Berman: Gas Price Increase Inevitable in 2016 AND Shale gas revolution may save E&P industry

Every week, the EIA proclaims a new record for natural gas production. But their own forecasts show that the U.S. will be short on supply by October of this year. A price increase is inevitable beginning later in 2016.

Conventional Production to Decline

Conventional gas will continue to decline at about 5% per year because few companies are drilling those plays. Shale gas must, therefore, continue to grow by at least 15 bcfd per year just to offset annual conventional gas decline (~2.5 bcfd per year) and legacy shale gas production decline (~12.5 bcfd per year).

It will take 15 bcfd of new shale gas production in 2016 to keep U.S. production flat.

Shale gas production replacement and growth for 2015 were 14.5 bcfd, down from almost 18 bcfd in 2014. It will be difficult to match 14.5 bcfd in 2016 because shale gas production has been falling 0.72 bcfd (~2.2 bcfd annualized) for the last 4 months of data (Figure 4).

Exports Won't Be Helpful

Export plans of at least 7 bcfd by 2020 are not helpful considering the challenges of meeting domestic supply in coming years (Figure 6).

The prospect of exports increasing to 13 bcfd by 2030 is even more troubling absent some new shale gas play that we don’t know about yet.

Conclusion

The EIA’s STEO forecast calls for $3.17 per MBTU gas prices by December 2016 and for $3.62 by December 2017. Those prices will not support necessary drilling in legacy shale gas plays. EIA’s AEO 2015 reference case does not call for gas prices to reach $5 per mcf until 2025. We can’t afford to wait 9 years.

It is, therefore, inevitable that natural gas prices must increase sooner, preferably in the next 12 to 24 months. If oil prices remain low, a shale-gas revival may save the domestic E&P business. During the last supply deficit in 2014, gas prices averaged $4.36 per mcf compared to only $2.63 in 2015.

But it will take time for producers to reverse the decline in drilling and production. It may be difficult to raise capital for renewed drilling given the current distress in the oil and gas industry.

Something will have to give sooner than later. That will be natural gas export.

Read more: http://www.forbes.com/sites/arthurberman/2016/02/21/natural-gas-pri...

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Maybe it would help if they'd stop burning / 'flaring' it off (insofar as being short on supply is concerned).

I don't see them flaring any more like they used to do around here. At night you could really see them, especially if there was a lot of moisture in the air.

Maybe having pipeline capacity gave them a place to put it instead of flaring it off.

I just read the article on RealClearPolitics.com, the energy tab takes you to links for tons of energy related articles and writings.

I refuse to be a pessimist when it comes to prices at the current low level no matter how much others try to convince me that things wont improve for years to come.

By this time next year prices will be improved over what we are seeing for the last year but you wont get an apology from the herd who echo each other while predicting an endless status quo.

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