Showing posts with label cng. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cng. Show all posts

Sunday, July 24, 2011

ECA & TMS, LNG/CNG

Q2 CC-transkripti:
Additionally, we have captured more than 250,000 net acres in the Tuscaloosa marine shale located in Mississippi and Louisiana. We will drill our first horizontal well starting next month. Although unproven today, we see this opportunity as a large unconventional oil- and liquids-rich natural gas resource play.

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Mark Gilman - The Benchmark Company, LLC

Okay. Jeff, it's been suggested by some that the Tuscaloosa marine shale is stratigraphically equivalent to the Eagle Ford. Do you share those views? Or do you see it a little bit differently?

Jeff Wojahn

I've been told by our geologist not to say that the way you had described it because I'm not an expert in the regional geology. But from what I understand, the Eagle Ford is separated by kind of the Sabine platform uplift. And really, although it looks laterally equivalent, it is a different type of play than the Eagle Ford. So hopefully, I didn't offend any geologists by the way I described it.

Mark Gilman - The Benchmark Company, LLC

Could you elaborate what you mean by that, Jeff, in terms of different type of play?

Jeff Wojahn

Well, it's a reservoir that has some silt and sand content in it versus the Eagle Ford, which is a clean shale
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Mark Gilman - The Benchmark Company, LLC

Okay. Could you give us just a little bit of an idea what the acreage costs were for your entry into the Tuscaloosa and the additional Duvernay acreage, which you acquired?

Jeff Wojahn


Sure. I'll start with the Tuscaloosa. This is a play that we entered very early for very low costs. We have a number of options and commitments, so I can't get specific on the range. But it ranges $42,000 to $50,000 area, somewhere between $40 million and $50 million.

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We also entered into an agreement to be the sole supplier of liquefied natural gas to a fleet of 200 LNG, heavy-duty trucks in Louisiana through our mobile LNG fueling station. In addition, we opened 2 compressed natural gas fleet fueling stations in Colorado and British Columbia. The cost advantage and environmental benefits of natural gas create a compelling case for Encana and others to adopt natural gas as a transportation fuel of choice in North America.

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Carrie Tait - National Post

Okay. You mentioned LNG fueling in Louisiana and I think in Colorado. Is this a business that you want to grow, get into?

Randall Eresman

We're not sure if we want to do this for ourselves, but we know we need to show leadership. And we want to make sure that LNG is used in transportation in North America, and we're basically walking the talk.

Carrie Tait - National Post


How do you decide if it's something that you want to do?

Randall Eresman

We will have to look at the competitiveness of the financial model. And it's going to take us a little while before we fully understand that. We know that there are going to be opportunities in and around our areas of operation that will probably make sense for us to be in some portion of that value chain. We're just going to have to figure out over time what that's going to be. In the meantime, we're investing on a variety of these kind of things in the order of $50 million to $100 million a year.

Carrie Tait - National Post


Are they making money?

Randall Eresman

I'm going to turn that over to Eric Marsh.

Eric Marsh

Yes. I think the answer is that the natural gas stations that we have, we actually have 5 operating, and 4 of them actually can -- will make money on a monthly basis. But what really dictates the money that you make is the throughput. So as -- if you're breaking even today and the number of vehicles that you have in that area grow, they begin to become profitable. But yes, that's our plan, is to be profitable on every CNG station that we make.

Randall Eresman


Carrie, the benefit for the users, those that convert their vehicles to natural gas, in the same way where we converted our drilling rigs to natural gas or starting to look at our frac-ing equipment in natural gas, financial benefits to us are huge. It really is just getting more places where people can fill up their vehicles and more opportunities for fleets to convert that is required, and I guess more people aware of what the huge price advantages or cost advantages to moving towards using more natural gas in the transportation sector.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Uudehkoa

Calgary Herald: U.S. anti-speculation push may topple oil prices
"A debate is emerging over how curbs on energy market speculation may impact oil prices, with at least one major bank boldly expecting the new rules will trigger a 30 per cent price plunge..."


OGJ: NAPE: Frac regulation Washington's 'worst threat'
"A move to regulate hydraulic fracturing federally is the “biggest threat our industry has ever seen in Washington,” Bruce Vincent, vice-chairman of the Independent Petroleum Association of America, said Aug. 26.

Joel Noyes, IPAA director of government relations and industry affairs, expressed a low expectation for passage of most of the Obama administrations frenzied agenda, much of which contains negative provisions for oil and gas producers.
.."

Barron's: Time for Natural-Gas Autos?
"AS "CASH FOR CLUNKERS" DEMONSTRATED, AMERICANS love a deal. And Congress may have yet another for you when it returns from summer recess.

The plan is to offer tax credits worth up to $12,500 on the purchase of new cars and trucks. The catch is that your new vehicle must run on natural gas -- compressed natural gas, or CNG, to be precise. A Senate bill, the counterpart to the House's NAT GAS Act, also would offer up to $64,000 in tax credits on fleet vehicles, and up to $100,000 to anyone opening a CNG filling station.

Washington is beginning to wake up to the value of using this plentiful, homegrown fuel for transportation -- and that in turn could open up some intriguing investment opportunities..."