As spot gas prices in California were breaking records again Friday with $61/MMBtu quotes being reported at PG&E’s Citygate, some state officials already started dubbing the upcoming heating season as California’s “winter of discontent.”
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Hurricane Hype on Hold, Monday is True to Form
Breaking its string of days with advances at nine, the naturalgas futures market sifted lower yesterday as traders learned that atropical storm they had been watching on Friday would likely not bea threat to gas production in the Gulf of Mexico. The prompt monthtook the news on the chin, tumbling 15.7 cents to finish at $4.318.Estimated volume confirmed the move, with 37,472 contracts changinghands.
FL Utility Offers Unrestricted Non-Residential Choice
Breaking new ground in Florida’s gas industry, City Gas Co., anNUI Corp. utility subsidiary, announced last week that a newlypassed tariff has enabled third-party suppliers in its serviceterritory to sign commercial and industrial customers withoutrestriction. The new program, called the Commercial TransportationService, is the first choice program without limitations in thestate, City Gas said. The plan was approved in late November by theFlorida Public Service Commission (PSC).
OGE Reactivates Turbines Amidst Power Crunch
In an attempt to better support record-breaking power demand inthe Midwest, OG&E Electric Services (OG&E), an OGE Corp.subsidiary, said yesterday it plans to reactivate two powergenerators at its Mustang Power Plant. The utility is alsoconsidering other enhancement projects, with a goal to add 1,000 MWto its power supply system.
After Breaking Resistance; Bulls Take Profits, Market Lower
Technical analysis was originated by Charles Dow in the late1800s as an attempt to interpret recurring historical pricemovements displayed by a group of stocks, which have since evolvedinto today’s Dow Jones Industrial Average. He would have been proudof the natural gas futures market last week. For four days the Maycontract ebbed and flowed within a 10-cent trading range until itbroke higher Friday in a technical buying spree. But as if it werefollowing the same script rehearsed during the prior two tradingdays, the May contract couldn’t hold onto its gains Friday,releasing them in the form of profit taking ahead of the weekend.The May contract capped the week with a 2.7-cent advance to $2.096after notching a $2.15 high.
After Breaking Support, Futures Resistant to Further Losses
All the ingredients were right for the futures market to spirallower yesterday-a softer cash market, continued bearish weatherforecasts, and an abundance of ready-to-expire March $1.65 and$1.70 put options. But for some reason, all of those factors werenot enough to inspire a sustained round of selling, leaving theMarch contract to chop to either side of unchanged before finishingwith a 0.6-cent gain to $1.71.
Late Breaking News….
Three of the four leading natural gas trade associations onFriday were said to be either definitely on board or “favorablyinclined” to jointly ask FERC for a second extension of thedeadline for industry comments on the major notice of proposedrulemaking (NOPR) and notice of inquiry (NOI) issued in July[RM98-10, RM98-12]. A source indicated there was a “50-50 chance”the lone association holdout would sign on too. The joint request,which reportedly is being spear-headed by the Interstate NaturalGas Association of America (INGAA), would seek a six-monthextension of the current Jan. 22nd deadline, and could be filed atthe Commission as early as this week. A possible reason for themove is that one of the groups is trying to buy time to broker acompromise with the other three associations on a voluntary auctionproposal, the source said. This would make pipeline participationin capacity auctioning optional, as opposed to the mandatory routethat FERC seems to favor.
Commission Upholds ‘Shipper Must Have Title’ Policy
Just because your competitors are breaking the rules, doesn’tmean that you should be allowed to do so, FERC essentially told twoEnron affiliates last week when it denied their plea for a limitedwaiver of its capacity-release rule and the “shipper must havetitle” policy. The affiliates contend they sought the waiver sothey could compete with other suppliers that allegedly are ignoringthe title rule in order to evade paying certain taxes in New YorkState.
Duke Merchant Power Plant Breaking into Florida Market
Duke Energy Power Services and the Utility Commission of theCity of New Smyrna Beach in Florida filed plans with the FloridaPublic Service Commission (FPSC) to build and operate a 500 MWgas-fired merchant power plant in the city. In attempting to buildthe first merchant power plant in the state, Duke will be runningthe gauntlet of opposition from entrenched utilities.
Negotiated Services, Removal of Price Caps Proposed by FERC
In a ground-breaking move yesterday, FERC proposed lifting theprice caps on capacity in the short-term market and allowingpipelines to negotiate the terms and conditions of service withtheir customers. These, as well as other proposals, represent themost comprehensive review of the Commission’s gas regulations sinceOrder 636.