Through

Second Remand Affects Penalty Revenue

In another case the FERC is going to have to defend its policyof not requiring pipelines to flow through penalty revenues, theU.S. Court of Appeals ruled Friday in remanding a case involvingNorAm Gas Transmission (No. 97-1607). The 2-1 decision in Amoco v.FERC, with Judge Randolph concurring in part and dissenting inpart, did not object to NorAm’s raising penalty rates, but it doesask for an explanation of why the Commission believes penaltyrevenues will be so insignificant as to warrant no consideration.In the year prior to NorAm’s rate filing the pipeline had collected$1.8 million in penalty revenue. The court noted FERC appeared tobelieve that because penalty rates were raised, the incidence ofpenalties would decrease. But “even if a lesser number of penaltiesare imposed, the increased penalty rate might result in a grossincrease in penalty revenue. Moreover – and this is the keyimponderable – whether a shipper will be willing to incur thepenalty depends on his cost in securing alternative supplies in atight market.”

October 26, 1998

Futures Hold Amid Bearish Fundamentals

Lack of follow-through selling kept the bears guessing yesterdayat Nymex as the market ignored a trio of bearish factors-weather,storage, and cash prices-to trade nearly unchanged on the day. TheNovember contract was limited to a tight trading range and settleddown just 0.4 cents to $2.176 for the day. Estimated volume was43,394.

October 23, 1998

Coral to Manage Mountaineer’s Supply

Coral Energy became the principal gas supplier to LDCMountaineer Gas Co. through an agreement giving Coral management ofvirtually all of Mountaineer’s total firm transportation andstorage entitlements. Effective Nov. 1, Coral will begin supplyingMountaineer, West Virginia’s largest LDC, about 25 Bcf/year forthree years. Gas will be supplied at a fixed price. Local gassupplies are not part of the deal and will continue to be managedby Mountaineer.

October 15, 1998

Earl Turns to the East as Futures Head South

The futures market followed-through on its usual hurricanescript Wednesday by reversing early week price spikes to plummetlower as Hurricane Earl plodded toward Florida and away from gulfcoast production. “Buy the rumor, then sell the fact,” is the adageoften bandied about when there is the potential for a hurricane todisturb supplies in the gulf and yesterday the phrase rang true asdismal fundamentals factors once again took center stage in themarket. That carried the October contract down 13.4 cents to settleat $1.652.

September 3, 1998

Transportation Note

Pacific Gas & Electric extended a low-inventory Stage 1 OFO(see Daily GPI, Sept. 1) through today. Penalties were unchanged,but the negative imbalance tolerance was tightened to 5%.

September 2, 1998

Short Covering Rally Buoys Futures

Follow-through on the heels of last Friday’s positive tradingsession prompted some mild short covering which bolstered futuresfor the second Monday in a row. The September contract was thebiggest mover, posting a 6.2 cent gain to settle at 1.895 on theday.

August 11, 1998

Transco Opens Season for Alabama, Georgia

Williams has announced an open season running now through Aug.24 to sign up firm shippers for expansion of its Transco pipelinesystem running northeast from Station 85 across Alabama and Georgiato mainline delivery points in Zone 4 and ending just north ofAtlanta, GA.

July 23, 1998

Sempra Buys CNG’s Wholesale Gas Portfolio for $48M

Consolidated Natural Gas Co. followed through on its plan toexit wholesale energy marketing yesterday by selling its gasmarketing operations, including supply, sales, storage andtransportation agreements, to Sempra Energy for $48 million.

July 22, 1998

Congress Wrangling over LIHEAP Funding

Funding for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program(LIHEAP) is up in the air again with a Senate committeereauthorizing funding through 2004 and a House subcommittee votingto zero out 1999 fiscal year funding for the program. Rallying forLIHEAP’s continuation is the American Gas Association. “Thisunanimous [Senate] committee vote demonstrates the depth of supportthat LIHEAP has in the Senate. In fact, several senators at themarkup expressed their dismay about the House subcommittee actionto eliminate program funding,” said Steve Crout, AGA director ofgovernment relations. “We intend to fight hard to restore the ’99funding for LIHEAP, and today’s action shows that we can count onstrong support from the Senate.”

June 25, 1998

Hebert: FERC Not the ‘Happiness Commission’

If environmental groups and landowners somehow got the idea thatthrough their increased activities at FERC their influence wasgrowing, perhaps they should think again.

June 17, 1998