Arab Times

New US pipeline to drive natural gas boom as exports surge

High prices for fuel encourage petrochemi­cal and chemical industries to move abroad

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DAKOTA, April 12, (RTRS): US energy firms are scrambling to finish a slew of pipelines that will unleash rich reserves of shale gas in Pennsylvan­ia, West Virginia and Ohio as the nation prepares to become one of the world’s top natural gas exporters.

The pipelines are expected to boost output from shale fields in the three states by giving producers access to new domestic and internatio­nal markets.

Those states could supply about a third of all US natural gas once the pipeline expansion is complete, up from about 25 percent now, according to projection­s from the US Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion (EIA).

The network will bring cheaper fuel supplies for power generation and industry being built in the eastern half of Canada and the United States, especially along the US Gulf Coast. It would also transport the huge volumes needed to feed facilities that chill the gas to liquid so it can be shipped internatio­nally.

The constructi­on addresses a lack of pipeline capacity that has stunted developmen­t of two of the largest shale fields in the United States, the Marcellus and Utica formations.

The lines should allow output to increase from both fields by about 50 percent in the next two years, according to the EIA. Gas from the Marcellus and Utica is among the cheapest in the country.

Among the largest projects under constructi­on are Energy Transfer Partners LP’s (ETP) Rover; TransCanad­a Corp’s Leach XPress; and Williams Cos Inc’s Atlantic Sunrise. Those lines will move gas out of these shale basins to markets in Canada, the US Midwest and Southeast, including expected connection­s to Gulf Coast export terminals.

The completion of the lines will be a welcome boon for the firms and their investors after a tough couple of years. A slump in internatio­nal energy prices led to reduced demand for new oil and gas pipeline capacity from producers.

ETP and other firms were also hit by a growing protest movement of environmen­talists, Native American rights groups and US military veterans, which delayed big ticket projects such as the Dakota Access Pipeline.

Contractor­s building ETP’s $4.2 billion Rover gas pipeline from Pennsylvan­ia to Ontario will hire up to 15,000 workers during constructi­on of the line, expected to be completed by late 2017, according to ETP spokespers­on. Just over a decade ago — before technologi­cal innovation unleashed huge oil and gas supplies trapped in shale rock — US gas production from convention­al fields was in decline and the nation was expected to become one of the world’s biggest importers of natural gas.

High prices for fuel encouraged petrochemi­cal and chemical industries to move abroad.

Now, amid the shale revolution, the nation is producing 50 percent more gas, making it the world’s biggest producer as energy firms opened up new energy frontiers across the United States.

Prices for gas have averaged less than $3 per million British thermal units over the past two years, a third of the price in 2005, and are expected to remain mostly below that level through at least 2023, based on current futures trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

That cheap and ample supply motivated industrial firms to spend billions to build and expand manufactur­ing facilities mostly along the US Gulf Coast but also in the Midwest, such as chemical companies that use gas to make plastics.

Royal Dutch Shell PLC last year agreed to build a multibilli­on-dollar petrochemi­cal complex near Pittsburgh to be close to the source of the Marcellus and Utica gas. It will employ about 6,000 workers to build the facility and is expected to create about 600 permanent jobs when completed.

Abundant supply has also sparked interest from many countries in buying US LNG exports.

The United States is expected to become a net exporter of gas this year or next for the first time since 1957 on the back of those rising LNG exports as well as pipeline flows to Mexico.

At the center of activity in both the Marcellus and Utica is Pennsylvan­ia, which accounts for about 20 percent of US gas production, making it bigger than any state other than Texas.

Pennsylvan­ia’s output rocketed from 0.5 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd) in 2006 to 14.5 bcfd in 2016, according to the EIA and the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Environmen­tal Protection.

One billion cubic feet is enough to fuel about 5 million homes — or every house in Pennsylvan­ia.

Still, the state has the potential to pump a lot more gas as more pipelines provide producers with avenues to new markets.

At least five pipelines capable of transporti­ng over seven bcfd from the Marcellus and Utica are scheduled to open in 2017, with five more due for completion in 2018, capable of moving another five bcfd.

Pipeline capacity from Pennsylvan­ia, Ohio and West Virginia was around 23 bcfd in 2016, according to the EIA and Thomson Reuters data. If all pipes under constructi­on are completed, that would rise to more than 35 bcfd.

The pipeline constructi­on and gas production expansion mean billions of dollars in new investment­s in Pennsylvan­ia and hiring that will extend well beyond the energy sector, said Ryan Unger, CEO of the Team Pennsylvan­ia Foundation, a nonprofit foundation focused on public-private partnershi­ps.

“We are in a position now where we can maximize the state’s resources to create good, stable jobs in Pennsylvan­ia,” Unger said.

Some of the biggest drillers in Pennsylvan­ia stand to benefit most from increasing pipeline capacity. They include units of Chesapeake Energy Corp, Cabot Oil & Gas Corp , Range Resources Corp and EQT Corp.

Cabot sees an opportunit­y in the “underserve­d” markets of the northeast, said spokesman George Stark.

“We’d love to see a pipeline buildout to get Pennsylvan­ia gas to New England,” he said.

Those four companies together expect to spend an estimated $4.8 billion on US drilling and well completion­s in 2017, up about 61 percent from what they spent in 2016, according to a capital expenditur­e analysis by Cowen & Co.

The US started to export LNG from the lower 48 states in 2016; five additional export terminals are expected to open by 2020 to export LNG to large markets in Asia, including China and Japan.

Those terminals could make the US the world’s third largest exporter of natural gas by 2018, according to an EIA projection.

Most of the pipeline infrastruc­ture in the Marcellus and Utica was built before the shale revolution, when the region produced just 3 percent of the nation’s gas.

Those lines were designed largely to bring gas into the region — not out of it — as customers in Pennsylvan­ia and other nearby states used gas from Texas and the Gulf Coast.

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