Severe

Cold Keeps Cash Prices From Emulating Screen Dive

Despite severe erosion of Nymex futures prices for natural gas, crude oil, heating oil and Appalachian coal Monday morning, cash gas numbers refused to “follow the screen.” Cash quotes ranged from flat to a few cents higher or lower in most market areas. Rockies points were recovering from Friday’s plunge that had a few priced below a dollar for a while. Deals for CIG, Cheyenne Hub and Questar gas could still be found in the $0.90s Monday, but generally they were in the $1.00s, according to a couple of marketers.

September 25, 2001

Heat, Humidity Push Northeast to Record Demand Levels

Severe heat and humidity in the Northeast last week led to record power demand and high prices in the region before a cold front swept through on Friday. The Pennsylvania New Jersey Maryland Interconnection (PJM), the New England Independent System Operator and the New York Independent System Operator all issued various alerts and requests for additional supply and conservation.

July 30, 2001

Summer Heat is Finally Heading East

For most of the summer, there has not been severe heat in the eastern half of the United States, but that could change by early next week, according to Salomon Smith Barney Meteorologist Jon Davis. With the presence of significant heat to trigger increased power generation for cooling demand in the Northeast, the strong tide of weekly storage injections could weaken a little.

July 25, 2001

Heat All Around Boosts Prices, But for How Long?

Summertime, and the living is downright hot–finally. Moderate to severe heat was uniform in all areas for a change Monday (even up into Canada, where a Calgary source reported afternoon temperatures in the mid 80s). The cash market responded with across-the-board gains that were mostly in the teens.

July 10, 2001

BPA Warns Of 250%+ Wholesale Rate Hikes

Faced with severe drought conditions and skyrocketing wholesale electricity market prices, the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) on Monday warned that it may be forced to increase wholesale rates by 250% or more after Oct. 1, unless the region’s retail utilities and large industrial customers step up to the plate and agree to slash energy use within the next 60 days.

July 2, 2001

Gas Pipeline Rush is Alive, Well in NW

Nature’s severe downturn in the amounts of hydroelectricity in the western region over the past 12 months has been a giant wake-up call for natural gas as new gas-fired power plants are spurring an unprecedented rush to build added interstate pipeline transmission into Washington and Oregon.

June 25, 2001

Gas Pipeline Rush is Alive, Well in NW

Nature’s severe downturn in the amounts of hydroelectricity in the western region over the past 12 months has been a giant wake-up call for natural gas as new gas-fired power plants are spurring an unprecedented rush to build added interstate pipeline transmission into Washington and Oregon.

June 22, 2001

BPA Warns Of 250%+ Wholesale Rate Hikes

Faced with severe drought conditions and skyrocketing wholesale electricity market prices, the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) last week warned that it may be forced to increase wholesale rates by 250% or more after Oct. 1, unless the region’s retail utilities and large industrial customers step up to the plate and agree to slash energy use within the next 60 days.

April 16, 2001

Market Begins Week Softly; Destin Back Online

All points were falling Monday in the general absence of severewinter weather except in parts of the Upper Midwest. For a change,the softness was relatively consistent; although California onceagain registered declines larger than most at the border and Malin,it was not nearly as out of step with the overall market as itoften had been since March began. Most of Monday’s drops werebetween 10 and 20 cents.

March 13, 2001

Most Points Mildly Softer, But Cal Border Keeps Rising

Despite prospects for a potentially severe winter storm in theNortheast and moderate screen firmness, the cash market generallyranged from flat to down about 20 cents Friday, as falling weekenddemand made an impact. Northern California numbers retreated fromThursday’s spike, but the Southern California border tacked on morethan $2.50 to its market-leading average.

March 5, 2001