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James,
Thanks for the post, very interesting.
The anti shale development crowd claims the value of shale development is over stated. Yet companies such as Dominion are willing to invest millions and billions of dollars. I guess the antis are smarter than the folks at Dominion.
Articles, such as the one you posted, give us an insight into the value of shale development. For us in areas of shale development this means great things in the future.
NiSource has smaller lower pressure rated pipelines in the Utica Point Pleasant foot print. These are 6" to 10" diameter lines, and are typically rated to operate less than 250 psig.
These pipelines are situated in a complimentary position to the Dominion Blue Racer pipelines. NiSource has struggled with debt and lacks the cash to build new and larger pipelines from Eastern Ohio to the larger market areas. The right of ways are worth a tidy sum & opportunity awaits those who have the business acumen to foresee the future.
If one can envision the ESE Ohio NiSource lines and potentially new and larger high pressure pipelines interconnected to the DOE or Blue Racer System and the near term processing capacity, Eastern Ohio becomes a new ball game. Potentially, market flexibility can be enhanced exponentially.
Gatherco ROW's are positioned nicely. I can see Treat CS pulling suction on some field lines in the oil window in that geographic area some day. The gas volumes are typically much lower from the oil bearing wells.
Gatherco acquired 2,600 miles of line from Columbia in 1997 before NiSource bought all the Columbia companies in year 2000.
Back then, Columbia was seeking something like 35 cents per MMBTU to operate, gather, compress and dehdrate the gas, including line loss, the producer community thought that was high and the result was Gatherco came into existence.
Look what Chesapeake and other Midstream companies are charging as post production costs today !!!
I saw a Q3 report from a large Midstream company that posted $1.39 per MMBTU as a cost.
r2d2
To expound a little more, the oil window is reported to be progressively less pressurized as you move west. Assuming the completion technology and techniques can be optimized to make the oil flow out of the shale to the well bore, the well reservoir pressure being lower working in conjunction with compression pulling on the gathering systems at 20 psig to 40 psig, this would be more conducive for the typical oil producing prospects & typically whereby the gas production is the lessor of the two products being produced.
After a well declines and reaches a state of equilibrium or static production, the move is to install tubing and pumping units, this producing scenario fits the existing Treat System capabilities very well. That is until the number of wells exceed the system capacity.
I hope this helps you understand my perspective. Opinion only.
The four Treat compressor engines you cite are 30 + years old. It would cost a fortune to modify them to make them exhaust emission compliant.
A new compressor station & related facilities and a new interconnect with Columbia North of the old Treat Homer station makes more operational and economic sense.
This facility can do what I describe above.
Regarding the KM connections, I can only speculate..... KM publicly announced they were planning to build a liquid pipeline from the SE Ohio processing plants NW through Ohio.
The below is speculation:
The proposed KM pipeline route I recall seeing passed in a NW direction near Utica and MtVernon. One might deduce that the the new compressor station outlet liquids may go into that pipeline.
From a nostalgia standpoint, the Treat Homer compressor station was the very first natural gas compressor station the Columbia Gas and Electric Company built early in the 1900's. It is sad to see one of the original building blocks of Columbia fading into history.
The treat facility is key to deliveries in Ohio.
The NiSource gas has and can move both North and South on that K to L mainline system from the storage fields.
My take is gas will not be flowing from Gatherco to Columbia, and that is what is reversed.
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