With the Dynegy-Illinova merger nearing completion, Dynegyunloaded some major Midcontinent gathering and processing assetsyesterday in a $307.7 million sale to Oneok in an effort tostreamline its midstream operations. The move will leave Dynegy’smidstream assets focused on several core regions and will helpreduce its new equity offering by several million dollars.
Some
Articles from Some
Hearing on Western’s Pipe Plan
Some 11th-hour life has been pumped back into a proposal forallowing gas distribution competition in an industrialized part ofthe East San Francisco Bay. Two members of the five-memberCalifornia Public Utilities Commission have proposed an alternativeto the Western Gas Resources pipeline proposal, which would servecustomers inside Pacific Gas & Electric’s franchise territory.The CPUC is scheduled to take up competing approaches when it meetsNov. 4 in San Francisco.
People
Southern Company Energy Marketing’s new president, GaryMorsches, shifted some personnel around yesterday to optimizeperformance. John Ragan, formerly west regional vice president,becomes east regional vice president. He also will oversee SCEM’scommodities group, which handles trading in coal, emissionscredits, weather derivatives and pulp/paper markets. Bill Orr,formerly northeast regional vice president, becomes west regionalvice president. Jay Catasein, project development vice president,becomes northeast regional vice president. Ron Erd is promoted fromdirector to vice president of market development. In addition toresponsibility for market development and structuring, Erd willassume responsibility for the project development group. SCEM is ajoint venture between Southern Energy Inc. and Vastar ResourcesInc.
Transportation Notes
Transco alerted shippers that some production possibly could beinterrupted today on the Southeast Louisiana Lateral. The U.S. ArmyCorps of Engineers is expected to take about eight hours tocomplete matting of the western bank of the Mississippi River.Transco said it will make every operational effort to keep thiswork from impacting production, but curtailments are possible ifunforeseen events lengthen the operation.
A Second Week Begins With Big Price Increases
Some traders were getting a sense of deja vu all over again(thanks, Yogi Berra) as a second straight week started withdouble-digit price increases nearly across the board. The biggestgains on either side of 20 cents were concentrated at Northeastcitygates. Despite forecasts of snow and cold weather in theRockies, several increases of about a dime were experienced bypipes there. And although its rise of a little over a dime wasamong the day’s smaller ones, the PG&E citygate topped all U.S.pricing with quotes solidly in the $3.30s.
Gulf RIK to Begin With 260 MMcf/d
The federal government will begin accepting royalty-in-kind(RIK) for some Gulf of Mexico gas production beginning Dec. 1 inwhat will be the Minerals Management Service’s (MMS) third ongoingRIK pilot.
Jurisdictional Dispute on TriState Resolved
The U.S. portion of TriState Pipeline got some much-needed goodnews last week when FERC issued a preliminary determination on thenon-environmental aspects of the project after resolving a stickyjurisdictional issue. But whether it will be enough to kick-startthe troubled project, which is lagging far behind the competingVector Pipeline, seemed doubtful.
Jurisdictional Dispute on TriState Resolved
The troubled TriState Pipeline got some much-needed good newsyesterday when FERC issued a preliminary determination on thenon-environmental aspects of the project.
PECO and Unicom Mum on Merger Possibility
The rumor mill produced some major headlines yesterday withseveral dominant players in the energy industry apparently inmerger talks. Unicom Corp., parent of Commonwealth Edison, and PECOEnergy Co. were reported to be in discussions about forming a”merger of equals,” while Chevron now has its eye on Phillips.
Choice Available to Some But Those Choosing Are Few
According to a recent survey, one in six U.S. consumers, or 17%,say they can now choose their energy suppliers. However, only 2%have actually changed providers.