Jan 26

 

The San Francisco Chronicle explains to readers why shale gas production is keeping their gas bills lower this winter:

Natural gas prices that slumped to a 10-year low this month could save U.S. consumers $16.5 billion on home energy bills over the course of a year, according to a senior economist at the U.S. Federal Reserve.

U.S. households might see total savings from lower gas prices of as much as $113 billion a year through 2015, including tack-on effects such as lower product prices and higher wages generated by cheaper fuel, according to energy industry consultants IHS Inc.

The projected savings is “an unbelievable amount of money,” said Greg Ebel, chief executive of Spectra Energy Corp., during a Jan. 17 interview. “That’s better than any tax cut you’ve seen out there, better than any government handout.”

If consumers end up pocketing more than $100 billion due to low gas prices, it could add a “significant” piece to U.S. gross domestic product growth for 2012 or 2013, said Robert Solow, professor emeritus at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, who won the 1987 Nobel Prize in economics. “If that figure is right, it’s a substantial amount,” Solow said in a telephone interview yesterday.

The savings realized by the nation’s 113 million households will vary depending on location and how much gas makes up the home’s total energy bill. Gas utilities are passing along the lower prices they’re paying for the fuel because of a glut of new domestic production from hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling in shale formations.

The price of gas has plunged about 30 percent since the end of October on mild weather and oversupplies, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Natural gas for next-month delivery fell to $2.322 per million British thermal units on Jan. 19, the lowest price since February 2002. Gas settled at $2.728 yesterday.

Consumers will likely spend about 95 percent of the direct savings they see from their gas bills, said Bernard Weinstein, associate director of the Maguire Energy Institute at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. While that amount is a fraction of the $10.245 trillion in consumer spending for 2010, “it’s a step in the right direction,” Solow said.

Electricity prices, historically tied to the gas market, also are falling, although not necessarily for consumers. That’s because many power companies have raised rates to upgrade an aging power grid, install pollution controls and build new generators.

The typical U.S. household gas bill this year would drop to $323.50 from $468.80 in the previous year at an average gas price of $2.50 per million British thermal units — a savings of $145.30, said Mine Yucel, vice president and senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.

Residents are forecast to pay about 25 percent less this winter for gas used in stoves, furnaces and fireplaces than they did in 2008, when the fuel last touched highs of more than $13.50, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

“I think of shale gas as a real game-changer for consumers of natural gas,” said Hank Linginfelter, executive vice president of Atlanta-based AGL Resources Inc., in a telephone interview. “It’s having a significant impact on prices.’

AGL Resources, the largest standalone local U.S. gas distribution owner, said December bills have fallen on average 25 percent from a year ago at its utilities in seven states.

Iowa gas bills fell about 19 percent in December compared to the same month a year ago on lower demand and prices, MidAmerican Energy Co., owned by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc., said. Piedmont Natural Gas Co., based in Charlotte, North Carolina, has proposed cutting rates next month that would bring the average bill down by 40 percent since 2008.

Source: San Francisco Chronicle

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Jan 12

 

A presentation at the European Unconventional Gas Summit in Poland has shown the real face of unconventional gas exploration – and is encouraging the whole world to take a look:

They were images that did look a little bit destructive, images rarely – if ever – seen at an unconventional gas conference in Europe: a huge land moving “vibrator,” equipment that was leaving a giant furrow on the farmland in its path.

The pictures belonged to Jakub Kostecki, CEO of New Gas Contracting, a provider of sourcing, landman and permitting services to the nascent oil and gas industry in Poland, who showed his pictures from the ground to attendees at the European Unconventional Gas Summit in Krakow, Poland.

“When we get to local communities and say there will be a small footprint left by what we are all doing we have to remember that they will remember this picture,” he explained. “Of course there’s nothing wrong with this as long as there’s a crew right behind the vibe to appraise the damage and another one right behind them to fix it.

He recalled that many of the communities his company worked in had seen screenshots and video of vibrators “lurking in the forests,” an image that had been played over and over on Polish television.

Kostecki explained, “Local communities will have seen these images a couple of months before seismic crews come into the area.”

“If you take the ostrich approach – hiding your head in the sand – that’s not going to work,” he continued. “Some regions of Poland are used to seismic acquisition. Others are not. In places like Ilawa in the north, which has never seen vibes, this needs to be explained to the community. They need to be told what’s going on.”

He said that the visibility of these issues would become higher as activity increased in Poland.

“Most of the acquisition in Poland has been 2D. When the 3D, 3C and VSP work starts there will be a lot more equipment and people on the ground. Next year there will be many more crews and a lot more issues.”

In terms of wellsite permitting, Kostecki said: “We provide landman services, which basically means that we help the operators enter parcels in Poland and put rigs on the ground. O&G operators will encounter serious delays in Poland because their land issues aren’t sorted properly.”

He said his company, New Gas Contracting, was in the process of securing 220,000 permits for one of the 2D programs. In addition to providing landman services and wellsite permitting, NGC was negotiating with local landowners, and gminas, on where to set up rigs.

“Many (O&G companies) go in where it’s easiest to get equipment. Others will look at the plot from a technical standpoint – where the sweetspot is,” he said. “Still others will negotiate until they get the right price.”

Kostecki explained that after 8 September local communities had seen what a well looked like. “The 10 wells already drilled in Poland have made the public aware.”

He noted that because the shale gas industry was made up of majors, supermajors, and small companies from all over using different approaches with different corporate cultures, it affected how each of them interacted with local communities.

He showed a photo of a drilling site which he considered well organized.

“We need to remember that the local authorities are the local population, so you need to tread lightly,” opined Mr. Kostecki, who said that there could be up to 300 wells drilled in Poland by 2013.

“We’re talking about a lot of land, a lot of wells. It will be a huge issue and everybody needs to have a strategy going forward.”

In terms of roads, he said access was a huge issue in Poland. “The road capacity tonnage is way too low and the way we deal with communities affects what kind of exemptions are available. There’s a lot of talk about more federal, more standardized regulation,” he said.

He added, “A lot of traffic is needed to get the seismic, drilling and fracking equipment onto a given piece of property.”

Source: Natural Gas for Europe

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Dec 21

 

Natural gas giant Encana Corp. is stepping up an unusually public battle with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency over water-contamination findings that threaten to fuel opposition to the industry’s controversial drilling methods.

The Calgary-based natural gas giant hosted an hour-long presentation Tuesday, detailing errors it believes the EPA made in its study concluding natural gas wells in Wyoming controlled by Encana contaminated the area’s water. Encana’s criticism ranged from EPA lab results to methodology and the agency’s understanding of geology and hydrology.

“It is our belief the EPA made critical mistakes and misjudgments in almost every step in the process – from the way it designed the study, to the way it drilled and completed its wells, to the way it collected and interpreted the data, and to its decision to release a preliminary draft report without independent third-party review,” said David Stewart, the environment, health and safety head for Encana’s Wyoming operations.

Canadian oil and gas companies rarely voice their opposition to regulators so openly and bluntly, given the power the agencies wield over their operations. But experts say Encana is making a worthwhile gamble, given what’s at stake.

The fight centres on an environmental issue increasingly facing the natural gas industry. The EPA is critical of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, techniques used to extract natural gas from tight geological formations in its Wyoming gas fields. The method involves blasting water, sand, and chemicals into wells in order to allow gas to escape. Fracking has made it possible for energy companies to access vast resources of oil and gas that were previously beyond reach.

Critics argue groundwater can be contaminated by the process, and the EPA on Dec. 8 said its research determined wells near Pavillion, Wyo., have been dirtied by drilling activity. The regulator drilled its own wells for the study. The problems, however, may have predated Encana’s ownership of the natural gas field, exist naturally, or were caused by the EPA’s own work, Encana says.

Encana discussed its concerns with the EPA prior to the report’s release, but the gas company’s perspective was not included, according to executives on the media call. Encana is no longer discussing the report with the EPA, and will instead further refute the report’s claims as part of the public comment process, the executives said.

The EPA is not backing down from its analysis. Catherine Milbourn, a spokesperson for the EPA, in an e-mail said the “EPA and its contractor used stringent standards for the installation and development of the two monitoring wells, practices that addressed the possibility of influencing sampling results.” The EPA also defended its decision to release its draft findings. “To ensure we have the best science in place, we released the draft analysis for public review and for review by independent scientists and experts before it is finalized.” The EPA is also planning a broader, national study on fracking and water.

Encana, North America’s second-largest natural gas company, has more leeway to speak out against the regulator because the battle is taking place south of the border, experts said.

“It is less unusual in the U.S. than it is in Canada to air your differences of opinion [publicly on] a very important issue for the industry,” said Dennis Mahony, head of Torys LLP’s environmental, health and safety practice. “It is more the culture in the U.S.”

Because the EPA chose to release its report on such a sensitive topic in such a high-profile way, Encana is wise to debate the regulator publicly, Mr. Mahony said. “From Encana’s perspective, this is a legitimate effort to balance the debate.”

Michal Moore, a professor of energy economics at The School of Public Policy at the University of Calgary, and also a visiting fellow at New York’s Cornell University, said now that the Republicans wield a great deal of power in Washington, the EPA is weak. Now is the time for its opponents to strike, he said.

“They [the EPA] don’t have a champion right now, and so people can yell at them right now because they can, and not worry about repercussions,” he said.

Source: The Globe and Mail

 

 

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Dec 12

 

While Offshore Oil and Gas Magazines article speaks mostly about the US shale gas potential, employment affects all countries – and those with shale gas could reap some major job benefits:

Shale gas development has already created a booming new industry in many areas of the country, but a new report suggests that the sector could add hundreds of thousands of jobs in the coming years, according to the Houston Business Journal.

The report, released by research firm IHS Global Insight, places the shale natural gas industry at around 600,000 workers throughout the U.S. last year. In the coming years, however, this number could grow by 45 percent, reaching 870,000 by 2015.

By 2035, the number of employees could actually swell to 1.6 million, and the direct tax contributions could reach $57 billion annually, according to Bloomberg. Between now and then, shale gas exploration and production could provide as much as $933 billion in tax revenue.

Meanwhile, the indirect benefits of the industry could prove even more substantial, with each high-paying gas development job leading to the creation of two to three other positions.

“Shale gas combines a capital-intensive industry with a broad domestic supply chain,” John Larson, a vice president at IHS, told Bloomberg. “We think that these jobs through 2015 are net new jobs because of high unemployment.”

Source: Offshore Oil and Gas Magazine

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Nov 16

 

The Secretary of Energy Advisory Board Subcommittee on Shale Gas Production has posted its second and final 90-day report about its 20 recommendations for improving the safety and environmental performance of shale gas development. The subcommittee met Nov. 14 to review the document and then send it to Energy Secretary Dr. Steven Chu.

The panel posted its initial report in August 2011. The follow-up report says federal agencies, state governments, industry, and public interest groups have planned or taken actions to reduce shale gas production’s environmental impact, such as the Interior Department’s plan to require disclosure of all chemicals in fracturing fluids used on federal lands and EPA’s proposed NESHAPs for oil and natural gas production, currently scheduled to be finalized by April 2012.

Energy companies are planning to collect and disclose air emissions data from shale gas production sites, according to the committee, which has recommended independent technical review of the methodology.

The report says as many as 100,000 more gas wells are likely to be drilled in the United States in the next several decades. “The development of shale gas is one of the biggest energy innovations, if not the biggest, in several decades,” said Subcommittee Chairman John Deutch, an MIT professor. “It is now about 30 percent of total U.S. natural gas production; it has reduced energy costs and created hundreds of thousands of jobs. But to ensure the full benefits to the American people, environmental issues need to be addressed now -– especially in terms of waste water, air quality, and community impact. We believe that our twenty recommendations provide the basis for a pragmatic route forward and hope that they will be acted upon.

“Industry, working with state and federal regulators and public interest groups, should increase their best field engineering practices and environmental control activities by adopting the objective of continuous improvement, validated by measurement and disclosure of key operating metrics,” he added. “This is the surest path forward to assure that shale gas is produced in an environmentally sound fashion, and in a way that meets the needs of public trust.”

Other members of the subcommittee are Stephen Holditch of Texas A&M; Fred Krupp of the Environmental Defense Fund; Kathleen McGinty of Weston Solutions; Susan Tierney of Analysis Group; Daniel Yergin of IHS-Cambridge Energy Research Associates; and Mark Zoback of Stanford University.

Source: Occupational Health and Safety

 

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Nov 11

 

Some interesting findings for shale gas critics.  Preliminary investigations from a study by the University of Texas Energy Institute suggests there is no link between the process used in shale gas extraction operations and groundwater contamination.

The study’s leader, Charles “Chip” Groat, a UT geology professor, noted that the dangers associated with shale gas drilling — which is accomplished by hydraulic fracturing, a process commonly known as fracking — are largely the same as other oil-drilling operations.

“Hydraulic fracturing doesn’t seem to be of concern to groundwater,” Groat said. “If there has been water contaminated related to shale gas development let’s not look at fracturing, let’s look at surface processes.”

Read the full article: Statesman.com

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Nov 03

 

Polish independent upstream company Kulczyk Oil Ventures has completed its first hydraulic fracturing in a gas well in Ukraine, which the company believes was the first ever fracking of its kind carried out in the eastern European country.

Kulczyk said late Wednesday the fracking was carried out in the Ologovskoye-6 well.

After being fracked, the well flowed gas at a rate of 2,300 Mcf/d.

The company said it hopes to repeat this success with a frack of an additional unit in the well, the second well in the program.

“Initial indications from the frack look positive and more information will be made available as soon as the company has definitive results,” it said.

Polish independent upstream company Kulczyk Oil Ventures has completed its first hydraulic fracturing in a gas well in Ukraine, which the company believes was the first ever fracking of its kind carried out in the eastern European country.

Kulczyk said late Wednesday the fracking was carried out in the Ologovskoye-6 well.

After being fracked, the well flowed gas at a rate of 2,300 Mcf/d.

The company said it hopes to repeat this success with a frack of an additional unit in the well, the second well in the program.

“Initial indications from the frack look positive and more information will be made available as soon as the company has definitive results,” it said.

Source: Platts.com

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Nov 03

 

With talk of Greece holding the future of the world’s economy in its hand and the U.S. looking for a solution to global financial problems, Bloomberg says shale gas could reignite the American economy – and therefore have a huge global impact on world finances.  It’s a long piece – but it’s worth a read:

In late 1998, Chesapeake Energy Corp., an independent natural-gas producer based in Oklahoma City, exemplified an industry in decline.

The company’s stock price had fallen over two years from above $34 a share to 75 cents. Its market value tumbled 93 percent, to $72 million. “They’re running up a down escalator,” Michael Spohn, an analyst at Petroleum Research Group, said.

When Aubrey K. McClendon, Chesapeake’s chief executive officer and co-founder, announced he might sell the company, there was little interest, Bloomberg Businessweek reports in its Nov. 7 edition.

Falling gas prices had reduced the value of Chesapeake’s reserves from $2.1 billion to $661 million. “We’d had higher highs than others in the industry; then we had lower lows,” McClendon said with characteristic insouciance. “In this business, it’s good to have a short memory and thick skin.”

Good thing he didn’t sell. Thirteen years later, Chesapeake’s market value exceeds $18 billion. Its shares sell for about $28, up 8 percent this year. The company’s 120-acre neo-Georgian corporate campus bustles with construction crews building new office space. Its workforce has grown 30 percent in a year, to 12,200, and its recruiters have 700 jobs to fill. “The United States,” McClendon boasts, “has the capacity to become the Saudi Arabia of natural gas.”

A tall man who wears his wavy silver hair long by CEO standards, McClendon, 52, exudes the confidence of someone who’s certain he’s seen the future. Exploitation of newly accessible supplies of gas embedded in layers of what’s known as shale rock, he predicts, will help revive domestic manufacturing and change the terms of debate about global warming. “It’s a new industrial renaissance,” he said.

Diverting Billions

You’d expect that kind of exuberance from a man with everything to gain from seeing his vision made real, but it’s not just independent drillers such as Chesapeake that are talking big. ConocoPhillips is investing $2 billion in gas in 2011, up from $500 million two years ago.

Other multi-national oil giants, such as Exxon Mobil Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell Plc, are likewise diverting billions into domestic shale gas projects. “We believe so strongly in natural gas that it’s a major portion of our portfolio,” Conoco CEO James J. Mulva told an audience at the Detroit Economic Club in September.

Last month, the potential for U.S. shale gas spurred Kinder Morgan to acquire rival pipeline operator El Paso Corp. for $21.1 billion. It also drove the proposed $4.4 billion purchase of Brigham Exploration Co. by Norway’s Statoil ASA.

Cheaper Gas

Encouraged by the availability of inexpensive and cleaner domestic gas, some electric utilities are replacing their coal- burning capacity with gas-fired units. Energy-intensive manufacturers of chemicals, plastics, and steel are beginning to bring home operations that they exported years ago.

“We believe natural gas must be part of any discussion on strengthening our country’s long-term economic health,” Mulva said in Detroit. “It should also be part of any discussion on improving energy security, protecting the environment, and, yes, creating jobs.”

On the economic potential of the nascent shale revolution, even some career environmentalists sound impressed, if cautious. “This thing is a potential game-changer,” said Fred Krupp, president of the New York-based Environmental Defense Fund (EDF). Shale production in the U.S. has increased from practically nothing in 2000 to more than 13 billion cubic feet per day, or about 30 percent of the country’s natural-gas supply.

Cleaner Than Coal

That proportion is heading toward 50 percent in coming years. The U.S. passed Russia in 2009 to become the world’s largest producer of natural gas. An Energy Dept. advisory panel on which Krupp sits estimated in August that more than 200,000 jobs, both direct and indirect, “have been created over the last several years by the development of domestic production of shale gas.”

At a moment of 9.1 percent unemployment nationally, additional decently paid work is just one potential benefit. “Natural gas burns cleaner than coal, emits less in the way of greenhouse gases, and avoids mercury and other pollutants from coal,” Krupp points out. “So this could be win-win, if–and this is a big ‘if’ — we do it the right way.”

Geologists have known for generations that immense, deeply buried shale formations contain copious reserves of methane, or natural gas, which can be burned efficiently to make electricity and run factories. Until recently, however, industry lacked the tools to get at shale gas profitably.

Casing Protects Wells

In the early 2000s, the combination of two existing techniques led to a breakthrough. One method is horizontal drilling. The other is hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” a scary-sounding and controversial process involving the high- pressure pumping of millions of gallons of chemical-laced water deep underground to create cracks in shale rock and release trapped gas.

When in 2007 environmentalists began raising reasonable concerns about fracking, industry executives responded with a dismissive, “Just trust us“ — ensuring that skeptics would trust them less. Just in case concern didn’t turn into panic on its own, the industry for years took the additional step of refusing to disclose the chemicals it uses in fracking.

Lost amid the suspicion and recrimination was a potentially more constructive discussion over improving industry standards for drillers’ concrete-lined steel casing, which, when installed correctly, has successfully insulated wells from drinking water.

Safe and Profitable

Now, though, there’s some surprising good news: Despite all the vituperation on both sides, some people from business and environmental circles are quietly at work in Texas, New York and Washington on guidelines that should ensure a safe, profitable gas revival.

The Environmental Defense Fund, for example, is drafting model state regulations with Southwestern Energy Co., a producer based in Houston. The collaboration is rooted in the recognition that the choice between polluting fossil fuels and pristine alternatives is not simple. For the foreseeable future, the U.S. has to burn a whole lot of something to produce power.

The nation now gets 45 percent of its electricity from coal, 25 percent from natural gas, 20 percent from nuclear, 7 percent from hydro, and 2 percent from wind. Solar barely registers. With current technology, wind and solar probably can’t reach into double digits, let alone bear the bulk of the load.

Bridge Fuel

If you want to continue to turn on the lights with the flip of a switch, the real short-term choice is whether to stick with the current mix or replace a substantial amount of coal capacity with less dirty natural gas.

John Podesta, former chief of staff to ex-President Bill Clinton, argues for the latter option. Now head of the Center for American Progress in Washington, Podesta writes on the liberal think tank’s website that natural gas can serve “as a bridge fuel to a 21st century energy economy that relies on efficiency, renewable sources, and low-carbon fossil fuels.” Exploring where that bridge will lead should be one of the country’s most important economic priorities.

Like petroleum, natural gas is a hydrocarbon, a product of decomposed organic material that simmered underground for hundreds of millions of years. Simple in structure–one carbon atom and four hydrogen atoms–gas has a convoluted history in the U.S.

In the 1970s, federal price restrictions contributed to underproduction and shortages, leading to wintertime shutdowns of Midwestern schools and factories. Utility executives and consumers came to view natural gas as unreliable.

Attractive Alternative

A titanic political fight during the Carter Administration ended in a bizarre compromise: price deregulation combined with restrictions on burning gas to generate electricity. (The coal industry, it should be noted, sponsors a long-established and adroit K Street lobby.) By the 1990s, the limits on using natural gas for power had been eased, and new turbine technology made gas an attractive alternative to coal.

Furious construction of gas-fired power plants ensued, only to be followed by dismay: Gas supplies were not expanding apace. At the turn of the 21st century, some natural-gas basins were nearly tapped out, and once again many utilities, homeowners, and energy-intensive manufacturers dismissed domestic gas as a sucker’s bet.

It might have stayed that way if not for the stubbornness of a Texan named George P. Mitchell. The son of an immigrant Greek goat herder, Mitchell worked his way through Texas A&M University in the late 1930s waiting tables and repairing clothes for students.

Mitchell’s Influence

After World War II, he went into the oil and gas business in Houston, working from a tiny office above a drugstore. All through the ‘80s, Mitchell pondered geological studies showing that gas could be found not only in conventional reservoirs but also in deeper, denser “unconventional” shale formations.

Shale is where gas is actually created. Energy men call it “the kitchen,” where hydrocarbons “cook,” and where large amounts of gas remains trapped. Mitchell wondered: Why not drill all the way down to the kitchen? His exploration company probed the Barnett Shale, a slab sprawling 7,000 feet beneath Dallas and Fort Worth. Competitors scoffed.

“We were running low on gas, and I had to find another reservoir somewhere,” Mitchell, now 92, told Bloomberg News. “So I said let’s drill a well and see what this thing is about.”

He invested his faith and capital in hydraulic fracturing, which had been introduced in rudimentary form in the late ‘40s. Injected at enormous pressures and in huge volumes, fracking fluid creates narrow cracks in the shale. Sand diffused in the fluid stays behind and props open the cracks, allowing gas to flow out and up through the well.

Horizontal Drilling

“Mitchell Energy,” the industry consultant Daniel Yergin writes in his new book, The Quest: Energy, Security, and the Remaking of the Modern World, “cracked the code.”

In 2002, after 60 years in the business, George Mitchell decided to cash out. Devon Energy Co., a better-capitalized independent in Oklahoma City, acquired his company for $3.5 billion.

Devon brought to the Barnett a knack for horizontal drilling. Improvements in equipment controls and measurement methods allowed its crews to drill down and then turn the gnawing diamond-tipped bit sideways. Drillers penetrate the shale laterally rather than just vertically. This exposes more of the surface area of the formation to extraction and enables multiple wells to be created from each drill pad.

Shale Stampede

Devon could not keep the field to itself. Rivals rushed in to lease tracts in Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Oklahoma. Following geologists’ amazingly precise three-dimensional subterranean maps, the drillers went as far east as the Marcellus Shale, a formation that extends below Western New York State, over into Pennsylvania, and all the way down to West Virginia and Tennessee. Few people outside the industry noticed, but a shale stampede was under way.

After almost selling his company during the late-’90s doldrums, Aubrey McClendon dramatically switched strategy and wagered Chesapeake’s future on shale. (A few years later, he lost much of his personal fortune during the financial crisis of 2008 before gaining it back.) Today, Chesapeake is the most active driller of new wells in the U.S., with 177 rigs in operation.

It is the country’s second-biggest overall producer of natural gas, behind only ExxonMobil, which announced in late 2009 that it would join the gas rush by buying XTO Energy for $41 billion. Anadarko Petroleum Corp. is the third-largest producer, followed by Devon.

Haynesville Play

McClendon is descended from a prominent Oklahoma oil family, the Kerrs of Kerr-McGee fame. Prospecting is in his DNA. In 2003 he instituted what he called his “land rush plan”: Chesapeake borrowed heavily and bought leases in the Barnett, some of them in built-up parts of the Dallas-Fort Worth metro area. At midnight after the jets stopped arriving at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport, workers drilled next to the quiet runways. In 2005, McClendon’s geologists discovered gas in a rich shale play in Northwest Louisiana and East Texas called the Haynesville. (Shale projects are commonly referred to as “plays.”)

Also in 2005, Chesapeake paid $2.2 billion for the second- largest gas producer in Appalachia, becoming the biggest presence in the Marcellus play. McClendon, who got his start in the business as a “land man,” or oil and gas lease broker, built a one-of-a-kind database of millions of property records from obscure county courthouses. The digitized trove has allowed Chesapeake to beat rivals to the doorsteps of landowners whose farms or backyards sat atop buried shale gas.

Margin Calls

A runup in gas prices–to nearly $14 per thousand cubic feet in mid-2008–made McClendon look like a genius. A few months later, he seemed less smart when the economy imploded, dragging down the price of energy and of Chesapeake’s stock (which fell from a high above $69 a share in July of that year to $11 in December).

McClendon personally had borrowed against his large individual holdings to buy yet more company stock. When the bottom fell out, he was hit with margin calls that forced him to liquidate a big chunk of his investments.

Like most entrepreneurs in the up-and-down energy business, McClendon takes occasional setbacks in stride. It helps to have a loyal board of directors. In 2009, the Chesapeake board gave the CEO a $100 million pay package. The company also paid him $12 million for a collection of 19th century maps he owned.

Better Than Coal

Why the well-timed company largesse? McClendon, citing pending shareholder litigation over his pay, answers guardedly. He was properly rewarded for his work during 2008, he said, and received an appropriate “retention package” to ensure his remaining as CEO.

As for the maps, he said he had paid out of his own pocket for years to decorate the halls and conference rooms of the company, and it was time for Chesapeake to make him whole. The company denies any impropriety. On Nov. 1, the litigation was settled, and McClendon agreed to rescind the map sale and repay Chesapeake the $12 million, plus interest.

Today, he has assets valued at more than $1 billion, including a 19.2 percent stake in Oklahoma City’s National Basketball Assn. franchise, the Thunder.

Burning natural gas for power, McClendon proudly points out, results in about half the equivalent carbon dioxide emissions of coal. Such observations, however, have not kept him from becoming a target of activists who are trying to shut down fracking — and have succeeded in some places, such as New York State.

Shale Gas Welcomed

Environmentalists, McClendon believes, should feel much more warmly toward him. He readily acknowledges that human activity contributes to global warming. “Why take a chance,” he said, “when we can reduce our carbon emissions through consuming more natural gas and less coal and oil?” It’s in his pecuniary interest to hold that opinion, of course.

Many residents of Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas–places accustomed to oil and gas development–welcomed the “shale gale” and its accompanying jobs, packed cafés, land royalties, and rising local tax revenue. The reaction was far more mixed in New York and Pennsylvania, despite the latter’s history of oil and coal exploration.

In the Northeast, some residents objected to heavy truck traffic and rural vistas marred by towering steel rigs and murky wastewater pools. Even more intense were concerns about the effects of shale drilling on drinking water supplies. Some homeowners complained that after gas operations began, well water started tasting bad and children fell ill.

Industry Defends Fracking

Activists raised questions about whether the chemicals in fracking fluid were contaminating drinking water with benzene, methanol, and other dangerous substances. In 2008, Businessweek published an article by the nonprofit journalism organization ProPublica that identified episodes of water contamination near (although not all definitively caused by) gas activity in seven states: Alabama, Colorado, Montana, New Mexico, Ohio, Texas, and Wyoming.

In 2010, New York stopped issuing permits for fracking to give environmental authorities there time to study the situation.

Hit with pollution lawsuits, Chesapeake and other producers denied that fracking caused water contamination. For one thing, the companies said, the procedure typically takes place a mile or more below drinking water aquifers and is isolated by massive layers of impermeable rock.

According to the industry, drillers had done more than a million frack jobs going back to 1948 without proof of widespread pollution problems. Drillers also pointed to a study of fracking released in 2004 by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency that supports their position.

Film’s Impact

O.K., environmentalists said, so what chemicals are you mixing into fracking fluid? That’s secret, the industry answered.

“That was a very, very stupid answer,” said Jim Gipson, a spokesman for Chesapeake. “In this country, if you tell people you’re keeping secrets from them, they will naturally assume you are doing something wrong.”

The producers blame the furtiveness on big drilling contractors, companies such as Halliburton Co., that actually devise and inject the frack fluid recipes. The contractors insisted that their recipes were safe, but deserved confidentiality as proprietary trade secrets.

The industry’s conduct fueled protests in New York and Pennsylvania, which adopted as their manifesto Gasland, a documentary that made its official debut in January 2010 at the Sundance Film Festival, went on to air on HBO, and was nominated for an Academy Award. The film memorably showed homeowners near drilling operations lighting their tap water on fire and complaining about contaminated waterways.

Fracking Dangers Overstated

While Gasland raised relevant questions, it overstated the dangers related to drilling shale gas. It suggested rampant water contamination caused by gas operations. In contrast, a study by researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology released earlier this year found about 20 reported cases of groundwater contamination between 2005 and 2009.

Some of these problems were traced to flawed cement used in well construction, though not to the fracking process itself. Pennsylvania and other states have since toughened drilling construction standards.

Flammable tap water is a real phenomenon in some areas, albeit a rare one. It’s caused by methane seeping into household wells, and it can happen regardless of whether gas drilling is going on nearby. The challenge in tracing the source of methane seepage is that the gas can occur naturally and contaminate water without any industrial activity. (Not that anyone would want an incendiary kitchen faucet, but methane gas in water isn’t toxic, and it evaporates quickly.)

Methane Occurs Naturally

This August, Josh Fox, Gasland’s director, accompanied a woman named Natalie Brant when she testified before a hearing on fracking held by members of the New York State Senate. Brant, whose family lives south of Buffalo, testified that before the state’s moratorium on fracking went into effect, several of her eight children developed headaches and nosebleeds, which she attributed to nearby gas drilling. “We’re constantly worried about our children and if they’re going to come down with cancer or other illnesses because of what they’ve been exposed to,” she said. State environmental officials have said that methane occurs naturally in well water in Brant’s part of the state, and that the gas turned up in other water wells in the area before drilling began.

New Casing System

Chesapeake’s McClendon (whose company wasn’t specifically implicated by Brant) said claims such as Brant’s, compelling though they may seem, aren’t based on hard evidence pointing to hydraulic fracturing. But in a speech in September at a conference in Philadelphia, he acknowledged a series of “limited gas migration incidents in Pennsylvania in the past three years.”

One of those led state regulators to impose a $900,000 fine on Chesapeake for polluting drinking water in Bradford County. “These incidents were not related to fracking,” McClendon said. Instead, they were caused by faulty well casing. “Only a couple dozen homeowners claim to have been affected,” he said. “And more importantly, the industry worked closely with Pennsylvania’s Environmental Protection Dept. officials to implement an updated and customized casing system that has been effective in preventing new cases of gas migration. Problem identified. Problem solved.”

McClendon has a tendency to exacerbate hostilities by belittling his antagonists. At the Philadelphia conference he described protesters’ “vision of the future” in these derisive terms: “We’re cold, it’s dark, and we’re hungry.”

Fracking Chemicals Disclosed

Such condescension notwithstanding, Chesapeake and other natural-gas producers have made concessions. Overcoming some of the concerns of their contractors, Chesapeake and other producers (and the contractors themselves) have begun to disclose the chemical additives used in fracking. An industry- sponsored website, www.fracfocus.org, allows companies voluntarily to report the additives on a well-by-well basis.

“We just decided to do what we should have done from the start,” said Chesapeake’s Gipson. Disclosure isn’t universal yet, but it’s headed in that direction. Arkansas, Texas, and certain other gas-producing states have enacted legal requirements for full disclosure as a condition of continued fracking.

At fracfocus.org, visitors will find that some of the stuff in fracking fluid is definitely not what you’d want in your water glass. Ingredients may include hydrochloric acid (initiates cracks), methanol (inhibits corrosion), glutaraldehyde (kills bacteria), and ethylene glycol (winterizes product).

Accidents Are Rare

Frack fluid is typically 98 percent to 99.5 percent water and sand, with the additives making up the remainder, according to the industry. When the nasty stuff passes by any drinking water supply, it is supposed to be contained securely within at least two layers of steel casing and two layers of heavy-duty cement.

No one disputes that there can be problems if there are flaws in the steel or concrete. The industry said such accidents have been exceedingly rare.

The 2011 MIT study estimates that between 2005 and 2009 there were some 50 incidents nationwide involving a variety of gas drilling mishaps: groundwater contamination, surface spills, offsite disposal issues, air quality problems, and well blowouts. To provide guidance on how to reduce gas drilling risks, the DOE set up its seven-person shale committee.

Sniping, Distrust

The EDF’s Krupp sits on the panel, which is chaired by John M. Deutch, a Director of Central Intelligence during the first Clinton Administration. Other members include the consultant and historian Yergin and several scholars and former regulators.

Despite Krupp’s participation, some environmentalists have written off the DOE committee as an industry-influenced rubber stamp. These critics note that Deutch, a professor at MIT, holds a directorship on the board of Cheniere Energy, a Houston-based liquefied natural-gas company, and formerly served on the board of Schlumberger Ltd., a major drilling contractor.

Even Krupp “has his own connections to the industry,” Dusty Horwitt, senior counsel at the Environmental Working Group, a nonprofit in Washington, said in a radio interview in May.

The sniping reflects distrust of the pragmatism Krupp embraces. A 57-year-old lawyer by training and the son of a New Jersey businessman who recycled rags and cardboard, Krupp heads a nonprofit that promotes the use of market forces to protect the environment.

August Report

He regularly takes flak from harder-line activists who oppose his willingness to work with industry. His “industry connection” to shale gas consists of having hired as a senior policy adviser a former employee of the Texas Independent Producers and Royalty Owners Assn.

After conferring with the Sierra Club, the Natural Resources Defense Council and other nonprofits, Krupp had considerable influence on the 41-page preliminary report the DOE committee released in August.

The paper calls for mandatory state-enforced disclosure of fracking ingredients, stricter standards on conventional air pollution created by shale operations, and additional research on underground methane migration and greenhouse gas releases associated with gas drilling. The panel persuasively explains the need for government inspection of casing and cementing and for more careful disposal of wastewater that comes up from wells.

The report doesn’t address the sticky question of whether the EPA should be given more authority over gas drilling. At present, state agencies regulate the industry. Gas executives grimace when asked about the EPA being given responsibility for permitting their operations.

Fracking’s Exemption

“There’s no evidence the states aren’t doing the job adequately,” said Henry J. Hood, Chesapeake’s senior vice- president and general counsel. “The EPA doesn’t have the manpower or the state-by-state expertise.”

Some environmentalists angrily stress that in 2005 Congress made explicit that another federal law, the Safe Drinking Water Act, doesn’t cover fracking. The exemption certainly reflects the strength of the oil and gas lobby, but with a U.S. House of Representatives controlled by anti-regulatory Republicans, the chances of getting the provision reversed at this point are exactly zero.

Debating it is more of a distraction than anything else and obscures that the EPA has authority to take action against gas drillers and producers that violate the Clean Air and Water Acts. Rather than drawing another bull’s-eye on the EPA’s back, a savvier approach would be to use the DOE report as a blueprint for broadly framed principles that state officials enforce vigorously.

Education Needed

Smart industry executives should accept tough standards as the cost of resolving environmental anxiety. In January 2010, one such corporate leader, Southwestern Energy’s executive vice- president and general counsel, Mark K. Boling, picked up the telephone and called Scott Anderson, the Texas-based EDF gas expert whose industry experience makes him suspect in the eyes of some fellow environmentalists. Southwestern traces its roots to an Arkansas gas concern incorporated in 1929.

Boling, a former partner with the Houston law firm Fulbright & Jaworski, has spent his entire legal career promoting the interests of oil and gas clients. Now, he said in an interview, those interests include demonstrating that fracking is safe. “It’s not enough to say we’ve been fracking for 60 years and no one has proved there’s a problem,” Boling adds. “We’ve got to get out there and educate, encourage better regulation, and pick up our performance in every aspect.”

Working Out Differences

Boling’s phone call to Anderson produced a cautious series of negotiations leading to a 37-page draft state regulatory code for gas operations. “Our idea is not that this should be adopted word for word by any state,” Anderson explains. “This is not one size fits all. Instead, it’s an attempt to show what a responsible producer and a responsible environmental organization consider best practices. It’s something to work toward.”

A dozen other gas producers have been shown the draft, and many offered comments, which have been incorporated, said Anderson. “What we’re working on are mostly very technical underground issues that have technical solutions,” he said. “Fracturing should be safe, if it is done properly. We have a ways to go, but this is a good model for working out our differences.”

The incentives for working out those differences are compelling. In New York, where local opposition to fracking remains strong in some communities, Governor Andrew M. Cuomo inherited a permitting moratorium on the procedure imposed by his predecessor, David A. Paterson. Since taking office in January, Cuomo has encouraged the drafting of more stringent rules.

Jobs at Stake

Released for public comment in September, the proposal would allow fracking subject to rules suited to New York’s geology and regional politics. It would prohibit drilling within 2,000 feet of public drinking water supplies or 500 feet of the state’s 18 primary aquifers. Drilling within the watersheds that provide unfiltered water to New York City and Syracuse would be banned altogether.

Even with these and many other restrictions, the Cuomo plan would make more than 80 percent of the Marcellus Shale within New York viable for drilling, said Joe Martens, the state’s commissioner of environmental conservation. “Our most conservative estimate is that we could add more than 13,000 jobs, direct and indirect,” Martens said. “The higher estimate is nearly 54,000 jobs.”

Fracking’s Economic Benefits

That kind of boost could bring struggling towns in Western Upstate New York back to life. “Right across the border in Pennsylvania,” Martens said, “we can see the jobs and tax revenue that can come with shale gas.” Assuming that New York regulators receive the resources to enforce the proposed toughened rules and effectively protect water supplies, he said, “New Yorkers deserve to get the same [economic] benefits.”

The potential for creating jobs goes beyond the bereft former farm towns of rural New York. Every day, Dow Chemical alone uses the equivalent of 700 million cubic feet of gas and ethane (a natural gas derivative).

That’s as much as all of Australia consumes on a daily basis. More plentiful domestic gas supplies now priced at around $4 per thousand cubic feet have allowed Dow to announce multibillion-dollar expansions of facilities in Louisiana and Texas, according to Executive Vice-President James R. Fitterling.

Impact on Dow

“We expect to employ up to 1,300 workers per project to construct our two new propane dehydrogenation units and a new ethylene cracker,” he told an energy conference in Houston on Sept. 26. “We also expect between 400 and 500 new, long-term Dow jobs to operate and maintain the facilities.” That’s just one chemical company.

Some electric utilities are overcoming their deep-seated uneasiness over natural gas to shift parts of their operations from coal to gas. The switch is inviting because many coal- burning facilities are antiquated, and the country already has large amounts of more modern, underused natural-gas utility capacity (a holdover from overbuilding in the late 1990s.)

The coal industry is fighting fierce rear-guard battles to prevent the move to gas. But a variety of federal antipollution rules taking effect in coming years will provide an additional reason to consider gas. Power companies in 15 states, including California, Florida, and Pennsylvania, have recently announced expanded use of natural gas, often at the expense of coal, according to America’s Natural Gas Alliance, a trade group.

Steady Power

“We need to find a way to take advantage of this historic opportunity to cut back on burning coal, which is the worst energy option,” said the EDF’s Krupp. And he said that as an advocate of more wind- and solar-generated electricity. The best way to exploit renewable power on a large scale is to use it in conjunction with natural-gas plants. Gas-fired generation ensures steady power when the wind isn’t blowing or the sun isn’t shining. “Done the right way,” Krupp said, “there’s just a lot to be said for natural gas.”

Source: Bloomberg

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Oct 25

 

World Tribune’s website has published an op-ed about the economic benefits of shale gas exploration, written by Sol Sanders who is a contributor for the Washington Times.

While the Obama Administration has been busy lining the pockets of its campaign contributors with solar power handouts, an energy revolution is taking place even the Washington Luddites and GOSplanners can’t buck.

These discoveries already dwarf proved conventional gas reserves. A decade of early exploitation by American technological pioneers has produced a domestic natural gas surplus, so much so U.S. prices are a fraction of liquefied natural gas [LNG] prices in East Asia. There appear to be export prospects as soon as ocean terminals designed for LNG imports can be refitted — the first significant exports since the 1973 Arab Oil Embargo.

Billions of investment dollars are already rolling in for both U.S. upstream drilling and pipeline distribution rationalization — including from the savvy Norwegian White Sheikhs’ Statoil to the Chinese government oil companies. Yes, Beijing is not only looking for solid equities but wants technological transfers for their own country’s deposits double current U.S. estimates. A similar story is beginning to unfold from Poland to France — although Paris is hesitant because of competition with its massive investment in nuclear power — to Canada to Brazil, South Africa, Australia, Israel, India and Chile.

The question now is whether the Obama Administration will leave the industry to benign neglect. It’s no secret where the Administration’s heart is; in 2008 President Barack Obama warned of inevitability of skyrocketing energy bills in a scenario to help force a shift from fossil fuels to more expensive so-called renewable “green” energy. You would think what with windmill imports from China and Spain so severe Congress is being asked for tariff protection — after subsidized windpower outfits moved their jobs and technology offshore — and the fiasco in solar energy, the feds and their enviromentalista campfollowers would back off. Logic now dictates their Jeremiah calls of rapidly approaching “peak oil” — the time when increasing demand and depleted fossil fuels would meet — is even more distant.

But warning signs came with the August release by the Obama Energy Department of a 90-day “study” [without industry representation] of safety standards for the new technologies, ignoring already formulated industry “safe practices”. There could be contamination of the water supply, even though most shale gas lies at depths far below the aquifers. And there have been some miscreants. But the industry — well aware of the opposition the enviromentalistas can mount — are already planning self-policing.

What is self evident is increased sources of natural gas — the least polluting of all fossil fuels — is going to revolutionize the whole energy and environmental debate. Although the $2,000 cost of retrofitting a Detroit car to use natural gas rather than gasoline or diesel is a minor stumbling bloc, a network of filling stations would require big investment for a massive U.S. shift. Still, the glitterati’s fascination with electric cars ignores 60 percent of the nation’s demand is supplied by coal-fired turbines. [There is already a surfeit of recharging plugs for electric cars, selling poorly despite all the hoopla.] And, of course, gas-fired generating plants are the fastest way to meet rapid increases in electricity demand.

Other opportunities for changeover are closer. It is conceivable truck fleets could move quickly to the “new” fuel. A number of new petrochemical plants using broken out elements of shale gas promise new jobs, bringing production back to the U.S. There is growing interest, too, in high-energy requirements for expansion of recycled scrap metal for specialty steels. The international implications, politically as well as economically, are equally promising: Moscow’s attempt to blackmail Western Europe with a gas monopoly and the growing power of the unstable Persian Gulf OPEC LNG producers is going to be eroded.

Bottom line, as Gov. Rick Perry has argued, American recovery demands access to new energy. That’s not new. U.S. development always has depended on cheap energy, from our colonial forests to the development of early 20th century petroleum. Now, again, the shale gas revolution holds out that promise at a time when the economy desperately needs a shot in the arm.

American technology, borrowing offshore deep-water drilling techniques, has started exploiting huge deposits of natural gas buried deep in the earth below shale rock. It would be hard to exaggerate the meaning of this “new” fuel for the American economy — and the world, what with three-quarters of the known new resources outside North America.

Source: Worldtribune.com

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Sep 27

 

Earlier this month, the Prime Minister of Russia, Vladimir Putin, and the former German Chancellor, Gerhard Schröder, ushered in what was widely seen – for better and worse – as a new era in the European gas market. On 6 September, at a ceremony outside St Petersburg, they inaugurated the Nord Stream pipeline that takes natural gas directly from Russia to Germany under the Baltic Sea.

Bypassing Ukraine, Poland and the Baltic States, the new pipeline is also designed to bypass the disputes that have periodically halted the flow of Russian gas to the rest of Europe.

Even as the new gas started to flow, however, there were the first signs that the European gas market could be in for even more radical reshaping within less than 10 years – in energy terms, a mere twinkling of the eye.

At an economic forum in Poland which happened to coincide with the opening of Nord Stream, the hottest topic – in the conference halls and in the corridors – was of the potential for shale gas, a resource that has quietly altered the balance of energy provision in the United States and helped bring prices there down by a fifth in the past five years.

Initial surveys indicate Poland has enormous reserves of shale gas. One from the US Department of Energy, suggests Poland could have as much as 5.3 trillion cubic metres – equivalent to 300 years’ domestic consumption.

But drilling for shale gas is controversial, especially among environmentalists. Although the technique – which involves extracting the gas by blasting the shale rock layers with high pressure sand, water and chemicals – has been known for a century, it is only in the past decade that it has become economically and technologically viable. But many fear that such “fracking” causes subsidence and contaminates ground water, and it has been banned in France, Switzerland and some US states. The recent discovery of shale gas deposits near Blackpool has also prompted calls for a UK ban.

The Green movement also fears that new, and exploitable, supplies of gas could reduce prices to the point where investment in alternative energy sources, such as wind and wave power does not make economic sense.

In Poland, however, the exploitation of shale gas is well on the way to becoming something of a national mission. Poland’s Prime Minister, Donald Tusk (below), has described shale gas as his country’s “great chance” to turn Poland from an energy importer to a major exporter within a generation. And the subtext for Warsaw is that shale gas could not only make Poland into an exporter, but also end its age-old energy dependence on Russia.

With a general election on 9 October, Mr Tusk’s ruling party is already capitalising politically on the issue and has published a four-year programme, which promises, among other things, the creation of a special fund for the proceeds from shale gas, to be used to pay future pensions. It may not be coincidence that this month the Polish energy conglomerate, PGNiG, torched the first flare on one of its rigs at Lubocino in the north of the country. Commercial shale gas production is projected to start in 2014. Not least because his is one of the few governments in Europe to escape the effects of the financial crisis, Mr Tusk’s government is confidently expected to be re-elected.

Not everyone, though, shares Poland’s enthusiasm for shale gas. For obvious reasons, some of the fiercest critics are to be found in Russia, which cannily cast itself among the eco-warriors at the economic forum in Poland, playing down the economic repurcussions.

Poland and Russia have had a difficult relationship, albeit one that has recently undergone a modest improvement. But a Poland that became self-sufficient in gas would take quite a chunk out of Russia’s exports. And if Poland became a net exporter, other markets – Ukraine, the Baltic States and others – could also be lost to Russia. The entire business model of Russia’s mega-conglomerate, Gazprom, would be called into question.

In fact, to an extent this is already happening. Almost without anyone noticing, the European gas market has been changing, and not in Russia’s favour. When Ukraine stopped the flow of Russian gas westward in the winter of 2009, a combination of existing European contingency plans and emergency cobbling-together soon replaced almost 90 per cent of the gas that would have come from Russia. This showed both Russia and Ukraine that their leverage was not what it once was.

There is also more gas on the market. Britain, where the Russia-Ukraine crisis served to highlight the dearth of gas storage, now has a state-of-the art terminal for Liquefied Natural Gas at Milford Haven. And reduced demand for imported gas in the US, thanks to the development of shale gas there, has increased stocks of LNG for delivery elsewhere. Even if Europe is not experiencing an actual gas glut, it is no longer threatened by a shortage.

The opening of Nord Stream adds a further dimension. With the potential to increase reliability of supplies and keep prices down, it can be seen as enhancing Europe’s, and more particularly Germany’s, energy security. This is why Berlin has always been enthusiastic about it. But it can also be seen as part of Russia’s post-Soviet energy strategy – which is why Poland and Ukraine, as transit countries, have been so hostile to it. They feared being left – literally and figuratively – out of the loop, with no transit fees and no leverage. Shale gas comes, for Poland, as a form of salvation.

Whatever reassurance the opening of Nord Stream offers Russia, however, the prospect of competition from Polish gas within Central and Eastern Europe can hardly be welcome either to Gazprom as a company or to Russia. And as Poland dreams of untold wealth and power from gas exports, Russia faces a nightmare combination of lower prices and fewer customers.

So far, the cognoscenti quip, Poland’s shale gas is 10 per cent gas and 90 per cent politics. Even if its reserves are as high as hoped, that balance will not necessarily change. But the politics and configuration of Europe’s gas market will both be unrecognisable from today.

Source: The Independent

 

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