After a wild week that saw the natural gas futures market survive heat waves, August’s expiration and a 7 Bcf storage withdrawal in the heart of July, natural gas futures traders gave it a rest on Friday. In its first regular session action as front month, September natural gas briefly sank below $7 before settling at $$7.184, up 6.1 cents on the day and 93.6 cents higher for the week.
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Tennessee Pipe Negotiated-Rate Deals Survive Joint Dissent of Wood, Kelly
Three negotiated-rate arrangements involving Tennessee Gas Pipeline were accepted by FERC and took effect last week despite a joint dissent by Chairman Pat Wood and Commissioner Suedeen Kelly.
Tennessee Pipe Negotiated-Rate Deals Survive Joint Dissent of Wood, Kelly
Three negotiated-rate arrangements involving Tennessee Gas Pipeline were accepted by FERC and take effect this week despite a joint dissent by Chairman Pat Wood and Commissioner Suedeen Kelly.
Tennessee Pipe Negotiated-Rate Deals Survive Joint Dissent of Wood, Kelly
Three negotiated-rate arrangements involving Tennessee Gas Pipeline were accepted by FERC and take effect this week despite a joint dissent by Chairman Pat Wood and Commissioner Suedeen Kelly.
Analyst: El Paso, Duke Energy Will Survive; Williams, Dynegy a ‘Jumpball’
El Paso Corp. and Duke Energy will be the “clear, immediate winners” as energy traders scramble for their survival on Wall Street, but embattled Williams and Dynegy will be a “jumpball because of the liquidity trap they have gotten themselves into,” says energy industry analyst John Olson of Houston-based Sanders Morris Harris.
Analyst: El Paso, Duke Energy Will Survive; Williams, Dynegy a ‘Jumpball’
El Paso Corp. and Duke Energy will be the “clear, immediate winners” as energy traders scramble for their survival on Wall Street, but embattled Williams and Dynegy will be a “jumpball because of the liquidity trap they have gotten themselves into,” says energy industry analyst John Olson of Houston-based Sanders Morris Harris.
Tips Provided for E&P Survival in Volatile Gas Market
E&P companies that survive and profit in the continuing volatile natural gas market will have to balance growth with profitability and avoid some of the typical pitfalls that can send a company into a crisis mode, Arthur L. Smith, chairman of John S. Herold Inc. told a GasMart/Power 2002 audience in Reno, NV, last Tuesday.
Tips Provided for E&P Survival in Volatile Gas Market
E&P companies that survive and profit in the continuing volatile natural gas market will have to balance growth with profitability and avoid some of the typical pitfalls that can send a company into a crisis mode, Arthur L. Smith, chairman of John S. Herold Inc. told a GasMart/Power 2002 audience Tuesday.