Well, " gas pipes starting to freeze " is pretty generic. That sounds good in a media story.
I would guess , the utilities are gonna try to reduce demand , rather than pay those high prices. I just don't believe a region as rich in natural gas as Oklahoma and Texas, has a gas shortage. Maybe its a shortage created by high spot market prices ? I'm highly suspicious.
From another perspective.... the utilities want to maximize profits. Reduce demand, better contracts.... left as an exercise for the students. But, at the end of the day, it's about the money, it's not about you & solving your needs.
HOUSTON (Bloomberg) --Chris Bird first saw the rumors Friday morning on Twitter.
Physical natural gas prices were soaring in Oklahoma amid a cold blast that was gripping much of the U.S. and only stood to get worse. Bird, owner of a small gas producer in Tulsa, called one trader who confirmed the heating fuel was going for a staggering $350 per million British thermal units. Then he called another who said it had risen to $395.
That’s all Bird needed to know. He and his production technician grabbed some winter clothes at the dollar store and drove the stretch of highway to Osage County some 20 miles north. They met up with a buddy who owns a propane torch and began melting ice off idled gas wells to get them back online.
“We’ve got four of us in the office turning on every single gas well that we’ve got,” Bird said. “We have old wells that haven’t produced in 10 years, and we’re like, ‘open the taps, let’s go.’”
After years of depressed prices and weak margins, U.S. natural gas producers -- at least those with wells and equipment that aren’t frozen -- are cashing in on an unusually extreme blast of cold. The freeze is giving a rare boost to a market that’s never recovered from a crash more than a decade ago, flooded by cheap supplies from shale fields.
. As Robert Clarke of Wood Mackenzie tweeted, as of February 15th, an estimated 7 billion cubic feet (BCF) of natural gas is offline due to freeze-offs with the majority of that coming from Oklahoma (est. 2.5 billion cubic feet of gas per day).
For perspective, the entire state of Oklahoma produces about 5.8 billion cubic feet of gas per day (source: Hefner Energy LLC; Enverus). That’s roughly half of Oklahoma’s natural gas going offline, and another 3.3 BCF offline in other states when utilities need it most.
As a result, America has gone from producing a record 13 million barrels of oil per day (mmbopd) in November 2019 to producing just 10 mmbopd just a year later.
In Oklahoma, we have gone from producing a record 230 billion cubic feet of gas (BCFG) in May 2019 to produce just 137 BCFG in November 2020, the most recent full month of gas production data available. That lack of investment amounts to a 41% decline during that very short period.
The starvation of capital and the lack of profits the oil and gas industry has endured created the perfect storm for natural gas inventories to fail. This, more than any other single reason I’ve observed thus far, seems to explain natural gas’ failure.
I retired from the natural industry as a Gas Controller. I can guarantee it sucks to be those people right now! During extended cold periods natural gas wells would freeze off at the wellhead and the producers could not meet their customers demands. When that happens the pressure in the interstate pipelines get dangerous low. The result is industrial customers get curtailed, starting with power plants that burn natural gas as fuel. Natural gas in storage can be depleted in a matter of just days when demand is high in a large area of the country. Damn, I'm glad to be retired!!!