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            1
Jim Willis
                       Editor, MDN




http://MarcellusDrilling.com
            2
John Hanger Webinar: The Truth About Gas Drilling and America's Energy Choices
   There Are No Perfect Energy Choices

   All Energy Choices Have Strengths &
    Weaknesses

   Fairly Stated Criticism of An Energy
    Source Is Typically Accurate



                        4
   Gas Production in 2011 Set Record

   U.S. World’s Number 1 Gas Producer

   Shale Gas About 37% of total U.S. Gas Supply

   U.S. Oil Production Increasing For First Time in 35
    Years – Over 6 Million Barrels Per Day

   U.S. Oil Imports Decline From 60% in 2005 to 42%
    Today

                               5
   Oil           34%

   Natural Gas   26%

   Coal          19%

   Renewables    11%

   Nuclear       10%
                   6
Coal   Gas        Nuclear   Wind   Solar
2000     52%    16%        20%       0      0
2011     42%    26%        20%       3%     0.2%
2012     36%    29%        20%       4%     0.4%

   Renewable Energy of all Types (Hydro,
    Biomass) Provided About 11% of U.S.
    Electricity Supply in 2011

   Coal Fell to 34% in March 2012

                       7
   Wind Has Doubled Since 2008: 25,000
    MW to 50,000 MW

   Iowa - 20% of Electricity From Wind

   Texas – 7% of Electricity From Wind




                       8
   Wind Power Costs Cut 65% Since 2003

   Wind Generation Now Costs 5 Cents Per
    Kwh

   Global Wind Installations About 240,000
    MW

                       9
   U.S. Solar Has Increased 700% Since 2008

   500 MW to 4,000 MW

   Solar Costs Cut From $10 Per Watt to About
    $2.75 Per Watt for Large Projects

   Rooftop Solar in $3 to $4 Per Watt Range



                          10
   Global Solar Market Was About 28,000
    MW in 2011

   $90 Billion Dollar Industry

   Total Installed Solar Globally About
    70,000 MW



                        11
   Oil Use Back to 1999 Levels

   Gasoline Use Back to 2001 Levels

   Total Energy Use at 2000 Levels

   New Cars Sold in February 2012 18%
    More Fuel Efficient Than in October 2007

                       12
   Oil Had Been Above $100 For Sustained
    Period
   Oil Consumption Globally at Record Level
   U.S. Oil to Gas Price Ratio at Record
    Levels: 35 to 1




                        13
   Natural Gas Prices at $1.80 to $2.75 per
    Thousand Cubic Feet from January to June
    2012
   Natural Gas Prices at $4.20 for Thousand Cubic
    Feet in April 2011
   July 2008 Price of $13/mcf
   30% of U.S. Electricity Gas Fired in March 2012



                          14
   Strategic Objective Should Be:

       Produce the Gas and Protect the Environment

       Natural Gas Development Must Be Strongly
        Regulated and Reasonably Taxed

       Natural Gas Production Cannot Be Done with
        Zero Impact on Environment
                          15
   Approximately 400,000 Oil & Gas Wells Drilled
    in Pennsylvania’s History
   First Exploratory Shale Gas Wells Drilled in 2005
   Pennsylvania Now Produces 5-3 bcf/day or
    About 2 Trillion Cubic Feet/Year
   Pennsylvania Now Ranks In Gas Production &
    Produces About 10% of U.S. Gas



                           16
1.   Impact on Water from Drilling /Wastewater
       - Streams
       - Private water wells
       - Withdrawals

2. Operational Problems/Accidents
     - Spills
     - Leaks
     - Fires – Response time
     - Blow outs – Response time
     - 50 plus emergency responses

                             17
3. Truck Traffic Impact & Safety
     - Congestion
     - Road damage
     - Unsafe trucks

4. Gas Migration

5. Public Lands: State Forests & Parks

                      18
6. Staffing of Oil and Gas Program
     - Number of employees
     - Location

7. Air Impacts
     - Nox
     - HAPs


                     19
8. Seismic Impacts from Deep Well
   Injections
    - Arkansas
    - Ohio


9. Disclosure of Chemicals


                     20
   Review & Strengthen All Rules
        5 Regulatory Packages Enacted
    1. Water Withdrawal Plan: August 2008
    2. Waste Water Disposal/TDS Rule: August 2010
    3. New, Strong Drilling Standards: January 2011
    4. 150 Feet Mandatory Buffer from All Development for
        22,000 Miles of High Quality Steams: November 2010
    5. Raise Permit Fee to Drill From $100 to an Average of
        More than $3,000
                              21
   Staffing

       88 Positions in Oil Gas Program as of
        September 2008

       Raised Fee When Applying For a Permit from
        $100 to as much as $10,000 for Deep Wells

       Doubled Staff to 202 by January 2011


                            22
   Enforcement of Rules

       1,200 Violations Issued During 2010

       1,100 Violations Issued During 2011

       Companies Pay for Clean Up of Spills, Leaks,
        Gas Migration


                           23
24
   Water Impacts From Gas Drilling Exist &
    Include Methane Migration to About 50 to 100
    Private Water Wells

   But Water Impacts of Gas Drilling Are Less
    Than:

       Oil Production
       Coal Production
       Biofuels
       Large Hydro


                          25
   Gas Drilling Is not in Top 5 Impacts of
    Water in Pennsylvania

       Acid Mine Drainage
       Raw Sewage Discharges
       Nitrogen & Phosphorus from Agriculture &
        Other lands
       Sediment From Construction Areas
       Spills, Leaks, Accidents From Underground
        Takes, Transportation of Materials

                           26
Four Remaining Environmental Issues

   Air Emissions
       Smog


   Methane Leakage

   Gas Migration

   Seismicity Associate With Injection of
    Wastewater in Deep Caverns
                           27
   There are 6

   Prof. Howarth, Cornell University, Most
    Publicized & Controversial

   Finding: “Coal is as Dirty as Gas on Carbon
    Emissions”

   No Claim that Coal is as Dirty as Gas on
    Mercury, Soot, Other Pollutants
                          28
1.   NETL – April 2011

2.   Carnegie Mellon University – August 2011

3.   Worldwatch Institute – August 2011

4.   University of Maryland – October 2011

5.   Cornell University – November 2011

All Papers are at www.johnhanger.blogsport.com
                            29
   100,000 Megawatts of U.S. Coal-Fired
    Power Plants Are 40 Years Old or Older
   EPA States Pollution – From Chiefly Old
    Coal-Fired Power Plants Cause 34,000
    Premature Deaths Per Year
   Likely Coal Retirements In Next 10 Years
    Are 48,000 to 100,000 MW


                       30
   36% Coal
   30% Gas
   20% Nuclear
   13% Renewables
   1% Petroleum



                     31
   0% Coal

   55% Gas

   15% Nuclear

   30% Renewables


                     32
   THERE ARE NO PERFECT ENERGY
    CHOICES

   SAYING NO TO GAS MEANS SAYING YES
    TO MORE OIL & COAL FOR THE NEXT 20
    YEARS

   GAS AND RENEWABLES WILL GROW
    RAPIDLY IN THE NEXT 20 YEARS

                    33
Ask John Your Question




                              John’s email:
                              jhanger@eckertseamans.com

                              John’s blog:
                              www.johnhanger.blogspot.com


           http://MarcellusDrilling.com
                         34
THANK YOU! For attending

(1) To receive a free copy of the PowerPoint slides:
 Send an email to: hanger@marcellusdrilling.com


          (2) To watch this presentation again
(and to read the most comprehensive Marcellus drilling news every weekday)
          Subscribe to Marcellus Drilling News:
          http://MarcellusDrilling.com/join-us
                       Just $5.95 per month!


                                   35

More Related Content

John Hanger Webinar: The Truth About Gas Drilling and America's Energy Choices

  • 2. Jim Willis Editor, MDN http://MarcellusDrilling.com 2
  • 4. There Are No Perfect Energy Choices  All Energy Choices Have Strengths & Weaknesses  Fairly Stated Criticism of An Energy Source Is Typically Accurate 4
  • 5. Gas Production in 2011 Set Record  U.S. World’s Number 1 Gas Producer  Shale Gas About 37% of total U.S. Gas Supply  U.S. Oil Production Increasing For First Time in 35 Years – Over 6 Million Barrels Per Day  U.S. Oil Imports Decline From 60% in 2005 to 42% Today 5
  • 6. Oil 34%  Natural Gas 26%  Coal 19%  Renewables 11%  Nuclear 10% 6
  • 7. Coal Gas Nuclear Wind Solar 2000 52% 16% 20% 0 0 2011 42% 26% 20% 3% 0.2% 2012 36% 29% 20% 4% 0.4%  Renewable Energy of all Types (Hydro, Biomass) Provided About 11% of U.S. Electricity Supply in 2011  Coal Fell to 34% in March 2012 7
  • 8. Wind Has Doubled Since 2008: 25,000 MW to 50,000 MW  Iowa - 20% of Electricity From Wind  Texas – 7% of Electricity From Wind 8
  • 9. Wind Power Costs Cut 65% Since 2003  Wind Generation Now Costs 5 Cents Per Kwh  Global Wind Installations About 240,000 MW 9
  • 10. U.S. Solar Has Increased 700% Since 2008  500 MW to 4,000 MW  Solar Costs Cut From $10 Per Watt to About $2.75 Per Watt for Large Projects  Rooftop Solar in $3 to $4 Per Watt Range 10
  • 11. Global Solar Market Was About 28,000 MW in 2011  $90 Billion Dollar Industry  Total Installed Solar Globally About 70,000 MW 11
  • 12. Oil Use Back to 1999 Levels  Gasoline Use Back to 2001 Levels  Total Energy Use at 2000 Levels  New Cars Sold in February 2012 18% More Fuel Efficient Than in October 2007 12
  • 13. Oil Had Been Above $100 For Sustained Period  Oil Consumption Globally at Record Level  U.S. Oil to Gas Price Ratio at Record Levels: 35 to 1 13
  • 14. Natural Gas Prices at $1.80 to $2.75 per Thousand Cubic Feet from January to June 2012  Natural Gas Prices at $4.20 for Thousand Cubic Feet in April 2011  July 2008 Price of $13/mcf  30% of U.S. Electricity Gas Fired in March 2012 14
  • 15. Strategic Objective Should Be:  Produce the Gas and Protect the Environment  Natural Gas Development Must Be Strongly Regulated and Reasonably Taxed  Natural Gas Production Cannot Be Done with Zero Impact on Environment 15
  • 16. Approximately 400,000 Oil & Gas Wells Drilled in Pennsylvania’s History  First Exploratory Shale Gas Wells Drilled in 2005  Pennsylvania Now Produces 5-3 bcf/day or About 2 Trillion Cubic Feet/Year  Pennsylvania Now Ranks In Gas Production & Produces About 10% of U.S. Gas 16
  • 17. 1. Impact on Water from Drilling /Wastewater - Streams - Private water wells - Withdrawals 2. Operational Problems/Accidents - Spills - Leaks - Fires – Response time - Blow outs – Response time - 50 plus emergency responses 17
  • 18. 3. Truck Traffic Impact & Safety - Congestion - Road damage - Unsafe trucks 4. Gas Migration 5. Public Lands: State Forests & Parks 18
  • 19. 6. Staffing of Oil and Gas Program - Number of employees - Location 7. Air Impacts - Nox - HAPs 19
  • 20. 8. Seismic Impacts from Deep Well Injections - Arkansas - Ohio 9. Disclosure of Chemicals 20
  • 21. Review & Strengthen All Rules  5 Regulatory Packages Enacted 1. Water Withdrawal Plan: August 2008 2. Waste Water Disposal/TDS Rule: August 2010 3. New, Strong Drilling Standards: January 2011 4. 150 Feet Mandatory Buffer from All Development for 22,000 Miles of High Quality Steams: November 2010 5. Raise Permit Fee to Drill From $100 to an Average of More than $3,000 21
  • 22. Staffing  88 Positions in Oil Gas Program as of September 2008  Raised Fee When Applying For a Permit from $100 to as much as $10,000 for Deep Wells  Doubled Staff to 202 by January 2011 22
  • 23. Enforcement of Rules  1,200 Violations Issued During 2010  1,100 Violations Issued During 2011  Companies Pay for Clean Up of Spills, Leaks, Gas Migration 23
  • 24. 24
  • 25. Water Impacts From Gas Drilling Exist & Include Methane Migration to About 50 to 100 Private Water Wells  But Water Impacts of Gas Drilling Are Less Than:  Oil Production  Coal Production  Biofuels  Large Hydro 25
  • 26. Gas Drilling Is not in Top 5 Impacts of Water in Pennsylvania  Acid Mine Drainage  Raw Sewage Discharges  Nitrogen & Phosphorus from Agriculture & Other lands  Sediment From Construction Areas  Spills, Leaks, Accidents From Underground Takes, Transportation of Materials 26
  • 27. Four Remaining Environmental Issues  Air Emissions  Smog  Methane Leakage  Gas Migration  Seismicity Associate With Injection of Wastewater in Deep Caverns 27
  • 28. There are 6  Prof. Howarth, Cornell University, Most Publicized & Controversial  Finding: “Coal is as Dirty as Gas on Carbon Emissions”  No Claim that Coal is as Dirty as Gas on Mercury, Soot, Other Pollutants 28
  • 29. 1. NETL – April 2011 2. Carnegie Mellon University – August 2011 3. Worldwatch Institute – August 2011 4. University of Maryland – October 2011 5. Cornell University – November 2011 All Papers are at www.johnhanger.blogsport.com 29
  • 30. 100,000 Megawatts of U.S. Coal-Fired Power Plants Are 40 Years Old or Older  EPA States Pollution – From Chiefly Old Coal-Fired Power Plants Cause 34,000 Premature Deaths Per Year  Likely Coal Retirements In Next 10 Years Are 48,000 to 100,000 MW 30
  • 31. 36% Coal  30% Gas  20% Nuclear  13% Renewables  1% Petroleum 31
  • 32. 0% Coal  55% Gas  15% Nuclear  30% Renewables 32
  • 33. THERE ARE NO PERFECT ENERGY CHOICES  SAYING NO TO GAS MEANS SAYING YES TO MORE OIL & COAL FOR THE NEXT 20 YEARS  GAS AND RENEWABLES WILL GROW RAPIDLY IN THE NEXT 20 YEARS 33
  • 34. Ask John Your Question John’s email: jhanger@eckertseamans.com John’s blog: www.johnhanger.blogspot.com http://MarcellusDrilling.com 34
  • 35. THANK YOU! For attending (1) To receive a free copy of the PowerPoint slides: Send an email to: hanger@marcellusdrilling.com (2) To watch this presentation again (and to read the most comprehensive Marcellus drilling news every weekday) Subscribe to Marcellus Drilling News: http://MarcellusDrilling.com/join-us Just $5.95 per month! 35