Fracking Not All It’s Cracked Up To Be, In These Times

by Duane Nichols on June 14, 2020

Drilling & fracking operations site of EQT in Washington County in southwestern Penna.

Fracking Once Lifted Pennsylvania. Now It Could Be a Drag.

From an Article by Peter Eavis, New York Times, March 31, 2020

CARMICHAELS, Pa. — The last time the global economy was in free fall, an economic savior showed up in southwestern Pennsylvania. Energy companies, which had discovered a way to get at the state’s vast natural-gas reserves, invested billions of dollars in the region, cushioning the blow of the Great Recession.

“There were just so many jobs,” Debbie Gideon, a retired community banker, recalls. “It was crazy.”

But 12 years later, as the region braces for the coronavirus recession, natural-gas companies are much more likely to weigh on the local economy than to rescue it. These natural-gas companies operating in Pennsylvania were looking shaky before the coronavirus hit. Local economies are now at risk.

Even before the latest shock, gas operators were reeling from self-inflicted wounds. They had taken on too much debt and drilled so many wells that they had flooded the market with gas, sending its price into a tailspin.

To conserve cash, the firms have been frantically slashing investments, cuts that will pummel local suppliers and contractors. “Every time one of these slowdowns occurs, they beat down every vendor they can,” said Steve Stuck, president of Jacobs Petroleum in Waynesburg, which supplies diesel to the natural-gas operators.

Pennsylvania, home to the United States’ first major oil wells and a large coal producer for decades, has a long history with the fossil fuel industry. That was a reason the state, unlike New York, allowed gas companies to use hydraulic fracturing — or fracking — to extract gas from the Marcellus Shale formation, estimated to be the largest gas field in the United States.

To many businesspeople and residents, the bet has paid off, not least by creating many well-paying jobs in struggling parts of the state. And though the industry, which Pennsylvania has allowed to operate through the coronavirus emergency, goes through ups and downs, they expect it to remain an important part of their economy for years to come.

“I don’t think we’ll ever get to the bust, because we have 40 to 60 years of gas,” says Mike Belding, a former Marine helicopter pilot and now a commissioner for Greene County. “That’s past our lifetimes.”

But there are strong signs that this natural-gas shakeout could grind on longer than others. And if it does turn into a rout that leads to large layoffs and business closures, Pennsylvania may have to reassess its great shale experiment.

“There is not a lot of knowledge of how fragile these companies are,” said Veronica Coptis, executive director of the Center for Coalfield Justice, which has often been critical of the coal and shale industries. “And when the companies start to struggle financially, the people who get hurt the most are the employees.”

Some energy giants have already lost faith in the region. Chevron in December took a multibillion-dollar write-down on its Appalachian shale assets, dominated by gas reserves in Pennsylvania, and said it might sell them. The stocks of two once mighty Marcellus Shale pioneers, Range Resources and EQT, have plummeted, and their bonds are trading at steep discounts, a sign that investors believe they could default on their debts.

The debts of those two companies and Southwestern Energy, another shale business focused on Pennsylvania, have increased by a combined $7 billion since 2008. Their operations generated far too little cash to pay for their investments. In fact, the three companies’ capital spending exceeded operating cash flows by $14 billion in that period.

The frackers now have fewer friends on Wall Street. “All they’ve done is destroy shareholder value,” said Ben Dell, managing partner at Kimmeridge, a private-equity firm that specializes in energy. “For the Marcellus guys, it will all stop with bankruptcy.”

Shale operators, pipeline companies and service companies together employed nearly 32,000 people in Pennsylvania as of June, according to an analysis of data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, roughly the same as during a previous peak, and about as many as Pennsylvania State University. In the first half of last year, workers in the shale industry and related sectors on average earned $2,128 a week, almost twice the average for private-sector workers in the state.

Larry Allison Jr., a co-owner of a crane company in Williamsport, a town in the center of the state, said his natural-gas-related business was down 30 percent from its peak, but added that the industry still created high-paying jobs: Crane operators earn $35 to $40 an hour. “Everyone’s making $10 per hour more than they were before,” he said. Activity in the natural-gas industry slowed slightly after the coronavirus outbreak began, Mr. Allison added later.

And Mr. Stuck’s fuel business has ballooned in size over the past decade, an expansion that was in part financed by loans from Community Bank in Carmichaels. “We would never have been able to employ local people from local universities for good competitive-wage jobs,” he said, “It’s been unbelievable to see the impact. And we’ve been through three downturns.” He says natural-gas companies’ demand for his services has not yet dropped because of the coronavirus outbreak.

Residents in gas-producing counties have received royalties for allowing shale operators to extract gas from and run pipelines across their land. “A lot of people made money,” said Ms. Gideon, the former banker. “I was happy for them; they had scraped by for years.” And the copiously flowing gas has lowered utility bills.

But now the shale-gas operators are trying to adapt to a harsher environment. They have cut the cost of drilling and fracking, which involves forcing liquids into the ground at extreme pressures to release gas by fracturing rock formations. Moving vast quantities of sand, used to prop open the fractures, has become more efficient, and operators are saving money by sharing water.

There is one big hope for some of the Pennsylvania gas companies. It’s the giant plastics plant that Shell, with the help of large tax breaks, is building in Beaver County in the southwestern part of the state. The plant takes ethane, a natural-gas byproduct, and breaks apart its molecules, which are then used to make plastic. The plant is expected to consume large amounts of gas from local wells, but Shell has not said exactly when it will come on line.

The Pennsylvania gas operators were also hoping that new pipelines would open up big markets. Some capacity has been added, but last month the companies behind the Constitution Pipeline, which would have transported gas to New York and New England, canceled the project, saying it was no longer economical.

One option the operators can try is cutting production to support prices. Pennsylvania’s rig count, a yardstick for new well drilling, is 24, half what it was a year ago, according to Baker Hughes. And natural-gas prices could benefit from the sharp drop in oil prices. That’s because the scaling back of drilling by American shale-oil operators will also reduce the amount of “associated” natural gas that those wells produce along with oil. But the economic downturn is expected to depress demand for the gas overall.

If the gas companies go into a long downturn, many in the community worry that it might become harder to get them to pay for legal settlements, cleanup costs, and wear and tear on local infrastructure.

In clearing ground for a road down to drilling site in 2018, EQT cut down some old Osage orange trees on land owned by Rose Friend. The company was building a road on her land because it had acquired a lease from another energy company.

Ms. Friend, 82, a former teacher who sings in a church group, said she didn’t want the road access to be directly opposite her farmhouse in Marianna, Pa., which has been in her family for 101 years, and tried to stop the company. The access was eventually moved 50 yards down the hill, and Ms. Friend’s daughter, Karen LeBlanc, is still negotiating with EQT over a payment to replace the trees.

“They just came in and took over,” Ms. Friend said. “I don’t do things that way.” The company did not respond to requests for comment.

Some of the oldest roads in the United States are in Washington County, where the gas industry is particularly active. Some residents say that the heavy trucks that cart water and sand cause them to crack and crumble and that the gas companies take too long to fix them. The industry defended its record of paying for road repairs and construction.

One way the companies help cover the costs of infrastructure improvements is through a state impact fee that is distributed to local governments. The fee peaked at $252 million in 2018, but the revenue for 2019, not yet paid out, is expected to decline by 21 percent to $198 million.

Counties and municipalities that have come to rely on the revenue are getting ready to cut or forgo projects. “It is not a crisis,” said Mr. Belding, the Greene County commissioner, “but it is concerning.”

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

S. Thomas Bond June 14, 2020 at 10:39 am

Sometimes it takes a long time for reality to sink in.

When investors are so far from the facts, “experts” can become confidence men. The United States was blessed with abundant petroleum. It also had a social climate that motivated people to develop it as a trade item. Oil and its products were soon exported.

But the US has about 2% of the earth’s dry surface, and the technology was easily exported elsewhere, and for decades now oil has been imported to the US.

Vast amounts of oil and gas are present in shale, and methods to extract it were developed with US government help, but it is expensive to get. The rock had to be broken by tremendous pressure and friction reducer chemicals used. Vast amounts of energy were required for extraction of oil and gas from shale, too, making the return of energy for the investment of energy produced marginal.

Another problem was huge externalized cost. The chemicals used in fracking poisoned wells and streams. This effecting rural people, their livestock and crops, and wildlife. Roads were crowded and destroyed, and the countryside was uglyfied. These were costs the companies and investors did not have to pay, but it produced a large, very active, opposition, desperate to protect their own interests.

At the same time there were other nations, which had abundant supplies of conventional sandstone and limestone oil and gas, which could be pumped without breaking rocks and using, synthesized chemicals. Was there a way to suppress their supply? Unfortunately the Arab nations, Russia, Iran, Libya, Venezuela and others, have not proved cooperative, and are a major problem for our diplomatic and military forces.

So the economic truth is sinking in. At the same time awareness of the effects of carbon dioxide and methane on the climate are permeating the public consciousness.

Fracking is not viable.

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WFMJ Channel 21 June 28, 2020 at 11:39 pm

One-time ‘Shale Boom’ leader Chesapeake Energy files for bankruptcy protection

Sunday, June 28th 2020, by Mike Gauntner

One of the companies that were at the forefront of the once highly touted Shale Boom in eastern Ohio and Western Pennsylvania has filed for bankruptcy.

Chesapeake Energy Corporation announced on Sunday that it is beginning the Chapter 11 bankruptcy process in hopes of restructuring $7 billion in debt. The company says it has secured $925 million in financing which will be available upon court approval.

Nearly a decade ago, Chesapeake and other energy companies converged on the Valley using a process called hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking” to tap into the predicted vast stores of natural gas trapped in what is known as the Marcellus Shale region.

Beginning in 2010, energy companies held public hearings with landowners to convince them to lease the drilling rights to them.

Attorney Alan Wegner of the law firm Harrington, Hoppe & Mitchell who has decades of experience overseeing mineral rights contracts for landowners, told 21 News that some of Chesapeake’s leases in the Valley were transferred to other companies, while the majority, thousands of leases, were just canceled.

As noted by Chesapeake in February, over the past decade, the landscape of energy production has changed dramatically in the United States.

Companies like Chesapeake became victims of their own success, as outlined by the company’s financial statements earlier this year when it reported that “fracking” had produced so much oil and gas, prices plummeted from where they were ten years ago.

https://www.wfmj.com/story/42300979/onetime-shale-boom-leader-chesapeake-files-bankruptcy

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