EQT CEO Says “Gas Markets in the U.S. are Broken”
Toby Rice said, Why? Lack of pipeline infrastructure and the inability to build new ones.
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EQT CEO Says “Gas Markets in the U.S. are Broken”
January 18, 2023 Commodity Price, Energy Companies, EQT Corp, Industrywide Issues, Pipelines
The CEO of the largest natural gas driller/producer in the U.S., EQT’s Toby Rice, is currently attending the Atlantic Conference in Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates. He spoke with Bloomberg reporters about what he sees ahead for U.S. natural gas production coming this year and, more broadly, about the problems he sees in general. Rice said, “The gas markets in the US are broken.” Why? Lack of pipeline infrastructure and the inability to build new ones.
With more pipelines, the U.S. has the potential to (eventually) increase gas exports by six times to 60 Bcf/d, which would allow the U.S. to be the “swing producer for energy” markets, according to Rice. He said production will remain muted (at least from EQT) for this year as long as the price of gas stays low. Just last summer, we were knocking on the door of $10/MMBtu gas. Today? We’re bumping along around $3.50/MMBtu. These lower prices will not support expanded drilling. The lack of pipelines doesn’t support expanded drilling either. Couple all that with Bidenflation, and we’re kind of screwed in the natural gas business.
A plunge in natural gas prices will slow supply growth in the US this year, according to the country’s biggest producer of the fuel.
Gas futures have dropped in the US and Europe in recent weeks, largely because of abnormally warm winter weather. US production has also continued to increase.
Predictions among some in the industry that US output will rise this year by another 3 billion cubic feet a day, or roughly 3%, will probably turn out to be incorrect, according to Toby Rice, Chief Executive Officer of EQT Corp.
“That’s a little ambitious with the current pullback and prices,” he said in an interview over the weekend. “You are going to see an operator response and slow down in the activity levels.”
US prices have fallen 16% this year to $3.75 per metric million British thermal units. They were almost double that as recently as late November.
The disruption to global flows caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and decision to cut supplies to Europe means gas will continue to whipsaw in the medium term, Rice said.
“It’s been a little bit over-sold,” he said in Abu Dhabi, capital of the United Arab Emirates, where he was attending an Atlantic Council conference. “But this is the world we’re going to be living in — a significant amount of volatility, especially when we are energy-short.”
Another problem for gas firms is that inflation in the industry is still high, making it expensive to hire drilling workers and equipment.
“Inflation has not reacted,” Rice said. “So, we’ve got a couple big forces that are working against producers.”
Pittsburgh-based EQT fracks gas from shale rocks in Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia. It’s pumping almost 6 billion cubic feet a day and expects that figure to remain flat this year, Rice said.
Broken Markets
He reiterated that a shortage of pipelines in the US exacerbates the company’s ability to raise production. Environmental activism has led to several pipelines being delayed or canceled in the past five years.
“The gas markets in the US are broken,” he said. “And what’s broken is lack of pipeline infrastructure that connects the low cost supply that we have with the demand. We still see pockets in the US where natural gas prices are higher than what they’re paying in Europe. It’s crazy.”
European prices are around $21 per mmbtu, even with their recent drop. That’s more than five times the cost of benchmark gas in the US.
Gas should be seen as a clean source of energy as not lumped together with oil and coal, said Rice. While gas is cleaner than those two, it still emits carbon when burned and methane leaks are common in the industry. Many climate activists are against its use and say governments should phase it out as a fuel for generating electricity and heating homes.
The US government’s climate envoy, John Kerry, said to Bloomberg on Sunday that gas can play a role in slowing the planet’s warming, but only if producers accelerate efforts to capture their carbon emissions.
With more pipelines, the US has the potential to eventually increase gas exports six-fold to 60 billion cubic feet daily, Rice said.
“That is the energy equivalent of adding 10 million barrels a day of clean energy to the world stage,” he said. It would allow the US to be the “swing producer for energy” markets, he said.
EQT has no plans to tap the bond market again following a $1 billion deal in September, which helped fund the acquisition of competitor THQ Appalachia I LLC. The company will look to raise its shareholder payouts further, according to Rice.
“We are going to be a dividend grower over time,” he said.*
*Bloomberg (Jan 17, 2023) – Natural Gas Slump Will Slow US Supply Growth, Fracker EQT Says
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