In view of the report below -
Arctic
chill exposes weakness of U.S. natural gas system
8
January, 2014
By
Julia Edwards
Jan
7 (Reuters) - Brutally cold weather this week laid bare critical
weaknesses in the Northeastern U.S. natural gas system, leaving some
states paying vast sums for supplies as arctic weather enveloped the
region.
Despite
its location alongside the biggest natural gas deposit in the
country, the northeast region saw record price spikes on Monday as an
unprecedented surge in demand from power plants and homeowners
overwhelmed pipelines.
The
rise in prices forced spot-market buyers in New York and New England
to pay up to 20 times more for their gas than amply supplied hubs in
Texas and Louisiana.
The
volatility shows that nearly a decade into a drilling boom that has
flooded much of the country with gas, a lack of pipelines has left
some areas vulnerable to shortages this year and potentially for
years to come.
It
is a weak spot in what has been a huge resurgence in U.S. natural gas
production over the past 10 years, and exposes how in some areas
pipelines have failed to keep up with the new supplies that have come
out of the ground.
"There's
a reason why New England is the most volatile power and gas market in
the country," said Addison Armstrong, senior director of market
research at Tradition Energy in Stamford, Connecticut. "It has
been slow on the uptake and now we're behind the curve in terms of
getting additional capacity brought in there."
In
New York on Monday, natural gas traded at an average of $55 per
million British thermal units on the Transco pipeline E-TSCO6NY-IDX.
Highs for the day reached $90.
The
average price broke highs first recorded in 2001, years before the
region began importing gas from the Marcellus. In Boston, gas on the
Algonquin pipeline swung up by $18 per mmBtu then down by $9 per
mmBtu as forecasts turned warmer on Tuesday.
MARCELLUS
GIANT
The
Marcellus shale, centered in Pennsylvania, has emerged as the giant
of the U.S. natural gas market. It currently produces 13 billion
cubic feet of natural gas per day (bcfd), accounting for about 18
percent of total U.S. supply, up from just 2 bcfd in 2010, according
to the Energy Information Administration.
Over
the next three years, pipeline capacity from the Marcellus is
expected to grow to carry 8.7 bcf more gas per day, 4.3 bcf of which
will be directed to the Northeast, according to data from Jonathan
Gould, a senior oil and gas analyst at Genscape.
But
far less of that will reach New England, Gould said.
Moreover,
even that growth rate is not enough to keep up with the robust
production in the region, so flows from wells must be tapered, Gould
said.
Despite
years of supply bottlenecks, only one announced project is targeting
New England states. Spectra Energy's Algonquin Incremental Market
project will expand an existing system through Connecticut and
Massachusetts carrying 342 million cubic feet of gas per day. The
pipeline is not scheduled to be completed until November 2016,
however, and will not reach past Boston.
"There
is a constraint getting all that gas out of the area," Gould
said. "In the Marcellus, you've got so many gas wells and it's
such a constrained system, that the pressure on the system keeps gas
from flowing how it would normally flow."
It
is a tough break for the six New England states that have been quick
to change from coal to gas-powered electric plants. Natural gas now
supplies most of the electricity to the region. Between 2011 and
2017, New England will have cut its electricity generated from coal
by more than half, according to Reuters data.
Some
companies are being forced to reroute gas originally meant for New
England to other regions to alleviate the supply built up in the
Marcellus, Armstrong said.
Building
too much capacity too fast could flood the market and kill demand on
days that are milder than seen recently. Developing gas supply
becomes "lumpy," according to Gordon Pickering, a director
in Navigant's Energy practice in Sacramento, who said gas companies
tend to develop gas supplies before they develop pipelines.
"More
supply means lower prices," said Pickering. "So pipeline
decisions require a long-term view of the market."
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