Pickens Thinks New Yorkers Don’t Understand Fracking | Food & Water Watch

Pickens Thinks New Yorkers Don’t Understand Fracking | Food & Water Watch.  Video of National Press Club interview with Ted Turner and T.Boone Pickens

April 21st, 2011

Pickens Thinks New Yorkers Don’t Understand Fracking

By Rich Bindell and Emily Wurth

Yesterday, the nation saw another example of the cost of doing business with the natural gas industry when a natural gas well operated by Chesapeake Energy blew out in Canton, Pennsylvania.

According to T. Boone Pickens this week, New Yorkers need an enlightened, “intelligent” leader on energy … like T. Boone Pickens.

On the subject of fracking (about 39 minutes into the video), Pickens said…

“Western New York is concerned about it. They now have said, ‘You’re gonna frack these wells in the watershed? What? The Watershed! They don’t even know what the watershed is. That’s where it rains. It rains in the watershed and then runs into a lake. And you’re not gonna frack a lake or the watershed or whatever. You’re fracking down 10,000 feet, two miles under the surface. But my God you say that to people, in New York, they don’t know what’s gonna happen to their water. Well what they need is somebody intelligent, a leader to say this is what the deal is. Don’t worry. Just watch what I’m telling you, listen to what I’m saying and check the facts. That’s all you have to do. It’s not complicated It’s very simple.”

This “reassurance” from a representative of the natural gas industry came courtesy of Pickens while he and Ted Turner were guest speakers earlier this week at the National Press Club event promoting his Pickens Plan to reduce U.S. dependence on foreign oil and invest in alternative fuels and natural gas in particular. It sounds like Pickens wants residents of New York State and even President Obama to trust him and the rest of the natural gas industry and not concern themselves with any of the details of fracking.

Before implying New Yorkers were incapable of grasping what a watershed was, he glossed over the fact that vertical fracking is currently taking place in Western New York using dangerous chemicals and the state’s water supply to extract methane from shale and the industry is poised to expand drilling in New York when the current state moratorium on horizontal fracking expires. The toxic chemicals used in fracking are exempt from the Safe Drinking Water Act thanks to the artful politicking of Dick Cheney and the “Cheney Loophole.” Shale gas drilling has rapidly expanded across the state of Pennsylvania in recent years.

38:30 into the video…

“If you notice, all the complaints are coming from Pennsylvania. And that’s in the Marcellus. How long have you been developing the Marcellus? About three years. You’ve been…I drilled over 800,000 wells in Oklahoma, Kansas, Texas and fracked those wells. And I do not know of any lawsuit or any complaint or anything else about that.”

But there is a distinction in the type of natural gas drilling that’s going on in the Marcellus Shale. The hydraulic fracturing that’s used to extract methane in shale formations is a much more water intensive and dangerous process than in many of the conventional natural gas sources out west. Shale rock formations are much more dense so it takes much more water and pressure. Regardless of how many wells Pickens claims that he fracked safely, clearly there are problems right now in Pennsylvania and New York and that’s where much of the natural gas industry has turned to lately.

As Bryan Walsh at TIME wrote this morning in response to the unfolding disaster in Branford County, Pennsylvania, “You don’t have to fear the contamination of underground aquifers to worry about the impacts of shale gas drilling.” Accidents at the surface can release toxic fracking fluid into local streams and onto agricultural fields. Since the fracking wastewater cannot be treated by standard treatment plants, it could potentially make its ways into drinking water supplies.

The Pickens Plan is really a plan to frack America. The Food & Water Watch plan is to fight for a ban on fracking.

Meanwhile, we’re following these blogs for their good earlier coverage of the Pennsylvania disaster:

Fracking Insiders Score Big in New Gas Bill, But Americans Not Told the True Costs of Massive Drilling Plan | Center for Media and Democracy

Fracking Insiders Score Big in New Gas Bill, But Americans Not Told the True Costs of Massive Drilling Plan | Center for Media and Democracy.

Fracking Insiders Score Big in New Gas Bill, But Americans Not Told the True Costs of Massive Drilling Plan

Corporate insiders peddling the claim that drilling for methane gas will solve America’s energy needs (and fracking for gas is very lucrative business) just scored big in Washington.  House Resolution 1380, given the feel-good moniker of the “New Alternative Transportation to Give Americans Solutions Act ” or “NAT GAS Act,” was announced on Wednesday, April 6, in the U. S. House of Representatives. The bill is 24 pages long and rewards the fracking industry with tax credits and products to help “drive” consumption. The bigger the vehicle, the more tax credits given.

This initiative to expand the controversial fracking process — which has already resulted in contaminated wells and rivers and even ignitable tap water for some — is being spearheaded in Congress by Reps. John Sullivan (R-Oklahoma), Dan Boren (D-Oklahoma), John Larson (D-Connecticut), and Kevin Brady (R-Texas). The bill has 77 co-sponsors, with 40 Democrats in support, and 37 Republicans, from 33 different states.

But, perhaps its most powerful supporter or potential supporter is President Barack Obama.  Just two weeks ago, he alluded to being a strong supporter of a bill of this nature in a speech on March 30 on “America’s Energy Security” at Georgetown University. In that address, he specifically mentioned T. Boone Pickens‘s name when discussing legislation to support expanded fracking for methane.

Pickens Hearts Methane: A Quick Review

As has been documented by PR Watch, T. Boone Pickens is a diehard advocate of methane gas drilling in the Marcellus Shale basin of the U.S. and elsewhere, vis-a-vis what he has coined as the “Pickens Plan“.

T. Boone PickensT. Boone PickensAnnounced in July of 2008, his PR pitch is about, to summarize, “getting off of foreign energy sources” and “using the resources we have at home.” In theory, these soundbites could refer to greater investment in renewable resources like wind and solar energy.  In practice, it has meant a push by Pickens for relentless fracking for methane in virtually every crevice of American land.

Environmentally and ecologically, though hailed by Pickens and other uncritical observers as an “energy efficient solution” and a “clean” energy resource, this PR spin ignores the true dangers and consequences of fracking and of the methane distribution and consumption process.  Fracking–using a drilling technique pioneered by Halliburton that forces a concoction of hazardous chemicals and drinkable water into shale–has been well-documented in movies like Gasland, as well as by the Center for Media and Democracy’s Water Portal, as a dangerous and destructive process that shortchanges land owners, enriches drillers, and spoils land and water.

Obama Embraces the Pickens Plan

President Barack Obama has fully embraced the Pickens Plan. In his March 30th speech at Georgetown, Obama gave a shout out to the Plan, saying,

But the potential for natural gas is enormous. And this is an area where there’s actually been some broad bipartisan agreement. Last year, more than 150 members of Congress from both sides of the aisle produced legislation providing incentives to use clean-burning natural gas in our vehicles instead of oil. And that’s a big deal. Getting 150 members of Congress to agree on anything is a big deal. And they were even joined by T. Boone Pickens, a businessman who made his fortune on oil, but who is out there making the simple point that we can’t simply drill our way out of our energy problems.

Obama also referenced Pickens in a March 11 address, using the same, “This is one emergency we can’t drill our way out of” talking point. In an interview after the March 11 address, Pickens praised Obama in appearances on Fox News and CNN‘s King Live.

The headline of a March 30 Dallas Morning News article gets the headline on what just happened right: “Obama endorses Pickens plan for natural gas vehicles.” Seconding that, the Miami Herald headline from April 3 reads, “Obama, oilman Pickens allied on natural gas push.” The lede of that article states, “The centerpiece of President Barack Obama’s new energy policy mirrors the plan trumpeted for more than two years by a one-time GOP juggernaut: Dallas oilman T. Boone Pickens.”

This is the same oilman who was a huge funder of Swift Boat Veterans for Truth — he gave some $3 million, according to a story by Politico.com, to the organization that is infamous for the smear campaign it ran against John Kerry in the 2004 Presidential Election.

Obama and Pickens both also claim that, for “national security” purposes, we need to end our addiction to foreign oil, particularly from OPEC countries. Yet, government reports show that gas companies are exporting an increasing amount of methane gas drilled in the U.S. to other countries, thus adding to the profits of the industry as it depletes the gas supply available to Americans.

Furthermore, the Wall Street Journal reported that two big Houston, Texas methane gas drilling companies, Freeport LNG and Cheniere Energy, are entering the export market. U.S. Rep. Kevin Brady (R-Texas), one of the bill’s original four sponsors, represents Texas’s 8th congressional district, which is located just outside of Houston. These two companies, lo and behold, are headquarted in Houston.

The Wall Street Journal article also mentioned, “Major gas producers, including Chesapeake Energy Corp. and EnCana Corporation, are enthusiastic about the idea.

Additionally, a cursory look toward Afghanistan and Iraq, two countries the United States military is currently occupying, shows that fossil fuels are on the minds of the powers-that-be and will be for years to come.  The Trans-Afghainstan Pipeline, located in the heart of Pipelineistan, was a project spearheaded by U.S. oil company Unocal. The pipeline procures methane gas.

Similarly, the Sourcewatch article titled “Oil and War in Iraq” also shows that Iraq sits on one of the largest oil reserves in the world, much of it consisting of methane gas. That article, citing a Sept. 2008 article from The Guardian, states, “In September 2008, oil giant Shell became the first western oil company to win significant access to the energy sector in Iraq since the 1970s, in a $4 billion deal…Shell signed an agreement with the Oil Ministry to form a joint venture with the South Oil Company…to process and market natural gas extracted on 19,000 sq km (7,300 sq miles) of land.”

A National Security concern? Certainly a concern for big profits, accompanied by big spin.

How the “NAT GAS” Bill Story Broke and What that Tale Tells

The way the story on the bill was broken reveals a lot about how the bill came to be. The first four entites to break the story are all, as will be seen, in some way, shape and form, well-connected to Pickens: School Transportation News (STN) and Natural Gas Vehicles for America (NGVA), and the American Natural Gas Alliance (ANGA), and Clean Energy Fuels (CEF). All four originally broke the story before the bill was publicly available.

ANGA consists of all of methane’s key players, including Cabot Oil and Gas, Chesapeake Energy, Seneca Resources, and EQT, among others. (SourceWatch has new profiles on these companies and the political donations and activities of their leaders.)  ANGA showered Obama’s March 31 address with praise.

NGVA, on the other hand, is called a “peer group partner” of the so-called “American Clean Skies Foundation“. NGVA has a programming agreement through the Foundation’s PR channel, Clean Skies TV Network, and the Foundation is funded by Chesapeake Energy CEO, Aubrey McClendon. NVGA’s spokesperson is the author of its press release on the announcement of the NAT GAS Act, and Denise McCourt, according to her LinkedIn page, is the former Industry Relations Director of the American Petroleum Institute (API). Before that stint, she was the Director of General Membership and Member Relations.

CEF is another “peer group partner” of the American Clean Skies Foundation that has a programming agreement with Clean Skies TV Network. Coming full circle, Pickens sits on its Board of Directors, as does John S. Herrington, the former United States Secretary of Energy under Ronald Reagan during his second term as President. The President and CEO of CEF, Andrew J. Littlefair, according to his biography on their website, is also the President of NGVA. According to that same biograpy, he formerly served as President of Pickens Fuel Corporation. A glance at the American Clean Skies Foundation webpage shows that he also sits on the Board of Directors with McClendon.

Pickens Fuel Corporation is the predecessor of CEF, which Littlefair co-founded in 1997 with Pickens. It was reincorporated as CEF in 2001. CEF dedicated its first Liquified Natural Gas plant to Pickens in May 2006, according to its website. The plant is called the “Pickens Plant.” CEF’s homepage includes links to the American Clean Skies Foundation, Clean Skies TV Network, and the NGVA website.

A bit trickier to figure out, STN, according to its website, “is a monthly news and feature magazine serving the field of pupil transportation.” Two of its “industry contacts” for “vendors and suppliers” in the “alternative fuel and equipment” category include, lo and behold, NGVA and CEF.

An e-mail exchange with the Editorial Director of STN and the author of STN’s article on the House’ introduction of the NAT GAS Act, John Gray, confirms that he had not yet seen a copy of the legislation when he wrote his article, but was flagged about it via a direct contact from a representative from the NGVA. Gray predicts that NGVA “were likely key authors of the legislation. My hunch is that they helped write it. Standard procedure in DC. They are a lobby.”

Many Questions to Answer, and Avenues to Explore

To be fair, it is unfortunately not uncommon for lobbyists to write drafts of legislation but that does not make it unseemly.  It does raise legitimate questions.  The age-old questions are about wealthy interests dictating law to willing servants in the legislature.  Or to put it another way, the question is whether the gas industry’s money is basically throwing its voice, like a ventriloquist, through the public’s (or industry’s) servants in Congress.  And, relatedly, given all the access expensive lobbyists and donations can procure in Congress, what access if any has been given to ordinary people who have deep concerns about the the methane industry’s grand plans?  Here are some more specific questions:

1. If well-connected and multi-billion dollar entites such as CEF, the ANGA, and NGVA were the first to see this bill and know its details before it was available to the general public, did they actually write the thing, in part or in whole, themselves, as Gray suggested? Why and how did they get a head start?

2. Was there some sort of bargain negotiated between President Obama and Pickens in their mid-August 2008 meetings before he became President? Did candidate Obama promise to support drilling in those pre-election meetings?

3. Did the $4,800 Pickens that gave to two the bill’s sponsors, Rep. John Sullivan (R-Oklohoma), and Rep. John Larson (D-Oklahoma), (figures according to the Center for Responsive Politics) have any influence on their decision to propose this bill? How about the $10,000 Pickens gave to two swing states’ Democratic Parties in the 2008 Presidential election, Colorado and New Mexico? Both of these states also sit on huge potential beds of gas.  How often have these reps or their staff been meeting with gas lobbyists and how much time has been given to citizens with concerns?

4. How much influence did the $327,400 campaign cash doled out in the 2010 election from the hand of Big Oil (much, but not all of which comes from methane gas companies) have on these four representatives?

5. How about the $11,000 from Aubrey McClendon ($4,800 to Boren and $4,800 to Sullivan, as well as $2,300 to Obama)? How about the $37,000 that the corporation he is CEO of, Chesapeake Energy, doled out to the bill’s four co-sponsors? Did that money carry with it any clout?

6. Will there be any public hearings that will let people like Josh Fox and others who have documented concerns about fracking be allowed to testify before Congress?

The Center for Media and Democracy plans to keep digging into this troubling proposal and its details in the coming days and months ahead.

TASK FORCE ON ENSURING STABLE NATURAL GAS MARKETS

63704_BPC_web.pdf (application/pdf Object).

Bipartisan Policy Center and the American Clean Skies Foundation

TASK FORCE ON ENSURING STABLE NATURAl GAS MARKETS

Department of Energy Foresees Solar, Wind Power as Cheap as Fossil Fuels – CleanTechnica: Cleantech innovation news and views

Department of Energy Foresees Solar, Wind Power as Cheap as Fossil Fuels – CleanTechnica: Cleantech innovation news and views.

The Oil Drum | Don’t count on natural gas to solve US energy problems

The Oil Drum | Don’t count on natural gas to solve US energy problems.

Don’t count on natural gas to solve US energy problems

Posted by Gail the Actuary on February 18, 2011 – 11:26am
Topic: Alternative energy
Tags: canadian natural gas, natural gas, shale gas [list all tags]

We often hear statements suggesting that by ramping up shale gas production, the US can raise total natural gas production and solve many of its energy problems, including adding quite a number of natural gas vehicles, and replacing a large share of coal fired electricity generation. While there is the possibility that shale gas will allow US natural gas supplies to increase for a few years (or even 10 or 15 years), natural gas is only about one-fourth of US fossil fuel use, so it would be very difficult to ramp it up enough to meet all of these needs.

One issue is whether a rise in shale gas will mostly offset other reductions in natural gas supply. In Annual Energy Outlook 2011, EIA forecasts that shale gas production will increase from 23% of US natural gas production in 2010 to 46% of US natural gas production by 2035, but that these increases will mostly offset decreases elsewhere. Even with this huge increase in shale gas production, the EIA only sees US natural gas production increasing by an average of 0.8% per year between 2011 and 2035, and US natural gas consumption increasing by an average of 0.6% per year per year to 2035–not enough to make a very big dent in our overall energy needs.

Energy Tax Policy: Issues in the 111th Congress CRS Report

Energy Tax Policy: Issues in the 111th Congress
Molly F. Sherlock
Analyst in Economics
Donald J. Marples
Section Research Manager
September 20, 2010
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R40999R40999.pdf (application/pdf Object)
.

Gas Leaks on the Path to a Post-Fossil Future

 

Opinion
By By ANDREW C. REVKIN
Published: January 25, 2011
More evidence that leaks from wells and pipes blunt the climate value of natural gas and that industry needs to tighten up its act.

//

Chesapeake is selling-off more US assets, this time to the Chinese.

Cnooc Pays $570 Million for Chesapeake Shale Stake – Businessweek.

Cnooc Pays $570 Million for Chesapeake Shale Stake

January 31, 2011, 4:12 PM EST

More From Businessweek

By Jim Polson and John Duce

(Updates share price in eighth paragraph.)

Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) — Cnooc Ltd., China’s largest offshore energy producer, agreed to pay $570 million in cash for a one- third stake in Chesapeake Energy Corp.’s Niobrara shale project, adding to its U.S. holdings in crude oil production.

The Chinese explorer also agreed to pay as much as $697 million, up to two-thirds of Chesapeake’s costs to drill and complete wells in the area, the companies said in a statement yesterday.

The deal follows Chinese President Hu Jintao’s first state visit to the U.S. this month to expand economic ties and would be Cnooc’s second U.S. energy asset purchase from Chesapeake, five years after political opposition derailed its $18.5 billion bid for Unocal Corp. The company will pay about $2,140 an acre for its stake in Niobrara and has the right to a one-third share in future acquisitions in the shale formation.

“If you look at President Hu’s recent trip to Washington, there seems to be a greater willingness in the U.S. to encourage Chinese investment,” said Wang Aochao, head of China energy research at UOB-Kay Hian Ltd. in Shanghai. “We don’t have all the details at hand, but it appears to be a fair price for these assets. The Chinese oil majors still think valuations generally for oil and gas assets are reasonable.”

Niobrara covers 8,400 square miles (21,756 square kilometers) in Colorado and Wyoming and may contain 103.6 million barrels of oil, the U.S. Geological Survey estimated in 2006 before Chesapeake, EOG Resources Inc. and other producers began drilling the formation.

‘Seems Rich’

Cnooc, which is listed in Hong Kong, has risen 54 percent in the past 12 months, outpacing the 16 percent gain in the benchmark Hang Seng Index. The shares fell 0.7 percent to HK$17.20 today. The Hang Seng also declined 0.7 percent.

Chesapeake rose $2.20, or 8.1 percent, to $29.53 at 4:02 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading, its largest gain in five weeks. Other U.S. oil and gas producers with Niobrara leases also rose, including Petroleum Development Corp. and Andarko Petroleum Corp.

“This price seems rich,” Eric Hagen, an analyst for New York-based Lazard Capital Markets, said in a note today to clients affirming a hold rating on Chesapeake shares. “Cnooc is seeking access to technology more than U.S. assets.”

The Chinese energy explorer forecast a 12 percent increase in oil and gas production in 2011 after spending about $8.4 billion in the past year acquiring assets in the U.S., Africa and Argentina. By contrast, output rose 44 percent in 2010.

Prior Shale Purchase

Cnooc, based in Beijing, completed its $1.08 billion purchase of a one-third interest in Chesapeake’s 600,000 acres in the Eagle Ford project in South Texas in November. The Niobrara deal may be completed in the first quarter of this year, according to yesterday’s statement.

“The win-win deal valuation is fair based on our estimates and Cnooc’s strategy to further expand into the oil-rich shale deposits in the U.S.,” said Gordon Kwan, head of regional energy search at Mirae Asset Securities in Hong Kong. “The total investment of $1.27 billion in the deal through 2014 is manageable and equates to about 14 percent of Cnooc’s budgeted $9 billion for 2011.”

The Niobrara deal will lead to a reduction in U.S. oil imports over time and the creation of thousands of jobs, Aubrey McClendon chief executive officer of Oklahoma City-based Chesapeake, said in the statement.

“This transaction will provide the capital necessary to accelerate drilling of this large domestic oil and natural gas resource,” McClendon added.

Doubling Rigs

Chesapeake expects to double its drilling rigs in Wyoming’s Powder River and Colorado’s Denver-Julesburg basins to 10 by the end of the year. It plans to have 20 rigs working by end-2012.

Chesapeake, the most active U.S. gas and oil driller, has 16 wells producing in those basins with initial output of as much as 1,000 barrels of oil and 3 million cubic feet of natural gas a day, according to the company.

The companies plan to eventually produce the equivalent of as much as 5 billion barrels of oil from the basins.

–Editors: Tina Davis, Jessica Resnick-Ault

To contact the reporters on this story: Jim Polson in New York at jpolson@bloomberg.net; John Duce in Hong Kong at jduce1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Susan Warren at susanwarren@bloomberg.net

Cheniere Energy, In Reversal, Wants to Export Natural Gas – NYTimes.com

Cheniere Energy, In Reversal, Wants to Export Natural Gas – NYTimes.com. Jan. 28, 2011

The central assumption behind the export strategy is simple: American gas prices are destined to be cheaper than European and Asian prices for years to come. At today’s prices, companies would be able to buy American gas at $4.35 per million British thermal units, and then sell the same gas in Europe or Asia for roughly double that price, since long-term contracts globally are still largely tied to high benchmark oil prices.

Related stories from Bendon O’Connor

“Cheniere Marketing, LLC; Application for Blanket Authorization To Export Liquefied Natural Gas” (Federal Register)- http://www.federalregister.gov/articles/2010/04/16/2010-8753/cheniere-marketing-llc-application-for-blanket-authorization-to-export-liquefied-natural-gas
“Sabine Pass Liquefaction, LLC; Application for Long-Term Authorization To Export Liquefied Natural Gas” (Federal Register)- http://www.federalregister.gov/articles/2010/10/12/2010-25546/sabine-pass-liquefaction-llc-application-for-long-term-authorization-to-export-liquefied-natural-gas
“Sempra LNG Marketing, LLC; Application for Blanket Authorization To Export Liquefied Natural Gas” (Federal Register)- http://www.federalregister.gov/articles/2010/09/29/2010-24389/sempra-lng-marketing-llc-application-for-blanket-authorization-to-export-liquefied-natural-gas
“Encana says eyes supplying U.S. natgas for export: “…Encana Corp (ECA.TO), Canada’s biggest natural gas producer, said it is interested in marketing gas produced in the United States for shipment overseas as domestic production increases…Cheniere’s project, which could export up to 16 million tonnes per year of LNG, is one of three proposed LNG export plans in North America as increased production from shale gas and tepid demand push U.S. inventories to record highs. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) is currently considering Cheniere’s project.” (Reuters)- http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN1428019620101214 (See also- http://www.google.com/search?q=Cheniere+site:federalregister.gov&num=100&hl=en&safe=off&tbo=1&biw=1216&bih=608&output=search&source=lnt&tbs=qdr:y&sa=X )
“Chesapeake Energy wants to export LNG: “…Mike Stice, senior vice president for natural gas projects at Oklahoma City-based Chesapeake Energy, would like to create new markets for the natural gas that is inundating the US, due in part to dramatically increased production in shale gas plays…Liquefying and exporting shale gas from shale plays like the Haynesville, Barnett, and Eagle Ford to global markets holds major promise as the US confronts an oversupply of cheap supplies, said analyst Rick Smead of Navigant Consulting…” ” ( Oil & Gas Financial Journal via PennEnergy)- http://www.pennenergy.com/index/petroleum/display/6421909998/articles/oil-gas-financial-journal/unconventional/chesapeake-energy.html
“Chinese stake out Chesapeake: “…”The deal reflects the ambition of Chinese companies to enter the global oil and gas industry, especially when China’s gas demand is expected to rise sharply,” said Grace Liu, an energy analyst with Guotai Junan Securities in Shenzhen, China…” ” (Bloomberg News via American Chronicle)- http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/yb/151039348
“Chesapeake CEO outlines “holy grail” for natural gas: “…. He said the U.S. by then could have in place an infrastructure for conversion of natural gas to liquid form, potentially for use as a motor fuel, and for export to foreign countries as liquefied natural gas (LNG)…Widespread use of gas as a motor fuel would boost demand and encourage higher prices for producers of the power plant, heating and industrial fuel…” ” (Texas)- http://blogs.star-telegram.com/barnett_shale/2010/11/chesapeake-ceo-outlines-holy-grail-for-natural-gas.html & http://www.star-telegram.com/2010/11/03/2602454/chesapeake-ceos-quest-cars-running.html
“Firm Would Export U.S. Natural Gas to China: “…But is it about to become a major exporter of one type of domestic fuel? A Houston-based company took a small, tentative step in that direction on Thursday, by saying it was working on a deal to supply liquefied natural gas from Louisiana to one of China’s largest independently owned natural gas companies…” ” (The Wall Street Journal)- http://www.gohaynesvilleshale.com/forum/topics/firm-would-export-us-natural & http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704756804575608864254564960.html
“Macquarie Energy and Freeport LNG Expansion, L.P. to Jointly Develop U.S. LNG Export Project: “…The proposed liquefaction facility will be capable of liquefying up to 1.4 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) of natural gas and will create a world-class bi-directional import/export LNG terminal…Worldwide growth in both LNG demand and supply is forecasted to continue, with the rate of demand outpacing supply. The majority of the demand growth is expected to be driven by Asia…Freeport LNG expects to file for an export license with the Department of Energy in December and shortly thereafter start the approval process with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC)…” ” (Press Release) (Macquarie)- http://www.macquarie.com/us/about_macquarie/media_centre/20101122.html
“Booming U.S. Gas Industry Becoming an American Energy Exporter: “…At this time of Thanksgiving we can be grateful that a tectonic shift in America’s dependence on imported energy is beginning to take hold. In the last weeks a number of major events have taken place that are beginning to shift the balance of energy in significant ways. Last month the Chinese government owned energy company CNOC (you will recall CNOC’s failed bid to take over Unocal in 2005) committed over a billion dollars to take an important stake in the Eagle Ford, shale gas acreage in Texas. In doing so they joined the Norwegian state oil company, Statoil, that had made an earlier investment in the Eagle Ford field as well. Major oil companies such as Exxon, Shell, Chevron and myriad other foreign entities have joined American gas producers such as Chesapeake Energy to invest tens of billions of dollars these past years to develop a stake in what is becoming a treasure trove of natural gas ranging from Texas and Louisiana to the vast Marcellus field of Western Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia and upstate New York…Of particular significance this Monday, Macquarie Energy and Freeport LNG announced plans to jointly develop a $2 billion project to liquefy, market and export 1.4 BCF gas/day. Mr. Nicholas O’Kane, Sr. Managing Director of Macquarie Group (an Australian company) was pointedly quoted, “Recent developments in shale gas technology have transformed the U.S. gas market. The U.S. has developed significant natural gas resources and is able to meet projected domestic demand and a surplus for a long time to come.” …” ” (The Huffington Post)- http://www.huffingtonpost.com/raymond-j-learsy/the-uss-booming-gas-indus_b_787949.html (Raymond J. Learsy- http://www.huffingtonpost.com/raymond-j-learsy# & http://www.wilsoncenter.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=about.profile&person_id=12857 )
“Shale gas popularity rising but experts remain divided: “…Recent energy discoveries are of huge importance because the U.S. used to be an importer and has now become a major exporter, Felix Lutz, a senior energy adviser at the European Parliament, recently told the Daily News…” ” (Hurriyet Daily News and Economic Review)- http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=specialists-question-european-shale-market-2010-11-28
“China and India see what the US doesn’t – the potential of natural gas: “…And that brings me to the next development. Cheniere Energy has signed an agreement with ENN Energy Trading of China, under which ENN will contract 1.5m tonnes per annum of bi-directional Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) processing capacity at Cheniere’s Sabine Pass LNG terminal in the US. This makes the possiblity of the US exporting its gas to the rest of the world that much more likely to happen. As gas is liquified for ease of use during transport…Europeans and Asians have been eagerly snapping up acreage for several years now. Indeed, Cnooc, the Chinese energy company, in October agreed to pay up to $2.16bn to buy a 33.3 per cent interest in Chesapeake’s Eagle Ford shale play in the largest Chinese investment in the US energy sector…” ” (Financial Times)- http://blogs.ft.com/energy-source/2010/11/11/china-india-see-natural-gas-potential-us-government-is-missing/
“China Buys U.S. Assets with its Surplus Dollars: “…CONOOC, China’s national oil company, recently announced an agreement with Chesapeake Energy Corporation that would give the Chinese a 33 percent share in a new drilling project set to start soon in southwest Texas. The deal reportedly will cost CONOOC more than $2 billion and is just one of a string of purchases by the Chinese who recently have gone on an international buying spree. Long known for accumulating a surplus of U.S. dollars as it grew its manufacturing base by exporting products to the American market, our manufacturing trade deficit with China more than tripled from 2000 to 2008, as it went from $83.8 billion to $268 billion. Now, China is using that excess of dollars to purchase hard assets such as oil and gas properties in Texas…” ” (Texas)- http://www.dallasblog.com/201011081007320/tom-pauken/china-buys-u.s.-assets-with-its-surplus-dollars.html
“U.S. sends first gas to NW Europe in 50 years: “…The United States is set to supply gas to Britain for the first time in half a century, with a liquefied natural gas (LNG) tanker expected to arrive from Louisiana in late November…The U.S. started re-exporting LNG to higher-paying markets in Asia and South America earlier this year, but the Maersk Meridian LNG tanker, expected to arrive on November 18 at Britain’s Isle of Grain terminal, is the first to head to Europe — Russia’s main export market…Nearly 20 billion cubic feet of gas has been re-exported from the United States this year, excluding the gas aboard the UK-bound vessel. In mid-October, two cargoes were shipped from the U.S. Gulf by Excelerate Energy, one of which is heading to Kuwait, the other to Argentina…” ” (Reuters) (UK)- http://uk.reuters.com/article/idUKTRE6A734Y20101108
“Commentary: U.S. Exports of Coal & Natural Gas: “…Of course, increasing exports also reduces the trade deficit. And thanks to twin dynamics in American attitudes toward energy use and in the rapidly growing global demand for electricity, the U.S. has surprisingly become a significant energy exporter…There’s another area for potential growth — natural gas. Just a few years ago, companies were building terminals along the coast to facilitate the importation of clean- burning liquefied natural gas or LNG. But thanks to huge new discoveries and new drilling techniques, the U.S. now has abundant supplies of its own. In September, the Department of Energy approved the application of one of those import terminals in Sabine Pass, Texas, to convert to an export facility…” ” (Video, PBS Nightly Business Report)- http://www.pbs.org/nbr/site/onair/transcripts/energy_independence_and_elections_101102/
“Shale Gas: Not An Overnight Success: “…”A lot of investment has been made in the US market but there has been a change in plan — like plans to receive LNG, which it now wants to export.”…”Acceptance by local communities is important, especially in Europe, a highly populated area,” said Ito, who mentioned that trucks coming in and out, and the noise they created were a very difficult issue…” ” (Natural Gas for Europe)- http://naturalgasforeurope.com/shale-gas-not-an-overnight-success.htm
“LNG re-exports signal US shale gas impact: “…The US is normally regarded as a hungry energy consumer, but has recently assumed a new role — that of exporter of liquefied natural gas…” ” (Lloyd’s List)- http://www.lloydslist.com/ll/sector/tankers/article351391.ece
“LNG Industry To 2016 – Increasing Gas Supply Challenges Future Growth Prospects: “…This oil and gas report provides forecasts for the liquefaction and regasification sectors of the LNG industry, of planned liquefaction and regasification terminals and of planned major global LNG projects to 2016. The report also provides segmental forecasts of the global LNG market in different regions worldwide and highlights the major countries in the region…” ” (GBI Research)- http://www.companiesandmarkets.com/Summary-Market-Report/lng-industry-to-2016-increasing-gas-supply-challenges-future-growth-prospects-322094.asp
“The (Shale) Gas Renaissance: “…By 2014, Canada will be a major producer and exporter of shale gas. Within just a few years, the U.S. could (and if it has its energy act together, it should) join Canada as a key natural gas exporter…” ” (Energy Tribune)- http://www.energytribune.com/articles.cfm/6174/The-Shale-Gas-Renaissance
“What if the U.S. Became a Net Exporter of Liquefied Natural Gas?: “…So what is the solution? Simple, increase exports of natural gas…Cheniere Partners (CQP) received permission from the US Department of Energy to export LNG produced in North America from its Sabine Pass terminal. The company had already received permission to re-export imported LNG. Cheniere Partners announced a memorandum of understanding was signed with a Chinese company, ENN Energy Trading Co., to provide the company with 1.5 million metric tons annually of LNG produced at Sabine Pass. Additionally, Cheniere Partners signed a memorandum of agreement with Morgan Stanley Capital Group Inc. The agreement would allow Morgan Stanley to import or export up to 1.7 million metric tons annually from Sabine Pass. Currently, there is one other North American LNG export facility. The US has 10 LNG import terminals where the owners are petitioning the US government for export licenses to join the race to export LNG. We could see the ramp up of export facilities in the near future. This bodes well for the natural gas industry and companies like Chesapeake Energy, Corp. This may be one of the reasons why Carl Icahn recently has taken a 5.8% stake in the company…” ” (Seeking Alpha)- http://seekingalpha.com/article/242898-what-if-the-u-s-became-a-net-exporter-of-liquefied-natural-gas
“Shell: We’ll produce more gas than oil by 2012: “…What about exporting liquefied natural gas? When it comes to the skills and the technology around liquefied natural gas, we’re well-placed if not the best placed company in terms of bringing the solution to that equation. As this market continues to develop, if the right thing is for this resource to leave the continent, we’re in a good place to do that…” ” (Fortune via CNN Money)- http://money.cnn.com/2010/12/15/news/companies/shell-oil-gas-odum.fortune/index.htm?section=money_latest
“North America: The new energy kingdom: “…Mr. Forbes was explaining why CNOOC, China’s principal state-owned oil company, was paying Chesapeake Energy $1.08-billion (U.S.) in cash for a one-third interest in the company’s next shale gas play in Texas — and paying 75 per cent of the cost of developing it. Yes, China was investing in drilling technology: China itself has abundant shale gas reserves. But China had another objective. “Within a decade,” Mr. Forbes said, “the U.S. will be a major natural gas exporter.” And China will be a major importer…” ” (The Globe and Mail) (Canada)- http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/commentary/neil-reynolds/north-america-the-new-energy-kingdom/article1828896/ & http://www.firstenercastfinancial.com/e_commentary.php?cont=100170
“Cheniere Plans to Export U.S. Gas Into Caribbean Power Markets, CEO Says: “…Cheniere owns the Sabine Pass LNG terminal in Cameron Parish, Louisiana. The company said in June that the plant might become the first in the continental U.S. to export LNG, citing increased domestic production from unconventional gas and lagging demand. JPMorgan Chase & Co., which is boosting its LNG trading in North America, said in August the country may see more “development plans” for liquefaction facilities if low prices boost export demand…” ” (Bloomberg)- http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-12-08/cheniere-plans-to-export-u-s-gas-into-caribbean-power-markets-ceo-says.html
“Another publication discovers U.S. on verge of energy independence without green fuels: “…Toronto’s Globe & Mail quotes a UN report that includes this observation: “Within a decade or so, North America will almost certainly emerge as the world’s biggest supplier — and exporter — of reasonably cheap energy.”…” “(San Francisco Examiner)- http://www.sfexaminer.com/blogs/beltway-confidential/2010/12/another-publication-discovers-us-verge-energy-independence-withou
“With natural gas glut, firms bank on exporting: “…The terminal requires approval from the Energy Department and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission…Demand and prices for liquefied natural gas overseas have remained much higher than in North America, however, leading some U.S. producers to mention exporting it. For example, Chesapeake Energy CEO Aubrey McClendon has suggested exports to boost demand for U.S. natural gas…Freeport plans to seek 20-year contracts for gas exported from the terminal, Smith said. Long-term contracts are needed for financing for the project, he said. Also Monday, Exxon Mobil Corp. said it put on hold plans for a floating liquefied natural gas import terminal off New Jersey, citing changes in its outlook for fuel supply and demand in the region…” ” (Texas)- http://www.star-telegram.com/2010/11/22/2652178/with-natural-gas-glut-firms-bank.html
“Freeport/Macquarie to Build LNG Export Terminal in Texas: “…Macquarie Energy, the North American energy marketing and trading arm of Macquarie Group (Macquarie), and Freeport LNG Expansion, L.P. (Freeport LNG) today announced an agreement to jointly develop and market liquefaction capacity at Freeport LNG’s existing LNG import terminal near Freeport, Texas. The proposed liquefaction facility will be capable of liquefying up to 1.4 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) of natural gas and will create a world-class bi-directional import/export LNG terminal…” ” (LNG World News)- http://www.lngworldnews.com/usa-freeport-macquarie-to-build-lng-export-terminal-in-texas/
“Macquarie, Freeport to build Texas LNG export terminal: “…Liquefied natural gas terminal developer Freeport LNG and Macquarie Bank have agreed to build an export plant in Texas to send US-produced gas overseas, a spokeswoman for Macquarie told Reuters…” ” (Reuters)- http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSL3E6MM00B20101122
“Macquarie in gas tie-up with Freeport LNG: “…The proposal follows a similar move by Cheniere Energy for a combined import and export terminal at Sabine Pass, Louisiana…Projects, such as Freeport and Sabine, could have repercussions for global LNGmarkets. The shale boom has made the country the world’s biggestnatural gas producer, with 57bn cu ft a day of output, according toNikos Tsafos of PFC Energy, the consultancy. If the US exported just a10th of its gas last year, he says, it would have been the world’s topLNG exporter…” “(Stockhouse)- http://www.stockhouse.com/Blogs/ViewDetailedPost.aspx?p=110227
“Project aims to liquefy U.S. natural gas: “…”Asia seems a likely market for U.S. LNG, given current market dynamics and the fact that the Panama Canal is opening soon to LNG tankers, said Nicholas O’Kane, global head of Macquarie Group’s energy markets division in Houston. “But we’ll be marketing in Europe in the next few weeks as well,” O’Kane said. If Freeport and Macquarie are able to sign up customers committed to buying the LNG for up to 20 years, they will use those com- mitments to fund the project through U.S. debt markets…” ” (Texas)- http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/business/energy/7307449.html
“Glut prompts project to chill natural gas for export: “…Freeport LNG is partnering with Australian bank Macquarie to build the capacity to turn U.S. natural gas into a liquid for shipment overseas.The Freeport terminal, which opened on the Texas coast in 2008 to import liquefied natural gas from other countries, has already added the capacity to ship some of that LNG back overseas because of overproduction of the fuel in the U.S…Earlier this month, Cheniere said it also plans to build gas liquefaction capacity to export LNG from its facility in Sabine Pass…” ” (Fuel Fix)- http://fuelfix.com/chronicleenergynews/2010/11/23/glut-prompts-project-to-chill-natural-gas-for-export/
“Bulls rushing into Cheniere Energy: “…Recent trading action suggests a similar trend could now be taking hold in LNG. The stock exploded higher on Nov. 11 after saying it was working on a deal to export natural gas to China…If anything close to that pans out, the United States could become a major exporter of natural gas to places like Western Europe…” ” (Nasdaq)- http://community.nasdaq.com/News/2010-12/bulls-are-rushing-into-cheniere-energy.aspx?storyid=51148
“US to Gain Competitive Edge in Global LNG Market: “…However, current developments indicate that the US is likely to reach the stage of self-sufficiency in coming future. Moreover, the country may achieve a competitive place in the global LNG export market…” ” (SBWire)- http://www.sbwire.com/press-releases/sbwire-71565.htm
“The Outlook For LNG: “…The US was never much into exporting LNG because it has plenty of domestic demand for gas. But with the rapid development of the burgeoning US shale gas industry, the US is now looking to becoming an LNG export player. Will it stick to its own side of the fence? Well that remains to be seen…” ” (Australia)- http://www.fnarena.com/index2.cfm?type=dsp_newsitem&n=0CA6A32B-A383-895B-50BD1AD5D9797FB8
“Shale industry delivers message to chambers of commerce: “…The rocks below Western Pennsylvania have enough natural gas in them to fuel the entire Eastern Seaboard for 50 years or more, and with our country’s current dependence on foreign oil, the ability to supply and export our own fuel would benefit the nation. That was the message delivered by representatives of the burgeoning Marcellus Shale extraction industry to guests of an economic forecast breakfast sponsored by The CHAMBER Inc., what used to be the Cranberry and North Hills Area chambers of commerce. The session, touted as the first in a series, was held at Treesdale Country Club last month. In addition to industry representatives, a sizable group of business owners also heard from Bruce Betty, McCandless land use administrator…” ” (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette) (PA)- http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/10336/1107458-54.stm
“Profit From the Russian Gas Crisis No One’s Covering: “…I have already discussed the likelihood that the accelerating production volume in US shale gas will end up allowing the export of LNG, especially from the Cove Point, Maryland, terminal (the largest LNG facility on the East Coast), and especially to Europe (see “A Solution for North America’s Natural Gas Surplus” from November 2nd). Given the virtual certainty the shale gas (and, to a lesser extent, unconventional production from coal bed methane) will result in a continuing surplus on the American market, an LNG outlet to Europe and elsewhere allows for increasing production profits on one side of the Atlantic from LNG sales on the other. This is going to allow investors to “play” the rising differential between LNG and piped gas in the European market by investing in US and Canadian shale gas producers…” ” (Kent Moors)- http://seekingalpha.com/article/239098-profit-from-the-russian-gas-crisis-no-ones-covering & http://oilandenergyinvestor.com/2010/11/profit-from-the-russian-gas-crisis-no-ones-covering/
“US to Gain Competitive Edge in Global LNG Market: “…However, current developments indicate that the US is likely to reach the stage of self-sufficiency in coming future. Moreover, the country may achieve a competitive place in the global LNG export market…” ” (RNCOS)- http://pr-usa.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=578085&Itemid=32
“”U.S. Natural Gas Supply: “…The U.S. natural gas resource should continue to expand in the coming years…Advanced Resources International, in a report commissioned for Cheniere’s application with the Department of Energy for LNG export authorization, estimates that the U.S. has 2,585 Tcf of technically recoverable gas reserves, or 113 years of U.S. demand at 2009 levels…” ” (Cheniere Energy Inc.: “North America’s LNG Gateway”)- http://www.cheniere.com/lng_industry/us_natural_gas_supply.shtml
“Beach pursues boutique LNG project: “…The abundance of shale gas reserves has driven US gas prices down sharply and fuelled interest in the US becoming an LNG exporter. Two LNG export projects for the US have been announced this year, the latest a $US2 billion proposal involving Freeport and Macquarie. The projects represent competition for Australian LNG suppliers in Asian markets…” ” (Australia)- http://www.smh.com.au/business/beach-pursues-boutique-lng-project-20101125-1893c.html
“Think the unthinkable: Gas glut could make the U.S. an LNG exporter: “…These factors are setting up what was an unthinkable scenario just a few years ago – that the U.S. might become a net exporter of natural gas. There are some signs of that change in the works…” ” (Fuel Fix)- http://fuelfix.com/energywatch/2010/11/10/think-the-unthinkable-gas-glut-could-make-the-u-s-an-lng-exporter/
“Natural Gas Rebound Looking Likely in 2011: “…Analysts argue that the natural gas oversupply in the United States could make the nation a major natural gas exporter in upcoming years. Demand for gas is soaring in Asia and other emerging markets as their economies expand. More liquefied natural gas export facilities could be developed going forward. The Wall Street Journal reported that a subsidiary of Cheniere Energy is working on a deal to supply liquefied natural gas to one of China’s largest independently owned natural gas companies. Chesapeake Energy’s Chief Executive Aubrey McClendon told investors at a conference he has been in talks with Cheniere to supply gas to the proposed facility. While Cheniere would still need to build the liquefaction facility, the company’s CEO believes that interest in the project from natural gas suppliers such as Chesapeake, as well as Chinese interest “confirms the global appetite for US natural gas.”…” ” (CNN Money)- http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/marketwire/0704136.htm
“China’s Relentless Hunt for Energy: “…To meet that demand, China’s biggest energy companies have gone on a buying spree. Last year was a record year for China’s oil and gas acquisitions, with $24.3 billion in deals, up from $17.1 billion in 2009…Given that three-quarters of the world’s exploration and production companies are headquartered in North America, the Chinese are likely to bid for U.S. companies, bankers said. “All the Chinese majors will be in North America in the next two years,” O’Malley said…Yet in 2010, Cnooc acquired oil-and-gas assets in the Eagle Ford Shale project in South Texas for $1.1 billion…” ” (The Wall Street Journal)- http://blogs.wsj.com/deals/2011/01/03/chinas-relentless-hunt-for-energy/