What is the typical difference between the price of gas "at the wellhead" versus the price of natural gas that we see on the stock exchange?

 

I believe we are paid on the price at the wellhead, correct?

Views: 1126

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Price at the wellhead is essentially a net price off of the NYMEX or some other index price.  In very simple terms, price at the wellhead accounts for various post-production costs (e.g., processing, treating, transportation, marketing) that are deducted from the NYMEX or some other index price that is the market downstream of the wellhead. 
And you are paid on whatever price your lease says you will be paid on.  If you have the boilerplate "market value" or "amount-realized" royalty clauses, then yes, you are technically getting paid a net-back price at the wellhead.

Price at the wellhead is not nessarilly tied to an index like the Nymex.

 

The Nymex price is what futures traders are paying for delivery at a later date. The "Wellhead price" is what the operator recives from the pipeline operator, or buyer downstream. Depending on your lease, you may have additional deductions.

 

Example. I drill some wells, build a gathering system and tie into a salesline owned by joe-bob. joe-bob will buy my gas, which will be less than the nymex set price, because he will sell the gas for delivery to someone else. Or worse, he will sell to another pipeline and give me even less money.

Thanks for the replies.

 

If anybody is involved in a 50-50 deal between Shell and Encana, do you know how much typically below the wellhead rates have been from the NYMEX?

Bobby, the daily NYMEX natural gas prices you see quoted have little or no connection to wellhead gas prices.  The final settlement price of the NYMEX contract will give a better indication of wellhead price once appropriate deductions are applied.  The final NYMEX contract settlement price occurs 3 business days before end of the previous month.

 

For example during June you would see daily quotes of the July NYMEX contract but the only valid value was the final settlement price of $4.357/MMBtu.  The other daily values really mean nothing for royalty owners. 

I am familiar. The price is more closely aligned with Henry hub. Not to the penny and it depends on your lease terms.read your contract once you are familiar with it then call shell and encana and ask them they operate separately. They will both tell you what they are using to base the price on.if you don't like the answer ask to speak with am analyst. Note shell takes out severance tax and encana does not.nymex is for commodities traders it had nothing to do with wellhead.
VSC, the majority of natural gas sold by producers in North Lousiana is priced against the NYMEX natural gas futures final settlement price.  Although the NYMEX futures contract is traded at the Henry Hub it is different than the Henry Hub cash prices which relate to gas physically bought and sold at that location.   

RSS

Support GoHaynesvilleShale.com

Blog Posts

The Lithium Connection to Shale Drilling

Shale drilling and lithium extraction are seemingly distinct activities, but there is a growing connection between the two as the world moves towards cleaner energy solutions. While shale drilling primarily targets…

Continue

Posted by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher) on November 20, 2024 at 12:40

Not a member? Get our email.

Groups



© 2024   Created by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher).   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service