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Foreign Liquified Natural Gas Now Entering U.S. at Low Prices.
In an article titled "Who Knew? Looks Like We're In for an LNG Glut", the April 2009 issue of Electricity Journal noted "In early 2000, the conventional wisdom was that U.S. domestic production capacity was on the decline, requiring massive imports of liquefied natural gas (LNG) from overseas."
In response to this outlook, a number of major LNG terminals were constructed to import LNG from producing countries overseas, where natural gas is often an unused byproduct of oil production. Those projects are now coming to fruition -- at exactly the wrong time for the U.S. natural gas industry.
Electricity Journal noted " there is now broad agreement that a U.S. LNG import surge is coming." The article noted three new U.S. terminals came online in 2008, after a record-setting LNG import total of 770 billion cubic feet in 2007.
Most distressing for the U.S. natural gas industry is that LNG imports are being sold at incredibly low prices. With a glut of LNG terminal and tanker capacity, foreign producers now have the LNG loaded and ready to sell, and often are merely trying to cover their marginal costs of operation. The article noted "Setting aside the need to recover massive fixed investments, the LNG itself can be sold for as low as $3 per [MMBTU], including transportation costs".
"Why would anybody sell LNG at such a low price? Because, as Zach Allen, head of Pan EurAsian Enterprises, says, 'Some cash is better than none', especially for low-cost producers such as Qatar or for others where natural gas is a byproduct of extracting oil.", the Electricity Journal article concluded.
Natural Gas Prices Have Crashed. With a new abundance of resources both domestic and foreign now flooding the market, U.S. natural gas prices have crashed.

Data Source: Energy Information Administration, Office of Oil & Gas
Price Not High Enough to Support Drilling. While good in the short term for consumers, natural gas prices this low have now largely curtailed new drilling and exploration activities. It is generally accepted that new drilling costs from $6.00 to $7.50 per MMBTU, so until prices can rise high enough to cover those costs, the rigs will stay down.
Little Hope On Horizon. Gas producers are looking at a very bleak outlook for 2009 and expect prices to remain depressed until increased demand for natural gas catches up with the very plentiful supplies now available. "The worst is yet to come, '09 activity is down 70-75%", stated Carter Mathies of Arista Midstream Services LLC during his presentation at the Grand Junction, CO Chamber of Commerce last week.
Enter "An Inconvenient Truth" -- for COAL. Unexpected help to the natural gas industry may come soon, and just in time, through a "Cap and Trade" bill to limit emissions on carbon dioxide production from electric power plants. This is a major piece of legislation that proposes to change the energy sources we use to generate power -- and the outcomes would greatly favor natural gas.
Scientists worldwide have concluded that the raising of carbon dioxide (CO2) levels in the atmosphere is having severe impacts on our climate. They say fossil fuel emissions must be controlled to prevent flooded coastal cities, dust bowls from Kansas to California, destruction of coral reefs and low-lying island nations, among other catastrophic effects. (See here for a good summary of the science.)
The major culprit, they say, is the burning of coal to produce electric power. Our nation's top climate scientist, NASA's Dr. James Hansen, argues "coal is the single greatest threat to civilization and all life on our planet". (See Hansen's full remarks here.)
Natural Gas is Winner When CO2 is Regulated. While natural gas is also a fossil fuel and produces carbon dioxide when it is burned -- it has a major advantage over coal. The best natural gas power plants produce less than half as much carbon dioxide per kWh of electricity as coal fired power plants.
Natural gas combined cycle gas turbines (CCGT's) are very efficient because they use two cycles to recover heat (hence the name "combined cycle"). These gas turbines are also far less costly to build than a new coal fired power plant.
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