U.S. natural gas production growth wanes as need arises
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[May 02, 2022] By
Scott DiSavino, Arathy Somasekhar and Brijesh Patel
(Reuters) - U.S. natural gas production
growth is waning at the same time many countries are looking for new
suppliers to help break their dependence on Russian gas after Moscow's
invasion of Ukraine.
The United States is already the world's largest producer of natural
gas. But the two mainstays of production - the Appalachian region and
West Texas - are seeing growth slow, with companies blaming lack of
adequate pipeline infrastructure, despite prices near 14-year highs.
Since Moscow invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24, U.S. gas prices have soared
about 50% as European countries look to the United States, the world's
second biggest exporter, to sell more liquefied natural gas (LNG) to
wean Europe off Russian fuel.
Growth has slowed in Appalachia, which supplied about 37% of U.S. gas in
2021, because it has become increasingly difficult for energy firms to
build new pipes to move gas out of the Pennsylvania, Ohio and West
Virginia region.
With pipelines in the Permian Shale, the nation's second biggest gas
supply basin, filling quickly, analysts said production growth in that
Texas-New Mexico basin could slow significantly next year unless firms
start building new pipelines soon. The Permian supplied about 19% of
U.S. gas in 2021.
Energy analysts expect benchmark gas prices will average $4.24 per
million British thermal units (mmBtu) in 2022, which would be the
highest annual average in eight years.
The largest European economies import about 18.3 billion cubic feet per
day (bcfd) from Russia. The United States currently can export about 9.8
bcfd as LNG. Several companies are looking to boost exports, but
substantial new LNG export capacity is not expected for at least two
years.
A billion cubic feet is enough gas to supply about five million U.S.
homes for a day.
U.S. natural gas remains well below prices in Europe, Asia
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-NATURALGAS/
PIPELINES/jnpwerllopw/chart.png
For much of the past decade, Appalachia has been the workhorse of U.S.
gas production, growing by an average of 36% per year from 2010-2019.
Pipeline construction has slowed, and output growth dropped to an
average of 4% in 2020 and 2021. EQT Corp said on its earnings call that
growth will not pick up until there are more pipelines.
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A flare burns excess natural gas in the Permian Basin in Loving
County, Texas, U.S. November 23, 2019. REUTERS/Angus Mordant
Appalachia "is nearing takeaway capacity limits," said analysts at Bank of
America, who estimated there would be "little to no production growth" until new
pipes enter service. One giant project, the Atlantic Coast pipeline, was
canceled in 2020 after costs rose from an estimated $6.0-$6.5 billion to $8
billion.
Another long-delayed project, Equitrans Midstream Corp's $6.2 billion Mountain
Valley line from West Virginia to Virginia, has not been completed due to
ongoing lawsuits.
"This project may be the last large greenfield natural gas pipeline to go into
service east of the Mississippi River for some time," said analysts at ClearView
Energy Partners, who estimate Mountain Valley will enter service in mid 2023.
Growth of Appalachia pipeline export capacity stalls
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-NATURALGAS/PIPELINES/
zdpxogaajvx/chart.png
The Permian Shale is the biggest U.S. oil field. That oil comes out of the
ground with a lot of gas, known as associated gas.
With crude prices hovering around $100 a barrel, analysts expect energy firms to
drill for more oil in the Permian with the associated gas filling existing pipes
in 2023.
Permian gas output grew by an average of 17% per year from 2012-2020, before
slowing to just 8% in 2021.
In the past, drillers would flare, or burn some of that gas. But pressure from
states and investors to be more environmentally-friendly and cut greenhouse gas
emissions have forced companies to reduce flaring.
Several energy companies are interested in building new pipes in the Permian,
including units of Enterprise Products Partners, Kinder Morgan and Energy
Transfer.
Permian and Appalachia basin growth slows https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-NATURALGAS/myvmnyglwpr/chart.png
(Reporting by Scott DiSavino in New York, Arathy Somasekhar in Houston, Brijesh
Patel in Bengaluru)
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