuit).
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Lefties Throw Tantrum that MVP Asked FERC to Startup on Earth Day

Yesterday, we brought you the great news that Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP), the 303-mile, 2.0 Bcf/d pipeline from Wetzel County, WV, to Pittsylvania County, VA, is essentially done (see MVP Essentially Done, Builder Asks FERC for OK to Start Up May 23). Equitrans, the builder, sent a request to FERC on Monday requesting the agency issue a decision allowing the pipeline to come online beginning May 23. Monday was Earth Day, which is a sacred day for anti-fossil fuel nutters. Kind of like Easter Sunday is for Christians. That MVP transmitted a request on sacred Earth Day appears to bother antis more than the fact that MVP is about to go online.
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New Tech Helps Fracked Wells Produce More Oil & Gas for Less $$

click for larger version

While oil output overall is at record levels, the amount of oil recovered per foot drilled in the Permian Basin of Texas, the main U.S. shale formation for oil extraction, fell 15% from 2020 to 2023, putting it on par with a decade ago. It’s going in reverse. The trend is not our friend. There are a number of reasons for the loss in efficiency (discussed below). However, new oilfield innovations, which began being implemented more widely last year, have made it possible for fracking to be faster, less expensive, and higher yielding. Those innovations include drilling much longer laterals and using simultaneous fracking (simul-frac).
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Other Stories of Interest: Thu, Apr 25, 2024

NATIONAL: Analysts see 80 Bcf increase in U.S. natgas inventories; Biden bans gas stoves and appliances in federal buildings; The Jones Act – consequences of a destructive industrial policy; U.S. propane exports and production hit record highs; Oil and gas mergers hit record Q1 levels in 2024; Don’t use the SPR to manipulate oil prices; INTERNATIONAL: Pressure on gas and LNG prices to help switch from coal; LNG exports offer a wealth-creating way to reduce global emissions.
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MVP Essentially Done, Builder Asks FERC for OK to Start Up May 23

We never thought this day would arrive! We hoped. We prayed. But finally, it’s (almost) here. The 303-mile, 2 Bcf/d Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) is almost ready to begin operation. On Monday, Equitrans Midstream filed a letter (below) with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) requesting a May 23 startup date for the pipeline. MVP (Equitrans) says the pipeline will be in the ground, buried, and ready to begin on May 22 (called “mechanically complete”). Get the champagne on ice and ready…
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EQT Quadruples Deal to Send Gas to LNG Export Plant in S. Texas

Port of Brownsville, TX, on the border with Mexico (click for larger version)

Yesterday, a major announcement went largely under the radar. EQT Corporation, currently the largest natural gas producer in the U.S., announced it will quadruple a deal with Glenfarne Energy’s Texas LNG Brownsville export facility to liquefy (now) 2.0 million tons per annum (MTPA) for EQT. This works out to be roughly 264 million cubic feet per day (MMcf/d) of EQT’s Marcellus/Utica molecules hitching a ride to South Texas.
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Evolution Well Services Adds e-Fracking Fleet to Marcellus/Utica

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. Evolution announced yesterday it had successfully deployed two new electric fleets in March, one in Appalachia and one in South Texas, bringing the company total to 12 fully operational crews.
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Marcellus Fracked Gas Leads to Record Low Emissions in PJM Grid

PJM is the largest electric grid operator in the U.S. It serves 65 million people in 13 states plus the District of Columbia (including PA, OH, and WV). PJM recently issued a press release to tout a radical reduction in emissions of all types. From 2005 to 2023, carbon dioxide (CO2) emission rates fell 43% across PJM’s footprint. Emission rates for nitrogen oxides (NOx) declined 90%, and the rates for sulfur dioxide (SO2) dropped 96%. It is, says PJM, a new all-time low for electric power emissions across the PJM region. Why the drastic drop? Because (says the Marcellus Shale Coalition), a number of coal-fired power plants have been replaced by natural gas-fired plants.
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NatGas Grew Its Share of Electric Power 7% in 2023, New Record High

Yesterday the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) published a post to announce that U.S. natural gas consumption set annual and monthly records during 2023. In 2023, some 89.1 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) of natural gas was consumed in the United States, the most on record. Since 2018, U.S. natural gas consumption has increased by an average of 4% annually. Why the significant increase in gas usage? It wasn’t due to residential, commercial, or industrial usage — all of which stayed even or decreased last year. It was (as you may have guessed) a huge increase in the use of natural gas to feed gas-fired power plants.
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Gov. Shapiro Dooms PA Gov’t to Use Unreliable, Intermittent Solar

As we outline today in another post, the PJM electric grid, which covers 13 states including Pennsylvania, reports emissions of all the nasty things (carbon dioxide, nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide) have decreased radically thanks to the change from coal-fired power to natural gas-fired power (see Marcellus Fracked Gas Leads to Record Low Emissions in PJM Grid). We also report today that in 2023, the country as a whole increased its usage of natural gas specifically because the country (including the M-U) is adding more low-carbon gas-fired power plants (see NatGas Grew Its Share of Electric Power 7% in 2023, New Record High). So what does the “brilliant” Governor of Pennsylvania, Josh Shapiro, do? He signs up PA government agencies (sentences them) to use unreliable solar energy.
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Problem-Plagued Freeport LNG Finally (!) Exports Another Cargo

BW Pavilion Leeara

Have things finally turned around for the problem-plagued Freeport LNG export facility located in Quintana, Texas? We hope so. Last week, we reported gas flows to the facility had dropped to “near zero” for at least five days in a row (see Freeport LNG Still Mostly Shut Down – 5 Days in Row at < 5% of Gas). Earlier this week, we reported that Freeport had finally begun to receive feedgas again (see Texas Fines Freeport LNG – Some Feedgas Starts to Reflow). Reuters is now reporting that for the first time in 12 days, an LNG cargo tanker (partially filled with liquefied gas) has left the Freeport dock.
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Other Stories of Interest: Wed, Apr 24, 2024

NATIONAL: NA natgas demand to soar in ‘25 and beyond, says Halliburton; Bidens doing everything they can to stop LNG development, exports; AI boom to fuel natural gas demand in coming years, report says; INTERNATIONAL: Rising spot LNG prices starting to bite some Asian buyers; Environmentalists’ silence on humanity and environmental atrocities.
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Investors Not Convinced re EOG’s Utica Shale Drilling Program

Here’s something we had not previously heard: Investors (at least some investors) have “mixed or negative sentiment towards EOG Resources, particularly concerning its activities in the Utica Shale.” Some investors, according to Investing.com, are unsure that EOG’s Utica operation will perform well for the company and may be a drag on the company. An analyst with KeyBanc takes the opposite view and believes EOG’s Utica program will help the company.
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