Page added on February 1, 2014
With the surprising deep and long freeze, liquefied natural gas (LNG) importers are suddenly busy. The busiest import terminals and regasification facilities are found in the northeast, including New Brunswick, Massachusetts, Maryland and Georgia. They are owned by Repsol (French), GDF Suez (French), Dominion Resources (D) and Kinder Morgan’s (KMI) El Paso Pipeline Partners (EPB).
There is plenty of natural gas. The issue is transportation. The nation’s natural gas pipelines are at capacity. The pipelines are full. They cannot accept additional demand from consumers. Natural gas cannot reach the nation’s consuming markets.
Short of curtailing service, the last choice is to buy spot LNG from suppliers in Trinidad, Nigeria and Egypt. After taking delivery at import terminals closest to demand, importers must regasify the LNG into natural gas and deliver it to the pipelines. The delivered price is astronomical.
As the U.S. Energy Information Administration reported earlier the hub price for natural gas has been stable, but climbing. Henry Hub spot price slowly rose by 10% or 15%. However, the market at the other end of the pipeline saw completely different pricing.
For example, this week New York City saw record price increases. A week ago, prices were $4.92 per million British thermal units (MMBtu). Then local prices reached a record $121.68/MMBtu on Tuesday. Prices fell somewhat on Wednesday, closing at $84.02/MMBtu. That represents a 1,500% increase!
Boston began the week at $6.63/MMBtu, tripling to $20.90/MMBtu on Friday, reaching $58.39 on Tuesday and closing at $78.30/MMBtu Wednesday. That is a 1,000% increase.
These numbers are wholesale. They are local, not national prices. They represent the market on the delivery end of the pipelines, not the supply end or the nation’s hub.
These numbers also represent the price local utilities pay for natural gas. Gas utilities must add additional fees on top of these prices to cover their costs of delivering servicing gas to their residential, commercial and industrial consumers.
4 Comments on "Looking for Energy in All the Wrong Places"
rollin on Sun, 2nd Feb 2014 12:52 am
So with all this industrial destruction of Pa and WV by the fracking companies, they still don’t have enough gas to provide for weather changes. Sounds like Limits to Growth to me.
Makati1 on Sun, 2nd Feb 2014 4:16 am
“… Boston began the week at $6.63/MMBtu, tripling to $20.90/MMBtu on Friday, reaching $58.39 on Tuesday and closing at $78.30/MMBtu Wednesday. That is a 1,000% increase. …”
This pricing will soon be the norm for ALL energy sources. Are you prepared?
clueless on Sun, 2nd Feb 2014 3:33 pm
makati1 comment is sending shivers down my spine… future looks so bleak..
Makati1 on Mon, 3rd Feb 2014 12:51 am
I remember the oil problem in the 80s. In 1980, fuel oil (heating) was $ .97 per gallon. To fill our 275 gallon tank cost about $200 or about $600+ in today’s dollars. That was high then, but in the late 70s the cost was about half that. A few years made the difference. Now the changes will be even more rapid as there is no extra oil to turn on and bring down the price. Same for natural gas.