Dayton Daily News

The MarkWest Energy Partners natural gas processing and storage operation near Cadiz is about 60 miles south of Canton.

Natural gas use at 2nd-highest level Vectren has seen.

- By Thomas Gnau Staff Writer

The sustained cold is doing more than making us uncomforta­ble. It’s making energy more expensive.

Natural gas provider Vectren is warning that bitter cold is leading to higher gas use — and that will mean higher bills.

Natural gas delivery volume in its Ohio service territory since Dec. 15, 2017, is the second highest Vectren has seen, said Natalie Hedde, spokeswoma­n for the Evansville, Ind.-based company.

Expect bills to be about 30 percent higher than the comparable period last year, she warned.

“Extreme temperatur­es the last half of December 2017 through the first half of January

this year have led to gas usage in volumes that rival the highest ever seen,” the company said in a release.

Gas is delivered to 316,000 customers in West-Central Ohio through Vectren’s 5,500-mile pipeline network.

Duke Energy and Columbia Gas also expect higher bills for customers.

Kelli Nowinsky, a spokeswoma­n for Columbia Gas of Ohio, which serves the Springfiel­d area, said natural gas prices are down, but temperatur­es are much colder than average, so bills will be higher.

Natural gas prices for January are down about 28 percent compared to January 2017, but Columbia expects weather colder than last year to take its toll.

“We estimate the January bill for the average customer will be about $20 higher than normal ($135.45 with our cold weather vs. $116.15 with normal weather),” Nowinsky said. “But every customer is different; customers who use more gas could see a much bigger jump in their bill.”

Lee Freedman, a Cincinnati-based spokesman for North Carolina-based Duke Energy, which serves customers in Warren County and beyond, agrees that cold has an impact.

“Remember that last year and the year before, we had really mild winters,” he said. “So compared to the mild winters, yes, it’s going to be extreme. Compared to average winters, it will probably higher (than those), too.”

Over the past month, Duke Energy customers have used more natural gas than average, but have not set any records in terms of use, Freedman said.

In Southweste­rn Ohio and Northern Kentucky, Duke Energy is projected to deliver 18.7 billion cubic feet of natural gas from Dec. 15, 2017, to Jan. 15, 2018, Duke said recently. That’s up from 14.3 billion cubic feet (Bcf ) for the same period last year.

The Duke record: In 1994, Duke customers used more than 20 Bcf of natural gas during a 30-day period.

What’s different about the stretch from Dec. 15 to expected weather through Jan. 15, is the sheer duration of all that cold, Vectren’s Hedde said.

“If you think back to events like the polar vortex, it was cold, certainly,” Hedde said. “This (the immediate past month) was interestin­g because in this time period, there wasn’t winter weather in terms of accumulati­on and precipitat­ion as part of that story. It was just the bitter, bitter cold.”

If you’re worried about costs, Vectren suggests calling at 800-227-1376. Qualifying customers can set up a payment schedule whereby they can pay their bills in smaller increments over a set period of time, the company said. This is a free service with no interest charges, Vectren said.

“We definitely want to partner with customers just as soon as they find themselves in a challenge to pay,” Hedde said.

Worried about your gas service being cut off ? Hedde noted that the company is in what she called a “moratorium period” from shutting service down.

“We will work with each individual customer, depending on qualificat­ions, certainly during extreme temperatur­es,” she said. “There are some unwritten rules where we would not disconnect.”

Wallace Tyner, an agricultur­e professor at Purdue University and an expert on natural gas, said what people need to understand and often don’t, is that a gas bill consists of two factors — the price of gas and the quantity of gas used. In cold weather, the quantity (or demand) side of the equation goes up, he said.

Utilities should have “forward-priced” natural gas last summer, Tyner said. Gas in our part of the country is injected undergroun­d and stored under salt domes, injected all through summer until about October or so, he said.

“Withdrawal­s (of natural gas) this year have been higher than in the past, obviously,” Tyner said. “That’s the ‘q’ (quantity) side of the equation.”

The price of the gas should be stable. But it could be higher next summer, especially if the cold continues, Tyner said. It could be as much as eight percent higher next year, he estimated.

Even with continued cold, though, the supply of gas in this part of the country should remain stable, he said. That’s a bit less certain in areas like the Northeaste­rn United States, he added.

 ??  ?? The extreme cold that started before Christmas will push most area energy bills much higher than last year.
The extreme cold that started before Christmas will push most area energy bills much higher than last year.

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