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United States gas producers shake off low rates, bet on LNG boom

Energy executives say they are looking past present ultracheap gas prices and betting on a. coming wave of new melted natural gas (LNG) plants to raise. need and prices for the fuel.

Gas rates have fallen by one-third this year,. damaged by a warmer winter, blackouts at LNG facilities and. higher-than-expected output. The growth in solar and wind power. and a pause on new U.S. LNG export permit evaluations likewise have. clouded the outlook for future gas need.

Domestic U.S. markets are oversupplied, said Chad Zamarin,. a senior vice president at gas pipeline operator Williams Cos .

It will definitely take a while for LNG coming out of the. U.S. and a bit of a slowdown in supply to rebalance, stated. Zamarin, speaking on the sidelines of the CERAWeek energy. conference in Houston.

Oversupply in West Texas, home of the leading U.S. oilfield, had. prices this week at a negative 26 cents per million British. thermal systems (mmBtu), requiring gas manufacturers to pay somebody to. take the fuel. U.S. gas prices were trading at $1.66 per. mmBtu on Friday, down 74% from the average price in 2022.

Our pipeline facilities is maxed out. It's going to. make it really challenging for us to link markets, said Toby. Rice, CEO of the largest U.S. gas producer, EQT Corp. He. said permitting reforms are required to develop brand-new lines.

New pipelines and LNG processing plants would allow the U.S. to export the gas now blocking those West Texas lines and supply. continual energy while sun and wind power grow. China and India. are moving away from coal to gas for electrical power, and. Europe has turned to the U.S. to change Russian pipeline gas.

Gas will continue to play a key function in the future. It's. not simply a shift (fuel), if you will, we take a look at it (gas). as being a location for years to come, stated Clay Neff,. Chevron's president for global exploration and. production.

Lorenzo Simonelli, CEO of LNG equipment provider Baker. Hughes, said if the U.S. stops working to authorize brand-new LNG export. plants, need for the fuel will still be met, generally from. projects in Qatar, Argentina and Africa.

Further U.S. demand for gas will likely originate from. domestic power utilities straining to supply electrical power for new. information centers that support artificial intelligence, crypto mining. and the progressively digital economy.

AI is what's going to drive additional energy usage,. stated Pierce Norton, CEO of gas pipeline operator Oneok. , whose business provides electric energies.

John Podesta, the Biden administration's climate envoy,. said the power needs could be filled by solar, wind and. renewables instead of gas.

More electrification in the mission for decarbonisation means. more pressure to produce tidy generation, he stated.

(source: Reuters)