NEW YORK TIMES ARTICLE - WORTH READING - NOT TOO GOOD NEWS FOR NATURAL GAS...

FORT WORTH — The great American drilling boom is over.
The number of oil and gas rigs deployed to tap new energy supplies across the country has plunged to less than 1,200 from 2,400 last summer, and energy executives say the drop is accelerating further.
Lower prices are bringing to an end an ambitious effort to squeeze more oil from aging fields and to tap new sources of natural gas. For the last four years, companies here drilled below airports, golf courses, churches and playgrounds in a frantic search for energy. They scoured the Rocky Mountains, the Great Plains, the Gulf of Mexico and Appalachia.
But the economic downturn has cut into demand. Global oil prices and American natural gas prices have plummeted two-thirds since last summer. Not even an unseasonably cold winter drove down unusually high inventories of natural gas.
The drop has been good news for American consumers, with gasoline now selling for $1.92 a gallon, on average, down from a high of $4.11 in July. But the result for companies is that it is becoming unprofitable to drill.
The reversal of fortune could have important implications for the future health of the nation’s energy companies, for consumer wallets and for national aspirations to rely less on foreign energy sources.
The drilling cutback has been particularly stark for natural gas. Gas exploration had soared in recent years after technology advances enabled the exploitation of gas trapped in huge shale beds found around Fort Worth, western Pennsylvania, upstate New York and elsewhere.
But that boom has created such abundant supplies that companies are not only drilling less but also deciding not to pump from wells already drilled.
Thousands of oil and gas workers who migrated around the country to work in new fields for fat salaries have been laid off.
“The big bonanza is over,” said Jay Ewing, the completion and construction manager for Devon Energy in the Barnett Shale field here, where so far this year his company has brought its rig count from 35 to 8. “Everyone is really shocked how fast everything has turned.”
Energy experts and company executives warn that oil and gas companies now cutting back on investments will be unable to respond quickly to a future economic recovery. John Richels, Devon’s president, said that if the slump lasted two years, it could then take 18 to 24 months for companies to reassemble rig crews.
That means a glut could rapidly turn to scarcity, sending energy prices soaring again. Already, experts are predicting that lower domestic gas production by the end of the year will require increased imports of liquefied natural gas from places like Qatar.
Through most of this year, gas supplies are not likely to decline sharply because so many shale wells came on line recently. But those wells should start to decline in productivity by next year, potentially leading to tight gas supplies if industrial and residential use picks up significantly in the second half of 2010.
“Inevitably, the market doesn’t react; it overreacts and shoots itself in the foot,” said Adam J. Robinson, director of commodities at Armored Wolf, a California hedge fund.
Domestic oil production is expected to increase this year over last, for the first time since 1991, according to projections by the Energy Department. That swing is attributable in part to increased production in the Gulf of Mexico from two giant new platforms that were years in the making. But some potential onshore production is likely to go untapped, as companies cut back on new drilling and abandon expensive efforts to flush extra oil from aging fields.
Many energy executives had thought the drilling renaissance, coming after years of declines, represented a new era, particularly for gas production. Domestic natural gas output rose by almost 8 percent last year from 2007, the biggest annual jump in more than a generation.
That jump reversed the widely held notion that domestic gas fields were in irreversible decline. It enabled the Texas billionaire T. Boone Pickens to promote a plan to use natural gas instead of gasoline in the nation’s cars.
But such ambitions are sputtering, as falling prices force companies to cut their drilling expenditures. Oil now costs $46.25 a barrel, down from a peak of more than $145 in July, and natural gas costs just less than $4 per thousand cubic feet, down from a peak of more than $13.
One reason companies need to make cuts is that the cost of drilling and servicing operations, while falling, is still roughly double the 2005 level, while the prices oil and gas companies earn from their production are suddenly below the 2005 level. Meanwhile, the cost of borrowing money for exploration and production has soared recently in the credit crisis.
“When everybody sobers up after the first quarter and sees what their real cash flow is going to be,” said G. Steven Farris, chairman and chief executive of the energy company Apache, “people are going to be very discouraged about how much capital they have to spend and that will depress the rig count even further.”
So far economists say the energy patch is still doing better economically than the rest of the country. The surge of drilling and leasing poured enough money into communities with oil and gas resources that they did not begin to feel the pain of the recession until the end of last year.
However, a slowdown appears to be coming in local tax revenue and businesses like restaurants that cater to oil workers. Residents here who receive monthly royalty checks for gas pumped through long horizontal wells tapping gas deposits deep below their homes say their payments are getting smaller or disappearing altogether.

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After reading this accepting $7,000.00/acre on 75 acres doesn't hurt as bad as it did when my siblings out voted me in favor of accepting. I still hope you all get a better offer, sooner rather than later.
AMEN BROTHER Jack Blake shreiked!!!!!! I am glad I accepted 4k/acre on 20 acres................... It may be all I ever see for my Haynesville shale. I will never sell the land though. Some day some of my descendents will see some more lease bonus $ and hopefully royalties>
LONG LIVE THE HAYNESVILLE SHALE CRIED JACK BLAKE
LONG LIVE JACK BLAKE CRIED TWO DOGS
TRUE EMOTION'S HERE!!
LONG LIVE PADDY MURPHY!!
Erin Go Braugh
Gasoline prices are still too high. Obama has done nothing to promote CNG powered vehicles for transportation in the general public. He wiping out every tax break he can for royalty owners. I guess he is bent on destroying what is left of the American economy.
I remember hearing: "The cure for high prices is high prices and the cure for low prices is low prices."

I read on Bloomberg yesterday that shorts on natural gas were down because of the reduced rig count and there was expectation that the price could double by early 2010.
Natural Gas

Consumption. Total natural gas consumption is projected to decline by 1.3 percent in 2009 and then increase by 0.4 percent in 2010 (Total U.S. Natural Gas Consumption Growth). The outlook for continued economic weakness in 2009 is expected to take its greatest toll on industrial sector natural gas consumption, which is expected to decline by about 6 percent this year, more than offsetting the small projected increases in other end-use sectors. Lower natural gas delivered prices compared with coal in some markets, particularly in the Southeast, are expected to cause some electric power generators to switch some generation from coal to natural gas. Natural gas consumption by the electric power sector is projected to grow by 0.4 percent in 2009.

The pace and extent of economic recovery in 2010 are the primary factors influencing the natural gas consumption forecast next year, particularly for industrial users. Based on the current economic assumptions for 2010, slight growth in the industrial sector and 2-percent growth in the electric power sector are balanced by declines in the residential and commercial sectors because of projected milder winter temperatures.

Production and Imports. Total U.S. marketed natural gas production is expected to remain flat in 2009 and then fall by 0.8 percent in 2010. Baker-Hughes reports 916 natural gas rigs working in the United States as of March 6, 2009, a decline of 43 percent from August 2008. Consequently, the robust growth in natural gas production in the Lower-48 region (excluding the Gulf of Mexico) over the last few years is expected to end as production reaches about 53 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) in early 2009, then declines during the second half of 2009. The extent of the production decline later this year is highly uncertain and subject to fluctuations in demand and prices over the period. Rig activity is expected to recover in 2010 as the economy improves and prices increase. However, annual average production is still projected to be lower next year because of the decline in new wells drilled this year.

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