Recover

Olson: Energy Trading Likely to Recover by Next Year

The current crisis in the energy trading market largely will have blown over by the time 2003 rolls around, predicted John Olson Wednesday. He is probably best known as the industry analyst who suspected something was rotten in the state of Enron well before anyone else, earning himself an unfavorable reputation in the Enron executive suite prior to the company’s collapse.

August 15, 2002

Retail Choice Struggles to Take Root in Many States

For retail natural gas choice to recover, several critical ingredients must be present, according to a report by R.J. Rudden Associates Vice President Howard S. Gorman. Residential choice is working well in Ohio, Maryland and Nebraska where meaningful numbers of residential customers participate and marketers are well established, but programs are not doing well in Wisconsin, Massachusetts and New Jersey, where there are only a few participants or marketers, or in Georgia where the program has been disruptive to consumers and marketers. The verdict is still out in New York, Pennsylvania and Illinois.

April 8, 2002

Idaho Power Gets PUC OK To Recover $168.3M

Idaho Power Tuesday received the go-ahead from state regulators to immediately start recovering $168.3 million of the $227.4 million requested by the utility in its annual power cost adjustment. But any decision related to the remaining $59.1 million of Idaho Power’s request won’t come until after the Idaho Public Utilities Commission (IPUC) completes an investigation into several areas, including the activities of the utility’s non-regulated trading arm.

May 2, 2001

PanCanadian Ramps Up Deep Panuke Field

Backed up with a C$1 billion investment to recover at least 1Tcf, PanCanadian Petroleum Ltd. said it would immediately begincommercial development on its Deep Panuke offshore natural gasfield. Located about 250 kilometers southeast of Halifax, plateausales production from the field is expected to be 400 MMcf/dfollowing startup in early 2005.

March 5, 2001

PanCanadian Ramps Up Deep Panuke Field

Backed up with a C$1 billion investment to recover at least 1Tcf, PanCanadian Petroleum Ltd. said it would immediately begincommercial development on its Deep Panuke offshore natural gasfield. Located about 250 kilometers southeast of Halifax, plateausales production from the field is expected to be 400 MMcf/dfollowing startup in early 2005.

February 26, 2001

McMoRan’s Discovery 50% Larger

McMoRan Exploration Co.’s gas discovery at Eugene Island appearsto be twice as big as expected, and now is expected to recover 100Bcf of natural gas. The well, will be put into production in thesecond quarter by the New Orleans-based company, expects productionto reach 100 MMcf/d by then.

January 3, 2001

Futures Slow to Recover from Storage Figures

After plunging almost a dime lower in response to alarger-than-expected storage injection Wednesday afternoon, thefutures market shuffled sideways yesterday in ahurricane-abbreviated trading session. Traders were unable to gleanmuch fundamentally positive out of a natural gas market that isfaced with mild temperatures and little or no hurricane activity inthe wake of Floyd. The October contract finished at $2.546, down8.2-cents from Wednesday’s close.

September 17, 1999

Montana Power Issues Bonds to Recover Costs

Hoping to relieve stranded costs due to state deregulation,Montana Power Co. (MPC) announced Tuesday that its MPC Natural GasFunding Trust issued $62.7 million worth of asset-backed transitionbonds in a private placement. There was a 6.2% coupon on the bondsissued. The utility said proceeds from these bonds will be used toreduce its outstanding debt and equity.

December 28, 1998

Amoco’s Hugoton Plant On Line

Amoco’s Hugoton Jayhawk gas processing plant in Ulysses, KS,recently began operations with capability to process 450 MMcf/d andrecover up to 33,000 barrels of gas liquids per day. HugotonJayhawk currently is processing about 400 MMcf/d, of which 280MMcf/d is supplied by Amoco-operated wells.

May 20, 1998

June Futures Recover From Early Price Weakness

Natural gas futures traders received a taste of both bearish andbullish news Monday, as the spot June contract turned in yetanother in a recent wave of volatile daily trading ranges. Thebears made their presence felt first after June easily fell belowthe double bottom trading formation in the $2.152-16 area toestablish a new low of $2.110. However, strong buying kicked in atthat point, and the June contract rode that momentum to settle theday up 5.5 cents at $2.257/MMBtu.

May 5, 1998