NGI The Weekly Gas Market Report

Enron Eyes Winner’s Circle Well Into Future

Confident in the pliability of their wildly successful businessmodel that has transformed the energy industry, Enron needed nodog-and-pony show as executives trotted out forecasts during aninvestor’s conference last week. In the space of a few hours, theHouston-based giant’s executives stressed one point again andagain: they fully expect to remain the leader in every field theyenter into the foreseeable future.

January 29, 2001

AEP/Dow, Calpine Building Louisiana Power Plants

It doesn’t appear Louisiana is going to run out of power anytime soon. American Electric Power and Dow Chemical last weekannounced plans are going forward to construct a 900 MW naturalgas-fired cogeneration plant at Dow’s chemical complex inPlaquemine, LA, at the same time Calpine Corp. revealed it hasacquired the development rights from Cogentrix for the 500 MWWashington Parish Energy Center, located near Bogalusa.

January 29, 2001

FERC Rejects OFO Complaint Against Northwest

FERC last week denied a complaint in which several Nevadaindustrial shippers sought exemption from continual must-flowoperational flow orders (OFOs) on Northwest Pipeline’s system, andto be reimbursed for the costs of complying with those OFOs. Butthe Commission did hold out some hope for the shippers, saying itwould consider proposals to provide future relief from thepipeline’s constant OFOs.

January 29, 2001

Industry Briefs

The various owners of the Black Marlin Pipeline System, a75-mile long natural gas and condensate gathering system in theGulf of Mexico, have sold the line to Williams Field Services for$9.25 million. The line was purchased from Blue Dolphin Energy, a50% owner, MCNIC Pipeline & Processing Co., a 33.33% owner, andWBI Holdings, Inc., a 16.67% owner. The sale includes related shorefacilities servicing the High Island area. Ivar Siem, chairman ofprimary owner Blue Dolphin, said the company had purchased BlackMarlin in early 1999 “during a period when the system hadexperienced lower throughput volumes due to limited drillingactivity in the High Island area. Since then the activity level hasbeen very high and significant additional reserves have beendiscovered,” Siem added. “This is an opportunity for us to realizegood value for the asset. We can re-deploy a portion of the saleproceeds to other niche pipeline opportunities in the Gulf.”

January 29, 2001

Hoecker Tells Gov. Davis to ‘Put Down the Guns’

In his parting shot as FERC chairman last week, James J. Hoecker issued one last plea to California Gov. Gray Davis to join with the Commission to enforce its comprehensive reforms for the state’s beleaguered power market: a $150/MWh soft price cap on wholesale sales, an emphasis on forward contracting by utilities, market-monitoring activities, and state participation in a regional transmission organization (RTO).

January 22, 2001

Eastern Canadian Pipe Link Planned

A new round of expansion is getting under way in the buddingnatural gas industry in eastern Canada, starting with constructionof the last missing link in the country’s transcontinental pipelinegrid. Longer range, there are possibilities of a new majorpipeline to transport Atlantic Canada production to major markets.

January 22, 2001

Berkley Rejects Hunt Offer, Breakup Possible

Calgary-based Berkley Petroleum Corp. unanimously rejected the takeover bid last week by a Hunt Oil Co. subsidiary, which offered to purchase all of the common shares of the company for $10 per share. Analysts were meanwhile speculating that without a white knight, Berkley might be worth more if it’s broken up and sold.

January 22, 2001

Canadian Exports Rise for 13th Year

With an extra boost from the industry’s newest branch offshoreof Nova Scotia, Canadian natural gas exporters chalked up their13th consecutive annual record during the contract year that endedlast Oct. 31.

January 22, 2001

Industry Briefs

Seeking to set aside what it called an “inappropriate” multi-billion verdict in which a jury awarded the State of Alabama $87 million in compensatory damages and $3.4 billion in punitive damages over unpaid royalty fees, ExxonMobil Corp. has filed an appeal with the Circuit Court of Montgomery County, AL. The case, decided last month, centered on charges that the energy giant (then Exxon, before its merger with Mobil) had underpaid up to $87.7 million in royalties on the Mobile Bay natural gas project in the Gulf of Mexico (see NGI, Dec. 25, 2000). The jury said it set the damages by tripling ExxonMobil’s annual production from 13 natural gas wells located on the Alabama coast in the disputed time. The long-standing contract dispute originally questioned whether an additional $40 million in royalties was due the state and exactly how the royalties should be calculated. To date, ExxonMobil said it has paid Alabama $1 billion in royalties and bonus payments under the lease agreement. “ExxonMobil believes that if this verdict goes unchallenged, other legitimate businesses in the state of Alabama – businesses that, like ExxonMobil, help expand the tax base, add to the economy and create new jobs – will also be potential targets,” the company said in a written statement. “Any company engaged in an open and reasonable contract dispute in the state will not be able to have reasonable disagreements with regulators without running the risk of being accused of fraud and being subjected to possible punitive damages.”

January 22, 2001

TransCanada Toll Issues Critical

While still new in Canada, competition has escalated in naturalgas transportation to the point where some big shippers say theyface a “rate shock” of steep toll increases later this year. TheCanadian Industrial Gas Users Association says “disruptive” hikesare coming unless TransCanada PipeLines Ltd. is immediately bailedout with an “interim” raise to spread its losses from the rivalrythinner over all of 2001.

January 22, 2001