Ground

Canadian Hunter Shows 485% Rise in Q1 Net Income

With record levels of natural gas rigs in the ground, it’s about time the industry started showing results. Canadian Hunter Exploration Ltd. is doing just that, as the company announced last Tuesday an increase in gas production to 523 MMcf/d during the first quarter 2001, a jump of 36% over the similar time period a year ago, and a 7% rise from the fourth quarter 2000. As a result, the Calgary-based producer posted a 485% increase in net income to C$145.1 million, or C$2.38 per fully diluted share for the first quarter 2001.

April 30, 2001

Canadian Hunter Shows 485% Rise in Q1 Net Income

With record levels of natural gas rigs in the ground, it’s about time the industry started showing results. Canadian Hunter Exploration Ltd. is doing just that, as the company announced on Tuesday an increase in gas production to 523 MMcf/d during the first quarter 2001, a jump of 36% over the similar time period a year ago, and a 7% rise from the fourth quarter 2000. As a result, the Calgary-based producer posted a 485% increase in net income to C$145.1 million, or C$2.38 per fully diluted share for the first quarter 2001.

April 25, 2001

Energy Policy Moves Front and Center

It’s crunch time on the energy policy front, and the big guns are in play, preparing the ground for the administration’s much-heralded comprehensive energy strategy. Vice President Dick Cheney has been putting in a series of media appearances lately, supporting energy development in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR), and a task force of energy experts has published a report calling on the nation to make some hard choices or face “more Californias in America’s future.”

April 16, 2001

Energy Policy Moves Front and Center

It’s crunch time on the energy policy front, and the big guns are in play, preparing the ground for the administration’s much-heralded comprehensive energy strategy. Vice President Dick Cheney has been putting in a series of media appearances lately, supporting energy development in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR), and today a task force of energy experts is unveiling a report calling on the nation to make some hard choices or face “more Californias in America’s future.”

April 12, 2001

Power Generators to Stick with Gas

With natural gas price spikes finally seeming to ease after asix-month-long roller coaster ride, U.S. electricity generatorshave taken the experience as a warning, but vow to stick withnatural gas as their go-to plant-firing source.

February 13, 2001

Futures Bounce Higher After Support Holds

Despite tumbling prices in the nearby cash market, natural gasfutures held their ground Tuesday as buyers were comforted byextremely oversold conditions and supportive intermediate-termtechnicals. After trading within a wide, 20-cent swath yesterday,the December contract finished at $4.49, a narrow 0.5-cent increasefor the session.

November 1, 2000

CERA: Power Transmission On Shaky Ground

A new report by Cambridge Energy Research Associates (CERA)identifies three plausible future paths for the power industry andin particular the transmission sector, which has been plagued bygridlock because of a tangle of infrastructure problems andregulatory uncertainty.

October 16, 2000

CERA: Power Transmission on Shaky Ground

A new report by Cambridge Energy Research Associates (CERA)identifies three plausible future paths for the power industry andin particular the transmission sector, which has been plagued bygridlock because of a tangle of infrastructure problems andregulatory uncertainty.

October 11, 2000

Weather or Not.. Futures Filter Lower

It was only fitting yesterday that the futures market groundlower amid lack of strong fundamentals. After all, Monday was theconclusion of just the second July in the last 100 years in whichNew York City did not reach 90 degrees Fahrenheit. Even WashingtonD.C., which is known for its mostly intolerable summer heat andhumidity was limited to just one day of 90-plus mercury during themonth.

August 1, 2000

Industry Brief

ONEOK broke ground Friday just north of Oklahoma City on a newnatural gas-run advanced electricity generating plant.The 300 MWplant, which will be owned and operated by ONEOK Power Marketing,will use the latest gas turbine technology to provide electricityfor utilities as well as other purchasers. This marks ONEOK’sfirst venture into the growing natural gas-powered electricitygeneration market. Intended as a “peaking plant,” the facilitywill provide electricity during the summer periods of peak demand.The Oklahoma Municipal Power Authority has already signed acontract to purchase 25% of the plant’s total capacity. ONEOKPresident and Chief Operating Officer David Kyle had this to sayabout ONEOK’s new project, “The natural gas-fueled plant that willbe built here is symbolic of not only a new direction for us, butfor the state as well.” The plant’s site is strategicallypositioned near Oklahoma Gas & Electric’s electric transmissionlines and one of ONEOK’s own natural gas storage facilities. Thegas-burning turbines will be provided by General Electric at anestimated cost of $70 million and will be in operation by thesummer of 2001.

May 30, 2000