The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) Friday released a Draft Environmental Assessment (EA) that eventually may lead to natural gas drilling in the Baca National Wildlife Refuge in the San Luis Valley, which is located in Saguache County, CO.
Tag / Eventually
SubscribeEventually
Articles from Eventually
Gas Drilling Considered in Colorado Wildlife Refuge
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) Friday released a Draft Environmental Assessment (EA) that eventually may lead to natural gas drilling in the Baca National Wildlife Refuge in the San Luis Valley, which is located in Saguache County, CO.
Gas Prices to Move Closer to Oil Globally, Goldman Economist Says
While in the short term North American natural gas markets may be weak, they will eventually strengthen and move back closer to oil prices as globalization of the commodity continues to unfold, according to Goldman Sachs & Co. economist David Greely. In the long term, the global trade and pricing of natural gas will be set by Russia, with its 54 Bcf/d of gas production, he said.
Prolific Barnett Fueling Interest in Other Lower 48 Shale Plays
The remarkable rock in the Barnett Shale of North Texas eventually may be the largest natural gas find in the United States, industry experts said Monday. But the “next Barnett Shale” may be out there, with similar shale formations in more than half of the Lower 48 states.
VA Governor Takes Neutral Position on Drilling Off State’s Coast; Both Sides Claim Victory
Virginia Gov. Timothy Kaine Friday did not veto legislation that eventually could allow natural gas development off the state’s coastline, but instead adopted a neutral stance.
NGI The Weekly Gas Market Report
CERA: Prices to Ease Below $5/MMBtu in the Long Term
North American natural gas prices will gradually ease over the coming years and eventually return to sub-$5/MMBtu levels toward the end of the decade because of growth in liquefied natural gas (LNG) imports and U.S. and Canadian unconventional gas resources, Cambridge Energy Research Associates (CERA) predicted last week.
CERA: Gas Prices to Ease Below $5/MMBtu in the Long Term
North American natural gas prices will gradually ease over the coming years and eventually return to sub-$5/MMBtu levels toward the end of the decade because of growth in liquefied natural gas (LNG) imports and U.S. and Canadian unconventional gas resources, Cambridge Energy Research Associates (CERA) predicted Wednesday.
Australia’s Woodside to Propose Added Offshore CA LNG Terminal
With the state’s chief energy regulator publicly advocating eventually two offshore liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminals for California, Australian oil/gas exploration and development behemoth Woodside Energy Ltd. will announce Wednesday in Sacramento a fourth proposed LNG project for the state. Its location is unspecified and it is billed as not needing a receiving terminal, according to a report in Tuesday’s Los Angeles Times.
EIA’s New Production Data Method Shows Higher Output
The Energy Information Agency (EIA) has published its first “new” monthly natural gas production report, designed to eventually replace its current data series, which covers domestic gross withdrawals from wells for January through July 2005. Using the new method, nearly all of EIA’s data reports showed higher withdrawal rates compared with its traditional data collection method.
East Mostly Up on Dennis Threat; West Softer
The industry was keeping its collective fingers crossed Friday as it watched the potentially destructive Hurricane Dennis eventually land in south-central Cuba on its way to the eastern Gulf of Mexico (GOM). The situation kept prices on the rise in most of the East. Except for a few flat to as much as 20 cents higher points, western markets tended to be weaker overall, with losses ranging up to about 30 cents.