Houston Chronicle Sunday

‘A victim of its own success’

America is awash with natural gas — and it’s about to get worse amid oversupply

- By Rachel Adams-Heard, Naureen S. Malik and Sayer Devlin

America is awash in natural gas, and it’s only getting worse amid global oversupply.

One chilly day in October, President Donald Trump boarded Air Force One and flew to Pennsylvan­ia to hail one of the state’s most important industries — not coal, but natural gas.

Trump spoke at an industry event of the “astonishin­g increase” in shale gas production. The Appalachia­n region has spearheade­d a historic expansion, turning the U.S. into the world’s biggest producer while slashing prices for consumers and sounding the death knell for domestic coal.

But the dark side of the boom is increasing­ly difficult to ignore. Shale drillers are extracting so much gas that it’s overwhelmi­ng demand.

Prices dipped briefly below $2 per million British thermal units last Friday for the first time since 2016 and traded below the threshold again on Monday. At that level, U.S. producers simply don’t make money. It’s forcing a wave of multibilli­on-dollar writedowns, layoffs and spending cuts.

Still, the industry is powerless to stop a wave of additional gas hitting the market as a byproduct of rising shale oil output in places like the Permian Basin and New Mexico. Even exports of liquefied natural gas provide little relief, as the internatio­nal market is also oversuppli­ed.

“The industry is a victim of its own success,” said Devin McDermott, an analyst at Morgan Stanley. “You don’t just have oversupply in the U.S. — you have oversupply in Europe, oversupply in Asia, and really oversupply across the globe.”

Gas prices have been in the doldrums for a while. The Henry Hub benchmark, named after a key Louisiana pipeline facility, has dropped for three years straight. This winter is proving to be unusually warm and inventory levels are above their seasonal average. Futures prices show traders aren’t expecting gas prices to rise above $2.60 even in the coldest months, when demand typically peaks.

U.S. producers need gas to be at least $2.50 in order to generate free cash flow, according to McDermott. “In the near-term, we don’t think it’s realistic to see a $2.50 price,” he said.

Annoying byproduct

Evidence of corporate distress is mounting. Chesapeake Energy., once in the vanguard of U.S. frackers, is unprofitab­le and struggling with more than $9 billion of debt. It warned in November it may go bust. EQT Corp., the largest domestic gas producer, said last week it will take an impairment of up to $1.8 billion for the fourth quarter, due in part to low prices.

Even the global energy giants aren’t immune. Chevron Corp. said last month it expects a writedown of more than $11 billion, more that half of that attributab­le to its Appalachia­n gas assets.

Producers including Cabot Oil & Gas and Range Resources Corp. are responding by taking an ax to capital expenditur­e. But that’s not going to put much of a dent in U.S. output. Production of “dry gas,” which excludes hydrocarbo­n liquids, is forecast to rise by 3 percent to 95 billion cubic feet a day this year, yet another record, the Energy Department said last week.

An unfortunat­e reality for gas producers is that their oil counterpar­ts in crude plays like the Permian keep spewing more gas from their wells — and they don’t even want it. Unlike in the Marcellus Shale in Appalachia, where it’s the main prize, gas is often regarded as an annoying byproduct of Permian oil. A lack of pipelines can force gas prices there to occasional­ly go negative — that is, producers have to pay others to take the fuel. They’re increasing­ly resorting to burning it off, a process known as flaring.

The unwelcome attention attracted by flaring isn’t helping gas’s environmen­tal credential­s, either. Despite being touted as greener “bridge” fuel that enables utilities to lower their emissions en route to a carbonfree future, gas is coming under attack in some parts of the U.S. from lawmakers seeking to ban all fossil fuels.

One outlet for excess supply has been the nascent U.S. liquefied natural gas export sector. Since the first cargo of the superchill­ed fuel — “freedom gas,” as the Trump administra­tion would have it — set sail four years ago, the country has leaped into the front ranks of global suppliers.

But even that success story appears to have stalled. China has imposed tariffs on U.S. LNG, effectivel­y cutting off a major market. Despite last week’s phase one trade deal, in which China agreed to buy an additional $52.4 billion of U.S. energy products including LNG, it remains unclear if the tariffs will be scrapped. Meanwhile, internatio­nal LNG prices have tanked, and there are questions whether the global market can take all the supply that’s available.

All that pain will almost certainly be reflected in production numbers at some point. The Energy Department forecasts U.S. dry gas production will drop by 600 million cubic feet next year, the first annual decline since 2016. That, combined with the potential removal of tariffs, could finally provide the kind of positive catalyst U.S. producers are desperatel­y seeking.

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 ?? Kevin Clancy / Associated Press ?? Are LNG exports the answer to America’s natural gas glut?
Kevin Clancy / Associated Press Are LNG exports the answer to America’s natural gas glut?

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