Natural gas drilling is facing pushback in Pennsylvania, Michigan and New York from some whose fears of energy development have been stoked by the BP plc well blowout and spill disaster in the Gulf of Mexico (GOM). And worries about hydraulic fracturing (fracing) well stimulation techniques aren’t going away either as a new anti-drilling film on the topic is now playing on big and small screens.
Whose
Articles from Whose
Kitimat LNG Gains EOG as Partner
The Canadian arm of Houston’s EOG Resources Inc. last week agreed to buy out Galveston LNG Inc., whose subsidiary Kitimat LNG Inc. owns 49% of the proposed liquefied natural gas (LNG) export terminal at Bish Cove, BC. Financial details were not disclosed.
EOG, Apache to Partner in Kitimat LNG Project
The Canadian arm of Houston’s EOG Resources Inc. on Tuesday said it is buying the shares of Galveston LNG Inc., whose subsidiary Kitimat LNG Inc. owns 49% of the proposed liquefied natural gas (LNG) export terminal at Bish Cove, BC. Financial details were not disclosed.
Quicksilver Cuts Back in Barnett Shale
Quicksilver Resources Inc., whose natural gas portfolio is spread across North America, said Monday it would reduce its 2010 capital program “to reflect reduced planned drilling and completion activities” in the Barnett Shale.
Chesapeake CEO: No Love in the Gas Patch
Chesapeake Energy Corp. — whose logo is a blue gas flame — is continuing the stampede to oil and liquids-rich gas plays along with other U.S. independent producers (see related story), reallocating $700 million of spending from gas to oil over this year and next and pulling some rigs from shale plays (see NGI, Feb. 22).
Chesapeake’s McClendon: No Love in the Gas Patch
Chesapeake Energy Corp. — whose logo is a blue gas flame — is continuing the stampede to oil and liquids-rich gas plays along with other U.S. independent producers (see related story), reallocating $700 million of spending from gas to oil over this year and next and pulling some rigs from shale plays (see Daily GPI, Feb. 19).
Analysts Cut LNG Forecast; Shale Makes a ‘Mockery’ of Earlier Estimates
Those whose interests are favored by liquefied natural gas (LNG) forsaking U.S. shores can thank more attractive oil-indexed pricing in Asia and European demand for holding back the long-predicted tide of cargoes, at least for this year and next, according to an analysis by Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. Securities Inc. (TPH).
LNG Tidal Wave? No, Still Not Yet, Say Analysts
Those whose interests are favored by liquefied natural gas (LNG) forsaking U.S. shores can thank more attractive oil-indexed pricing in Asia and European demand for holding back the long-predicted tide of cargoes, at least for this year and next, according to an analysis by Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. Securities Inc. (TPH).
Analysts Cut LNG Forecast; Shale Makes a ‘Mockery’ of Earlier Estimates
Those whose interests are favored by liquefied natural gas (LNG) forsaking U.S. shores can thank more attractive oil-indexed pricing in Asia and European demand for holding back the long-predicted tide of cargoes, at least for this year and next, according to an analysis by Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. Securities Inc. (TPH).
Cabot: Marcellus is ‘the Real Deal’
Cabot Oil & Gas Corp., whose year-ago output in the Marcellus Shale averaged 16 MMcf/d, was producing 100 MMcf/d gross there as of Feb. 19, and the natural gas play “will be the driving force for the company for years to come…it’s the real deal,” said CEO Dan Dinges last week.