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From our January 18, 2001,
edition.
No
end in sight for high natural gas bills
Roger
Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
Skyrocketing
costs at the wellhead are to blame for dramatic increases in local natural
gas bills, TXU Gas spokesman Doug Hill said Tuesday.
“In
December 1999 the cost was $2.65 per mcf (thousand cubic feet),” he
said. “In December 2000 the cost was $9.10 to $9.15 per mcf.”
Since
the onset of cold weather this season, people across the country have seen
their gas bills rise sharply, straining residential budgets and putting an
added burden on agriculture producers who use natural gas to fuel
irrigation wells.
According
to Hill, it goes back to simple supply and demand, and there won’t be
any relief until more new wells are drilled.
November
and December were some of the coldest back to back months since records
have been kept in Texas, he said.
Also,
new electric generating facilities are using natural gas, and the
population of the United States has increased in the last ten years. The
population pressures mean more natural gas users and more electricity
consumers, which requires more gas for generators.
Additionally,
high temperatures this past summer drew down on natural gas reserves as
electricity providers had to generate more power to keep air-conditioners
running.
“Natural
gas is the cleanest source of energy, but it is costly to produce.”
Hill
said there wasn’t much drilling in recent years because of low prices
but more is occurring now than at any time in the last ten years. Even so,
drillers are faced with another problem.
“A
lot of rigs were cut up and sold for scrap iron, and the people who
operate those rigs have found employment elsewhere.”
In
a column this week, Texas Railroad Commissioner Charles Matthews also
addresses rising natural gas costs.
“During
the first downturn in 1986, the oil and gas industry lost over 500,000
jobs nationwide,” Matthews wrote.
“In
addition to that number, another 50,000 jobs were lost during the most
recent downturn of 1998-1999, which lasted over 18 months.”
Matthews
says a decline in applications for natural gas drilling and completion
permits shows “that we have lost talented, qualified people in the
industry who have the ability to identify and explore new fields, drill
new wells, and increase production.”
“The
new wells that will be coming on line may not begin to yield significant
increases in actual production until later in the year,” the commisioner
wrote.
Matthews hopes the state legislature will take a long-term look at how to
revitalize the natural gas industry to fuel growing demands.
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