April 8, 2010
posted on: Apr 08, 2010
IPAMS Meetings and Announcements
Rockies Regional Competitiveness Survey
It’s not too late to respond to IPAMS member survey. Please help us quantify the impacts of government policy on companies’ decisions to invest and create jobs in the Rockies by filling out IPAMS’ member survey available here. All individual company information will be kept confidential, and any results released will be aggregated. Please return the completed survey to Spencer Kimball or fax to (303) 893-0709. We are requesting that surveys be returned by April 9th.
Fundraiser for Richard Pombo
May 5, 2010
IPAMS is organizing a fundraiser for Richard Pombo on May 5th in Denver. Pombo served in Congress for 14 years and was Chairman of the House Resources Committee from 2002-2006. He also chaired the Western Caucus where he championed many issues important to the western oil and gas industry. Click here for more background on Richard Pombo’s accomplishments in Congress.
Governor Bill Owens, Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell, Representative Tom Tancredo, Representative Bob Shaffer and State Senator Josh Penry are co-hosting this reception. The event will take place May 5, 2010 at 5:00 pm at Workplace Resource Herman-Miller, located at 1899 Wynkoop Street in downtown Denver. Suggested contribution is $500/individual and $1,000/PAC. Click here for the invitation.
Please contact Jon Haubert if you are interested in making a contribution or have questions about the event.
A Western Tradition Continues
May 15, 2010
Traditions are an important way of passing along history, values and culture. Since 1981, when H.A. “Dave” True, Jr. was named the first Wildcatter of the Year, no other tradition at IPAMS is as important or celebrated as our Wildcatter of the Year Gala.
On May 15, 2010, IPAMS will bestow its highest honor, Wildcatter of the Year, to another deserving and remarkable individual. Please join us in celebrating a person whose character, vision, determination, discipline, achievements, service and philanthropy have made the West a better place to live, work and raise a family. By tradition, the name of our 28th Wildcatter of the Year will be kept secret until the evening of the event.
IPAMS 2010 Wildcatter of the Year Gala
May 15, 2010
Seawell Ballroom, Denver Center for the Performing Arts
With cocktails beginning at 6 o’clock in the evening
Black Tie
After registering online, please email Becca Ness or call (303) 623-0987 with the names of your guests to ensure they have a nametag at check-in. Sponsorship opportunities are still available. Click here to learn more about sponsoring this event.
Interior Accepts IPAMS Nomination for Royalty Policy Committee
Secretary of Interior Ken Salazar selected two of the people IPAMS nominated to serve on Interior’s Royalty Policy Committee: Thomas Jepperson (Questar Corporation) and James Hardwick (Hail Estill Attorneys at Law). Tom will serve as IPAMS primary representative and James will serve as the alternate.
Special thanks to Questar for allowing Tom to serve in this important capacity.
IPAMS Membership Update
IPAMS thanks our broad membership for supporting our organization 2010 dues. Your financial support ensures that we have the resources to continue to defend and promote your investment in the Intermountain West.
This week we are proud to recognize the following new and upgraded memberships:
WILDCATTER MEMBER
Chesapeake Energy Corporation
NEW FRONTIER MEMBER
Beacon E&P
PIONEER MEMBER
Workplace Resource—Herman Miller
For more information or to refer a company to IPAMS regarding membership please contact Susan Fakharzadeh.
Other Upcoming Meetings
• Montana Basin Advisory Network Meeting– April 12th, 1:30 p.m. The committee will discuss the recent settlement of the BLM v. Montana Environmental Information Center (MEIC) et. al. case and put together a strategy for moving forward. Click here to view a copy of the settlement agreement.
• Utah Basin Advisors Network – April 13th, 10:00 a.m.
Agendas are available for upcoming meetings at http://www.westernenergyalliance.org/advocacy/. All meetings unless otherwise indicated are Mountain time, and at IPAMS and via teleconference.
Visit westernenergyalliance.org for the latest news affecting the Intermountain West’s oil and natural gas industry. Headlines are updated daily from local, national and international news sources. You may also sign up for daily newsbrief emails under the Manage Account section of the “Members Only” page.
The West
Montana and Dakotas Lease Sale Delayed
The Bureau of Land Management in Montana and the Dakotas is delaying scheduled oil and gas lease sales in order to complete additional environmental review under the National Environmental Policy Act. The next sale had been scheduled for April 13 and included 129 parcels in Montana and the Dakotas. This lease sale will not be held.
From the BLM: “The additional environmental reviews will ensure the responsible development of oil and gas resources on the public lands. By taking this additional time, the BLM will be able to provide greater assurances to industry so that it can move forward with certainty in leasing parcels from the BLM and developing the resources. Lease sales will resume when the additional environmental reviews are complete.”
Colorado
BLM seeking input on energy proposal near Whitewater
published in: Grand Junction Daily Sentinel on: 04/06/2010 by: Staff
The Bureau of Land Management is seeking public opinion on a proposal to develop oil and natural gas resources on more than 90,000 acres between Grand Junction and Delta. According to the BLM, Fram Operating, LLC, has proposed a Whitewater Unit Master Development Plan for nearly 65,000 acres of BLM-managed public land, nearly 20,000 acres of private land, and about 6,000 acres of split estate (private surface with federally owned minerals underneath).
Garfield County getting involved in state’s pit liner debate
published in: Glenwood Springs Post Independent on: 04/06/2010 by: John Colson
Garfield County is positioning itself to get involved in a state-level debate over the disposal of “pit liners,” thick plastic sheets used to line storage pits by the gas drilling industry. The pits typically contain a mixture of water and chemicals produced by the process of drilling and hydraulic fracturing of the deeply buried, gas-bearing rock formations of the Piceance Basin, which underlies much of western Garfield County.
Colo. oil and gas rules no longer hot-button issue in governor’s race
published in: Denver Post on: 04/05/2010 by: Karen E. Crummy
The political controversy over new oil and gas drilling rules, which dominated the gubernatorial campaign a few months ago, has fizzled, as the Democrat vying to replace Gov. Bill Ritter has signaled a more conciliatory stance toward the industry. Republican gubernatorial candidate Dan Maes has said he would gut the rules as one of his first orders of business.
Gas gets upper hand on coal in Colo. emissions deal (subscription required)
published in: E&E ClimateWire on: 04/05/2010 by: Joel Kirkland
The governor of Colorado is expected to sign a bill later this month that encourages a major power company to switch from coal to natural gas as a way to slash harmful air pollutants and begin the process of addressing climate change. Gov. Bill Ritter’s (D) April 19 bill-signing will be the culmination of a monthlong slugfest pitting Colorado’s coal industry against big gas producers drilling in the state’s sparsely populated west.
Xcel to buy 2 Colorado gas power plants from Calpine for $739M
published in: Denver Business Journal on: 04/05/2010 by: Cathy Proctor and Mark Harden
Xcel Energy Inc. said Monday its Colorado unit will buy two gas-fired power plants near Denver from Calpine Corp. of Houston for $739 million. Xcel already buys power from the Calpine plants. The utility, Colorado’s largest, said its Public Service Company of Colorado (PSCo) subsidiary plans to buy the 621-megawatt Rocky Mountain Energy Center, near Hudson, and the 310-megawatt Blue Spruce Energy Center, in Aurora.
North Dakota
Kodiak adds Bakken acreage
published in: Upstreamonline.com on: 04/06/2010 by: Staff
Kodiak acquired 5680 gross mineral acres (4531 net) in McKenzie County, ND, west of the Nesson Anticline from a private party. Kodiak plans a wildcat probe on the new acreage this year. Kodiak also increased its working interest in the Grizzly Project in the Mondak Field by 25% to an 87.5% working interest across 3419 net acres.
Bakken well yields oil, gas at record rate
published in: Oil & Gas Journal on: 04/05/2010 by: Staff
A long horizontal well completed in the Bakken formation has produced oil and gas at an early 24-hr peak flow back rate, said Brigham Exploration Co., Austin. Rate was 4,335 b/d of oil and 4.79 MMcfd of gas at the Sorenson 29-32 1H, for a combined rate of 5,133 boe/d. That rate represents an apparent record production level for the more than 2,700 horizontal wells in the Williston basin based on publicly reported date, the company said.
North Dakota jobs in gas and oil
published in: InForum on: 04/03/2010 by: Bruce Furness
Now that the health care decision has been made, President Barack Obama should return his attention to what he said in his State of the Union address was his top priority – jobs. While other states have record-shattering unemployment and budgets deep in the red, North Dakota remains a beacon of prosperity. If the president is sincerely looking for ways to create jobs and stimulate the economy, he should take a page from the Peace Garden State and develop America’s vast oil and natural gas resources.
Utah
Outrage over secret deal with SUWA
published in: Emery County Progress on: 04/06/2010 by: Staff
Bennett outraged over Obama’s secret deal with SUWA Sen. Bob Bennett (R-Utah) issued the following statement regarding an announcement that, under the guise of a settlement agreement between the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance and the Department of the Interior, a key provision of the of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 will be dropped from use in the field.
BLM settles suit over CX use in eastern Utah drilling permits
published in: Oil & Gas Journal on: 04/02/2010 by: Nick Snow
The US Bureau of Land Management has settled a lawsuit challenging its use of the 2005 Energy Policy Act’s categorical exclusion (CX) provision to approve 30 oil and gas drilling permits near Nine Mile Canyon in eastern Utah. The US Department of the Interior agency said on Mar. 31 that it agreed under the settlement to not issue any more CXs in the area until a full-field environmental impact statement is completed; to continue studying the impacts of dust on petroglyphs in the area; and to issue national guidance stating that the extraordinary circumstances provision of the National Environmental Policy Act applies to the CXs under EPACT’s Section 390.
Wyoming
Oil companies line up
published in: Associated Press on: 04/06/2010 by: Mead Gruver
The state has approved all but four of 25 permits sought by three companies to drill oil wells in southeastern Wyoming, an area that has had little oil development. Samson Oil and Gas USA Inc., EOG Resources Inc. and Jonah Gas Co. LLC sought the permits to drill horizontal oil wells in Laramie and Goshen counties. The wells would be deep, ranging between 10,700 feet and 14,700 feet, to tap into the Niobrara shale formation.
Landowner liability slows study
published in: Sublette Examiner on: 04/05/2010 by: Derek Farr
Gas development in the Pinedale Anticline has the potential to affect groundwater in the New Fork River Valley, which contains a complicated system of aquifers, surface water, hydrocarbon-rich deposits and salt-laden subterranean reservoirs. In its record of decision, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) requires Anticline gas operators to develop a groundwater monitoring and mitigation program.
Wyoming Pipeline Authority Public Meeting Notice
April 20, 2010 in Casper, WY at 10:00 a.m.
The meeting will be held at the
Wyoming Oil and Gas Conservation Commission Building, located at 2211 King Boulevard, Casper, WY.
Contact Brian Jeffries or Colby Drechsel or call (307) 237-5009.
Washington Watch
Congressman Denies Knowing His Wife Lobbied For Landman Group
published in: DC Bureau on: 04/07/2010 by: Allison Sickle
At the same time liberal Upstate New York Rep. Maurice Hinchey, 71, championed strict control over gas drilling in the Marcellus Shale, his wife lobbied for a Texas-based landmen association whose members represent gas drillers securing leases from New York property owners. Hinchey claimed that he was unaware of his wife’s lobbying on behalf of the landmen. For at least two years of their marriage, Hinchey’s wife, Allison Lee, 47, who was previously his district office representative and administrative aide, represented members of the Forth Worth-based American Association of Professional Landmen (AAPL).
EPA advisory panel weighs expansion of fracking study (subscription required)
published in: E&E News on: 04/07/2010 by: Katie Howell
U.S. EPA may broaden its pending study on the effects of hydraulic fracturing on water supplies to include other environmental and health effects, according to agency documents and members of a science advisory panel guiding the research. Meeting today in Washington, D.C., members of the Science Advisory Board Environmental Engineering Committee said EPA should conduct a full life-cycle analysis of the oil and gas production technique as part of its study.
Administration uses latest job gains to push climate agenda (subscription required)
published in: E&E ClimateWire on: 04/07/2010 by: Joel Kirkland
Unemployment’s stubborn hold on the American economy cuts two ways in the climate debate. To some, the economic slump screams out against government actions that increase energy costs. To others, the malaise is a signal that oil and coal are dragging down the economy, and the United States is failing in a global race to develop clean energy technology.
White House to Congress: Energy-only bill would be ‘unfortunate’
published in: The Hill on: 04/06/2010 by: Ben Geman
White House climate czar Carol Browner said Tuesday that the Obama administration is urging Senate lawmakers not to proceed with an “energy only” bill that shelves limits on greenhouse gas emissions. Browner said the White House is very engaged in bipartisan talks on Capitol Hill. “We are very clear that we want comprehensive legislation,” Browner said at an energy event at Google’s Washington, DC office. “Every now and then you will hear talk about maybe an energy-only bill. We think that would be unfortunate.”
U.S. overestimates natgas output, shale blamed
published in: Reuters on: 04/05/2010 by: Ayesha Rascoe and Timothy Gardner
The U.S. Energy Information Administration is revamping the way it calculates domestic natural gas production after it overestimated output from key producer states Texas and Louisiana, an agency official said on Monday. Rapid changes to U.S. natural gas output involving a wave of new small producers of shale gas made it difficult to get an accurate picture of the market, said Gary Long, acting director of the reserves and production division of the agency’s oil and gas office.
Congress renews interest in fracing
published in: Durango Herald on: 04/05/2010 by: Jeremy Walsh
The congressional bill aimed at preventing potentially negative byproducts of the hydraulic fracturing stage of natural-gas production has gained renewed relevance 10 months after its introduction by U.S. Rep. Diana DeGette, coinciding with recent congressional action on the issue. The Environmental Protection Agency’s recent decision to study the chemicals injected underground by the natural-gas industry has boosted efforts by DeGette, D-Colo., to pass legislation regulating the chemicals.
U.S. Natural Gas Reserves May Have Doubled, Secretary Chu Says
published in: BusinessWeek/Bloomberg on: 04/06/2010 by: Simon Lomax
New natural-gas drilling technologies may have doubled U.S. reserves of the fuel, Energy Secretary Steven Chu said today. U.S. natural gas reserves have definitely increased by about 30 percent and “probably has doubled,” Chu said in a speech at a conference in Washington hosted by the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
Environmentalists criticize White House climate tactics after drilling roll-out
published in: The Hill on: 04/03/2010 by: Ben Geman
President Barack Obama’s offshore drilling expansion is prompting criticism from environmentalists who fear the White House has agreed to major concessions without gaining new support for climate change legislation. Obama backs increased drilling and nuclear power development – he proposed a $36 billion increase in nuclear plant loan guarantees in February – while emphasizing that they should be part of a larger energy strategy that includes limits on greenhouse gas emissions.
See IER’s column: “Oil drilling head fake”
Media Watch
Editorial: How Congress can get a smart climate-change bill passed
published in: Washington Post on: 04/05/2010 by: Editorial Staff
Opponents of health-care reform like to point out that it will reshape one-sixth of the U.S. economy. But there’s another big legislative push, overshadowed by health care, that would directly affect an even larger chunk: the effort to pass a climate-change bill. The action is in the Senate, where Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.), John F. Kerry (D-Mass.) and Joseph I. Lieberman (I-Conn.) are preparing a proposal. The outlines are becoming clear: The package is expected to contain a cap on carbon emissions that will grow stricter over time and a slew of provisions to promote certain types of energy.
Op-ed: The culture of convenient transparency
published in: The Hill on: 04/05/2010 by: Rep. Rob Bishop (R-UT)
When President Obama said that his administration would be the most transparent in history, we wanted to believe him. After all, he went so far as to issue a Presidential Executive order calling for greater transparency and open Government. Despite the executive order, it soon became clear this was a façade. Instead, this Administration has demonstrated a consistent pattern of hidden agendas and ulterior motives. In February, I received a leaked copy of an internal Department of Interior (DOI) memo that identified as many as 13 million acres throughout the West as possible sites for national monument designations.
Editorial: Move to natural gas helps clear the air
published in: Denver Post on: 04/05/2010 by: Editorial Staff
Colorado skies someday will be cleaner thanks to last week’s passage of a bill that prompts Xcel Energy to shutter some old coal-fired power plants and switch to electrical generation powered by natural gas. A healthy mix of Democrats and Republicans worked with Gov. Bill Ritter to require Xcel to cut emissions of nitrogen oxides — which add to haze and ozone — by as much as 80 percent by 2017. We applaud their work, even though it’s not a comprehensive solution to haze and ozone.
Op-ed: Clean Jobs Act good for Colorado economy
published in: Denver Post on: 04/03/2010 by: Tisha Schuler
Colorado is consistently ranked as one of the best places to live, with its plentiful outdoor activities and beautiful views. However, those views are sometimes compromised by haze and ozone, and these issues have caused the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to keep a close eye on the state, and the Denver Front Range in particular, to ensure compliance with haze and ozone standards. While the state has made great progress over the last 10 years, the EPA has proposed to strengthen its national ambient air quality standards for ground level ozone, the main component of smog.
Environment and Wildlife
GALLUP Poll: Americans Prioritize Energy Over Environment for First Time
published in: Gallup.com on: 04/06/2010 by: Jeffrey M. Jones
Americans are more likely to say the U.S. should prioritize development of energy supplies than to say it should prioritize protecting the environment, the first time more have favored energy production over environmental protection in this question’s 10-year history.
Study: Collection pipelines help Wyo. sage grouse
published in: Associated Press on: 04/06/2010 by: Staff
A new study preliminarily concludes that gas development has harmed sage grouse in western Wyoming but efforts to reduce truck traffic in gas fields seem to have helped the birds somewhat. Companies have reduced traffic by expanding a network of pipelines to move condensate and produced water out of the gas fields. Companies previously would truck those fluids out.
Legal actions follow grouse decision as agencies emphasize conservation plans
published in: Grand Junction Daily Sentinel on: 04/04/2010 by: Dennis Webb
Efforts to protect the greater sage grouse will continue on dual tracks, in the courtroom and on the ground, following a federal decision in early March that an Endangered Species Act listing for the bird is warranted but precluded. Last week, the Center for Biological Diversity, Desert Survivors and Western Watersheds Project environmental groups notified the Interior Department of their plans to take legal action under a citizens suit provision of the Endangered Species Act.
Technology, Alternative & Renewables
Is Texas writing the book on wind power?
published in: E&E News/New York Times on: 04/08/2010 by: Peter Behr
Feb. 28, 2010, was a banner day for Texas wind to set the clouds — and electrons — flying. In the Panhandle, gusts reached 47 miles per hour and wind generators delivered a record 6,242 megawatts of power to Dallas, Austin and other population centers. At 1 p.m., 22 percent of all the electricity consumed in the Texas grid was coming from wind. To proud Texans like Public Utility Commission Chairman Barry Smitherman, such records document the state’s position as the “epicenter of land-based wind production” in the United States, if not the world, as the chairman put it.
Solar Power Demand Fades (subscription required)
published in: Wall Street Journal on: 04/08/2010 by: Pui-Wing Tam
Silicon Valley has positioned itself as a hub for clean-technology companies. But the region isn’t doing so well when it comes to adopting alternative-energy practices, especially in solar power. Last year, Silicon Valley’s installations of solar panels slowed compared with the rest of California. According to the 2010 Index of Silicon Valley, an annual economic report on the area, the kilowatt capacity of solar power installed in the region fell 24% in 2009 while the rest of California saw its solar capacity through the California Solar Initiative—a state program to spur usage of solar power—rise 22%.
Unlikely companions: wind turbine in oil field
published in: Greening Of Oil on: 04/06/2010 by: Steve Quinn
It stands as an icon for renewable energy—right smack in the middle of an oil field. It’s a wind turbine and the odd juxtaposition is no mistake. It was placed in Teapot Dome, a U.S. Department of Energy oil field near Casper, Wyoming, as a test of how renewable energy and fossil fuel development can co-exist on the same block.
Natural Gas Vehicle (NGV) Informational Meeting
May 4, 2010 at 9:00 a.m.
The AGA-ANGA Natural Gas Transportation Collaborative Task Force seeks to advance the production and use of natural gas as a transportation fuel. The task force is focused on legislative advocacy, infrastructure development/business models, fleet conversions and manufacturer outreach, and marketing and education. Click here for the agenda.
RSVP to Janet Flanigan at 303-672-6984 or janet.flanigan@questar.com
Markets
Feds OK Ruby Pipeline to carry Rockies natural gas to West Coast
published in: Denver Business Journal on: 04/05/2010 by: Cathy Proctor
The $3 billion Ruby Pipeline project to carry natural gas from Wyoming to the West Coast, a project that garnered the support of Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter, has received federal approval. El Paso Corp. (NYSE: EP), based in Houston, said Monday that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) has approved the project. The Ruby Pipeline will run 675 miles between a hub at Opal, Wyo., and a connection point near the Oregon-California border.
Industry News and Events
SPE Environmental Study Group
April 27, 2010 from 11:30 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. (bring your own sack lunch)
Daniel Pring, Buys & Associates, Inc. will be discussing recent developments in EPA Air Quality Regulations . Non-SPE members are welcome to join.
Location: Halliburton Energy Services, Main Conference Room (CHASE Building), 1125 Seventeenth Street, Suite 1900, Denver CO 80202
The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has several regulatory actions finalized or pending concerning air quality issues for which Oil and Gas operators will potentially be subject to. Among the pending regulatory issues are:
• Greenhouse Gas Mandatory Reporting Requirements , Subpart W Petroleum and Natural Gas Systems (Upstream Operations) – Proposed Rule Published: 3/22/10
• Prevention of Significant Deterioration (PSD) and Title V Greenhouse Gas Tailoring Rule – Proposed Rule
• NAAQS – NOx 1-hour Standard, Final Rule Effective: 4/12/10
• NAAQS – Primary/Secondary Ozone Standard review
There is no registration fee or RSVP necessary to attend.
Bakken and Beyond!
May 2 – 4, 2010 in Bismarck, North Dakota
The 18th Williston Basin Petroleum Conference & Expo will be held May 2 – 4, 2010 in Bismarck, North Dakota.Technical presentations will be the highlight of the Conference, as industry experts from across North America cover all the “Hot Plays” in the Williston Basin including the Bakken, Three Forks, and Lodgepole, along with talks on deep and shallow gas plays and CO2-EOR opportunities in the Basin. In addition, crude oil transportation issues and a panel on Bakken fracture stimulation techniques will be of great interest to attendees. Keynote speakers include North Dakota Governor John Hoeven, Clarence Cazalot of Marathon Oil Company, and Jim Volker of Whiting Oil and Gas. Click here to learn more.
GHG Information Session: Mandatory Greenhouse Gas Reporting Rule- What to Expect and When
May 4, 2010 from 8 a.m. – 10 a.m.
Buys & Associates, Inc. will be hosting an information seminar on Tuesday, to discuss the EPA’s Proposed GHG Reporting Rule. The workshop will include:
• Operations affected by proposed rule
• Reporting Thresholds
• Reporting Requirements
• Additional Requirements
• Suggestions for moving forward/future compliance (how to prepare)
Location: Buys & Associates’ Corporate Headquarters, 300 E. Mineral Avenue, Suite 10. Littleton, CO 80122
Please RSVP to Lauren MacMillan or (303) 781-8211 ext. 237
University of Wyoming Energy Resources and Produced Waters Conference
May 25-26 2010 in Laramie, WY
Final call for Presentations and Registration is still open. The Energy Resources Produced Water Conference, convened by the University of Wyoming’s Ruckelshaus Institute and the School of Energy Resources, is intended to advance the understanding of current research and monitoring projects related to the management, treatment, protection, and use of water associated with energy development in Wyoming and the West. The conference will cover produced water issues from various types of energy development, including, oil, gas, coalbed natural gas, coal mining, uranium, and carbon sequestration.
The format for the two-day conference will consist of oral presentations in concurrent sessions as well as a display of posters. Click here to learn more.
Institute for Energy Research’s 2nd Annual Houston Luncheon
June 4, 2010 in Houston, TX
The Institute for Energy Research (IER) will have John Stossel, Fox Business Anchor, as their keynote speaker at their 2nd Annual Luncheon.
For additional event and sponsorship questions, contact Nancy Bradley at events@iertx.org or call (713) 591-1732. Click here for more information and registration.
BENPOSIUM
June 7-10, 2010 in Houston, TX
The most comprehensive natural gas symposium that applies the “fundamentals” perspective to how production, capacity, flow, inventories and demand interact to drive prices, trading opportunities and marketing and investing strategies. The goal of BENPOSIUM is to provide executives, analysts, traders and investors for an in-depth look at the shifting energy market dynamics and how these developments are the reshaping natural gas and power industry landscape. Click here to view the agenda and to register.
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