Virtually

Prosperity or Chaos to be Decided by New Energy Technology

Placing energy, or the lack thereof, at the core of “virtually every problem facing humanity,” Richard E. Smalley, director of the Carbon Nanotechnology Laboratory at Rice University, said the country should be skeptical of the existing energy industry’s optimism that it can find a solution to the energy prosperity dilemma.

May 3, 2004

Prosperity or Chaos to be Decided by New Energy Technology

Placing energy, or the lack thereof, at the core of “virtually every problem facing humanity,” Richard E. Smalley, director of the Carbon Nanotechnology Laboratory at Rice University, said the country should be skeptical of the existing energy industry’s optimism that it can find a solution to the energy prosperity dilemma.

April 28, 2004

Cash Market Stays Flat as Oil-Based Futures Soar

Wednesday’s market was virtually a repeat of the one Tuesday, with little or no price movement at the great majority of points and the few increases or decreases being capped at about a nickel. Lingering cold in the Midwest and Northeast was being joined by a modest amount of cooling load developing from Texas through the desert Southwest into California.

March 18, 2004

Virtually No Support Sends Weekend Prices Plunging

To absolutely no one’s surprise, all points recorded major declines in swing trading for the weekend. Friday’s market had a lot going against it: the screen plunge a day earlier that was linked to the latest record-setting storage injection; the disappearance of very hot weather almost everywhere except for the desert Southwest and inland California; and the normal industrial load drop that accompanies a weekend.

June 30, 2003

Christmas Eve Deals Are Few and Far Between

It’s a huge understatement to say that Tuesday’s market was rather featureless. Try virtually non-existent instead, which was to be expected on Christmas Eve.

December 26, 2002

Rockies Only Firm Spot in a Sea of Softness

With milder weather reaching as far as the Southeast and energy futures back on a downward slope, it was virtually inevitable that cash prices continued to slide Wednesday at nearly all points. Besides the above factors, sources said the soft market also was reflecting what some believe will be a relatively big storage injection report Thursday morning for a period covering record-setting heat and electricity demand.

August 8, 2002

Cash Price Softness Meek Compared to Stock Carnage

On a day that had virtually all traders mesmerized by the hemorrhaging of merchant energy values on Wall Street (see related stories), cash gas prices were mostly lower by small amounts Tuesday. Mild gains of a nickel or less at a few western points (intra-Alberta, Sumas and Kern River) were the exceptions to flat to as much as 40 cents lower (Transco Zone 6-NYC) numbers elsewhere.

July 24, 2002

Cash Price Softness Meek Compared to Stock Carnage

On a day that had virtually all traders mesmerized by the hemorrhaging of merchant energy values on Wall Street (see related stories), cash gas prices were mostly lower by small amounts Tuesday. Mild gains of a nickel or less at a few western points (intra-Alberta, Sumas and Kern River) were the exceptions to flat to as much as 40 cents lower (Transco Zone 6-NYC) numbers elsewhere.

July 24, 2002

Typical Mid-July Weather Keeps Prices Moving Higher

Air conditioners are humming virtually everywhere, and that translated into continuing bullishness for almost the entire cash gas market Wednesday. Except for a small decline at Malin and flat to barely higher numbers at a few Northeast citygates, other points saw gains that tended to range from a nickel to a little more than 15 cents.

July 18, 2002

Typical Mid-July Weather Keeps Prices Moving Higher

Air conditioners are humming virtually everywhere, and that translated into continuing bullishness for almost the entire cash gas market Wednesday. Except for a small decline at Malin and flat to barely higher numbers at a few Northeast citygates, other points saw gains that tended to range from a nickel to a little more than 15 cents.

July 18, 2002