Month: March 2017

U.S. Shale To Feed European Gas Market Battered By Coldest January In Seven Years

U.S. Shale To Feed European Gas Market Battered By Coldest January In Seven Years

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF)
http://www.thegwpf.com

The heart of Europe’s gas market may finally get a helping hand from the American shale revolution as fuel is poised to cross the Atlantic to replenish depleted inventories after the coldest January in seven years.

Northwest Europe, one of the biggest trading regions for the fuel, hasn’t yet attracted any liquefied natural gas cargoes from the U.S., which the shale boom turned into the world’s biggest gas producer. So far, sellers have favored markets in South America and Asia where prices have been higher.

But that may be about to change with spring weather poised to damp demand and prices in the biggest consuming region of Japan and South Korea moving closer to those in the U.K. and the Netherlands. Supplies from the U.S. may arrive in the coming months to help replenish European stocks at their lowest level since 2013, according to Houston-based Cheniere Energy Inc., which is expanding its export plant in Louisiana.

“U.S. gas will find an obvious home in Europe once most other markets are filled up,” Trevor Sikorski, head of natural gas and carbon at Energy Aspects Ltd. in London, said by email. “There should be lots of gas as three trains should be operating for most of summer 2017” at Cheniere, he said.

As Asian demand subsides with milder weather, regional prices will move closer to parity with European rates, according to Energy Aspects.

The arbitrage for U.S. gas to both Europe and Asia is already “wide open,” Citigroup Inc. said in a report emailed Wednesday. Asian LNG prices may slide to below $5 per million British thermal units after May, according to the bank. That’s the price of summer gas in the U.K. on ICE Futures Europe in London.

“We are looking to sell into Europe in April-May as European storage sites start refilling, but we will only sell to Europe if we see it offers a price premium,” Eric Bensaude, Cheniere’s managing director of commercial operations, said by phone from London. “The main reason why we did not sell in Europe in the winter is because other markets were paying a higher price.”

Most U.S. LNG exports have so far gone to Latin America, with cargoes also reaching Asia and the Middle East. Supplies from Cheniere’s Sabine Pass have also arrived in Spain, Portugal, Italy and Turkey at an increasing rate over the past three months, according to London-based consultant Timera Energy, which counts BP Plc to Gazprom PJSC as clients. The company estimates that only 17 percent of U.S. LNG went to Europe since exports started in February 2016.

“After Latin America, Europe is the next cheapest destination for U.S. exports from a shipping cost perspective,” Timera said this month in a report. “As U.S. export volumes grow, significant volumes are likely to land in Europe, or to displace cargoes that flow to Europe from elsewhere.”

Full story

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF) http://www.thegwpf.com

March 23, 2017 at 09:11PM

UK STARTS DRILLING FIRST FRACKING WELLS

UK STARTS DRILLING FIRST FRACKING WELLS

via climate science
http://ift.tt/2jXH2Ie

This article gives some details of the latest situation. We are still at least 5 years away from commercial extraction but it is at least a move in the right direction. The new age of cheap gas is dawning. 

via climate science http://ift.tt/2jXH2Ie

March 23, 2017 at 07:00PM

Tobacco Industry Propaganda Reprise: Wind Industry Denies Science Behind Adverse Health Effects from Turbine Noise

Tobacco Industry Propaganda Reprise: Wind Industry Denies Science Behind Adverse Health Effects from Turbine Noise

via STOP THESE THINGS
http://ift.tt/2kE7k62

Helen Schwiesow Parker recently graced our pages in this post: The Hidden Human Tragedy Caused by Incessant Wind Turbine Noise Here she is again and on the same warpath. The wind industry has spent every day of its subsidy soaked existence telling the world that incessant, turbine generated low-frequency noise and infra-sound wouldn’t harm a fly. […]

via STOP THESE THINGS http://ift.tt/2kE7k62

March 23, 2017 at 06:34PM

What is it Like to Attend a Heartland Climate Conference?

What is it Like to Attend a Heartland Climate Conference?

via Watts Up With That?
http://ift.tt/1Viafi3

Guest essay by Eric Worrall

This is my second visit to the United States, and my first visit to a Heartland Climate Conference.

The overwhelming feeling on the first day of the two day conference is that you are among friends – even if some people hold a different point of view.

Not everyone here agrees that climate is a non-issue. One of Heartland’s key note speakers today was Robert Mendelsohn, Ph.D.

Dr. Mendelsohn is concerned that if we don’t start taking at least minimal action to contain CO2 emissions, we face a much steeper bill a few decades from now.

I think it is fair to say most people disagreed with Dr. Mendelsohn’s position. But the thank you for Dr. Mendelsohn’s courage in presenting a contrary point of view to an audience who largely disagreed with his position received a heartfelt standing ovation.

This is what liberty feels like.

The Heartland Conference is a forum where people are free to disagree. There is no consensus police demanding rigorous adherence to a particular position. Heartland is a place where people can express their views in a forum which accepts that people have the right to form their own opinion, and defend that opinion on its merits, without name calling or disrespect.

I could tell you some of the interesting facts I learned, or the time I brought the house down with my question about “naked climate models” (not what you think), but if you want to know what really happened, watch the videos – well worth your time.

Better still if you are in Washington D.C, and can attend in person.

Shall I attend another Heartland Conference? Definitely. Am I looking forward to tomorrow’s session? Absolutely.

The freedom to express yourself without hostility, making friends, meeting climate heroes in person, debating theories on merit rather than whether they conform to political convenience – its like finding something you thought was just a dream.

via Watts Up With That? http://ift.tt/1Viafi3

March 23, 2017 at 06:19PM