NEW YORK
(AP) -- The U.S. natural gas market is bursting at the seams.
So much
natural gas is being produced that soon there may be nowhere left to put the
country's swelling surplus. After years of explosive growth, natural gas
producers are retrenching.
The
underground salt caverns, depleted oil fields and aquifers that store natural
gas are rapidly filling up after a balmy winter depressed demand for home
heating.
The glut
has benefited businesses and homeowners that use natural gas. But with natural
gas prices at a 10-year low - and falling - companies that produce the fuel are
becoming victims of their drilling successes. Their stock prices are falling in
anticipation of declining profits and scaled-back growth plans.
Some of the
nation's biggest natural gas producers, including Chesapeake Energy,
ConocoPhillips and Encana Corp., have announced plans to slow down.
"They've
gotten way ahead of themselves, and winter got way ahead of them too,"
says Jen Snyder, head of North American gas for the research firm Wood
Mackenzie. "There hasn't been enough demand to use up all the supply being
pushed into the market."
So far,
efforts to limit production have barely made a dent. Unless the pace of
production declines sharply or demand picks up significantly this summer,
analysts say the nation's storage facilities could reach their limits by fall.
That would
cause the price of natural gas, which has been halved over the past year, to
nosedive. Citigroup commodities analyst Anthony Yuen says the price of natural
gas - now $2.08 per 1,000 cubic feet - could briefly fall below $1.
"There
would be no floor," he says.
Since
October, the number of drilling rigs exploring for natural gas has fallen by 30
percent to 658, according to the energy services company Baker Hughes. Some of
the sharpest drop-offs have been in the Haynesville Shale in Northwestern
Louisiana and East Texas and the Fayetteville Shale in Central Arkansas. But
natural gas production is still growing, the result of a five-year drilling
boom that has peppered the country with wells.
The workers
and rigs aren't just being sent home. They are instead being put to work
drilling for oil, whose price has averaged more than $100 a barrel for months.
The oil rig count in the U.S is at a 25-year high. This activity is adding to
the natural gas glut because natural gas is almost always a byproduct of oil
drilling.
Analysts
say that before long companies could have to start slowing the gas flow from
existing wells or even take the rare and expensive step of capping off some
wells completely.
"Something
is going to have to give," says Maria Sanchez, manager of energy analysis
at Bentek Energy, a research firm.
U.S. natural
gas production has boomed in recent years as a result of new drilling
techniques that allow companies to unlock fuel trapped in shale formations.
Last year, the U.S. produced an average of 63 billion cubic feet of natural gas
per day, a 24 percent increase from 2006. But over that period consumption has
grown half as fast.
The
nation's storage facilities could easily handle this extra supply until
recently because cold winters pushed up demand for heating and hot summers led
to higher demand for air conditioning. Just over half the nation's homes are
heated with natural gas, and one-quarter of its electricity is produced by
gas-fired power plants.
But this
past winter was the fourth warmest in the last 117 years, according to the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. It was the warmest March since
1950.
Between
November and March, daily natural gas demand fell 5 percent, on average, from a
year earlier, according to Bentek Energy. Yet production grew 8 percent over
the same period.
"We
haven't ever seen a situation like this before," says Chris McGill, Vice
President for Policy Analysis at the American Gas Association, an industry
group.
At the end
of winter, there is usually about 1.5 trillion cubic feet of gas in storage.
Today there is 2.5 trillion cubic feet because utilities withdrew far less than
usual this past winter.
There is
4.4 trillion cubic feet of natural gas storage capacity in the U.S. If full,
that would be enough fuel to supply the country for about 2 months.
If current
production and consumption trends were to continue, Bentek estimates that
storage facilities would be full on October 10.
Storage
capacity, which has grown by 15 percent over the past decade, cannot be built
fast enough to address the rapidly expanding glut. And analysts note there is
little financial incentive to build more anyway.
The low
price brought on by the glut has increased demand for natural gas among
industrial users and utilities.
Makers of
chemicals, plastics and fertilizers that use natural gas as a feedstock are
expanding. Garbage trucks, buses and delivery vehicles are using more natural
gas. Electric power producers are switching from coal to natural gas whenever
possible.
This won't
add up to enough new demand quickly enough to relieve the pressure on storage
facilities this summer.
Scorching
temperatures this summer would do the trick, but Mother Nature is not expected
to cooperate.
Temperatures
this summer are forecast to be about normal, and much cooler than the last two
summers, says David Streit, a meteorologist at Commodity Weather Group expects.
Sultry
winters, he said, do not usually develop into sultry summers.
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