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Published byAllison Matthews Modified over 8 years ago
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Recent History – Natural Gas November 2012 Michael Vickerman
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2007-2008 Fears of declining NG output triggers price spike above $10/MMBtu Drilling activity hits all-time high Industry rushes to develop new shale gas plays (Barnett, Haynesworth, Marcellus) Demand destruction observed
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2009-2010 Shale gas output begins flowing to market Total NG output increases by 6% Prices stabilize in $4 to $6 /MMBtu range NG industry launches “game-changer” PR campaign High decline rates observed with shale gas wells (Art Berman)
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2011 Shale gas flows boost output by 7% Industry starts ratcheting back exploration, but well completions continue apace More NG turning into kWh; coal usage declines Weekly storage injections surpass historical averages Prices drop below $4/MMBtu early, then tumble below $3 at year-end
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First Half of 2012 Record-setting mild winter reduces heating demand by 30% Storage inventories swell to record levels - 60% above five-year average Prices drop to $2/MMBtu – substantially below production costs NG now cheaper than coal
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Second Half of 2012 NG output remains constant Exploration activity now 25% of 2008 level Record-setting hot weather increases demand for NG as generator fuel Storage overhang decreases, now only 6% above 5-year average Industry bleeding red ink due to continuation of prices below cost of production
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Outlook – 2013/2014 Greater recognition in financial circles that shale gas extraction is expensive! Contractual commitments notwithstanding, industry will conserve capital & cut back spending Plant closures to continue, expanding NG share of electricity market Lag effects of reduced exploration, combined with high decline rates, will shave output totals Prices have nowhere to go but up
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