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Showing posts with label Natural gas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Natural gas. Show all posts

Monday, January 20, 2025

Trump says "Drill baby drill" and we explore a market that should benefit greatly from his energy and Ai policies going forward!

 


Pipelines and Energy

Business & Investment Report

Prepared: January 20, 2025
Disclaimer: The following report is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Always conduct your own due diligence or consult a licensed professional before making investment decisions.


Executive Summary

With President Trump returning to the White House and signaling a renewed focus on traditional energy development—summarized by the slogan “Drill, Baby, Drill”—the U.S. midstream (pipeline) sector stands poised for a potential uptick in natural gas and oil throughput. Easing of permitting processes, expedited infrastructure approvals, and expanded access to federal lands are likely catalysts.

Top Five Pipeline Companies to Watch:

  1. Kinder Morgan (NYSE: KMI)
  2. Williams Companies (NYSE: WMB)
  3. Energy Transfer LP (NYSE: ET)
  4. Enterprise Products Partners (NYSE: EPD)
  5. ONEOK (NYSE: OKE)

All five have extensive U.S. natural gas infrastructure, strong financial fundamentals, and direct exposure to regions poised for production growth under the current administration’s energy strategy.


Market Context

  1. Policy Tailwinds:

    • A pro-drilling administration typically reduces regulatory hurdles, possibly accelerating new pipeline projects or expansions.
    • Producers in prolific basins (Permian, Marcellus/Utica, Haynesville, Bakken) could increase output, driving higher demand for pipeline capacity.
  2. Natural Gas Dynamics:

    • Rising global Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) demand (especially in Europe and Asia) supports exports, which boosts midstream volumes.
    • An administration focused on energy independence is likely to encourage increased infrastructure build-out to move resources from wellhead to domestic and international markets.
  3. Challenges & Risks:

    • Local and state opposition can still slow or halt pipeline projects despite federal support.
    • Commodity price volatility may affect producers’ capital spending decisions, influencing pipeline volumes.
    • Global economic or geopolitical events could shift demand patterns, affecting throughput.

1. Kinder Morgan (NYSE: KMI)

Company Snapshot

  • Market Cap (Approx.): $45–50 billion
  • Dividend Yield (Approx.): Historically in the 6% range
  • Core Operations: 70,000+ miles of natural gas pipelines, plus terminals and storage facilities.

Investment Thesis

  • Massive Infrastructure Footprint: Kinder Morgan moves ~40% of U.S. natural gas, making it exceptionally leveraged to any production surge.
  • Expansion Projects: Several ongoing or planned capacity expansions (e.g., in the Permian Basin, where associated gas production continues to rise). Under an administration that eases permitting, these could move forward more quickly.
  • Stable Cash Flows: The company relies heavily on fee-based contracts, offering insulation from commodity price volatility.

Outlook

  • Near-Term: Growth could come from incremental expansions and higher throughput in core regions (Permian, Haynesville).
  • Long-Term: Kinder Morgan’s wide moat in natural gas pipelines positions it well to capitalize on sustained LNG export growth.

2. Williams Companies (NYSE: WMB)

Company Snapshot

  • Market Cap (Approx.): $35–40 billion
  • Dividend Yield (Approx.): Around 5–6%
  • Core Operations: Operates the Transco pipeline (spanning Texas to New York), plus major assets in the Marcellus/Utica.

Investment Thesis

  • Strategic Marcellus Focus: Appalachia is the largest U.S. gas-producing region; increased drilling here directly impacts Williams’ throughput.
  • Transco Pipeline Dominance: Critical infrastructure delivering gas to high-demand corridors on the East Coast; expansions regularly go online to meet regional and export needs.
  • Stable, Regulated Cash Flows: Similar to Kinder Morgan, Williams benefits from fee-based or regulated rate structures.

Outlook

  • Near-Term: Projects aimed at debottlenecking Appalachian supply could accelerate if permitting for expansions becomes more streamlined.
  • Long-Term: Steady demand from high-density markets along Transco’s route, plus rising LNG exports via Gulf Coast terminals, supports robust throughput.

3. Energy Transfer LP (NYSE: ET)

Company Snapshot

  • Market Cap (Approx.): $40–45 billion
  • Distribution Yield (Approx.): 8–10%, often higher than peers
  • Core Operations: Vast network of natural gas, natural gas liquids (NGLs), and crude oil pipelines, spanning multiple basins.

Investment Thesis

  • Integrated System: Energy Transfer connects production basins (Permian, Marcellus, Utica, Bakken) to end markets, including significant processing and fractionation capacity.
  • Growth-Oriented Management: Known for acquisitions (e.g., merging with Enable Midstream) and aggressive pipeline expansions. A friendlier federal stance on energy could support further growth.
  • Attractive Yield: Distributions are typically higher than industry averages; potential volume growth could sustain or even increase payouts.

Outlook

  • Near-Term: Ramping production in Permian and Haynesville could fill ET’s underutilized capacity and boost earnings.
  • Long-Term: Additional NGL and crude expansions, plus possible synergy in new Gulf Coast export facilities, may drive continued growth.

4. Enterprise Products Partners (NYSE: EPD)

Company Snapshot

  • Market Cap (Approx.): $55–60 billion
  • Distribution Yield (Approx.): 7–8%
  • Core Operations: Over 50,000 miles of pipelines, large NGL processing and fractionation footprint, plus export terminals.

Investment Thesis

  • NGL Leader: Enterprise is a major mover of natural gas liquids, which often see increased production when natural gas and crude drilling climbs.
  • Stable, Long-Term Contracts: A large portion of EPD’s revenue is secured through long-term agreements; less commodity price risk.
  • Export Potential: Gulf Coast terminals (e.g., on the Houston Ship Channel) could see higher volumes if LNG and NGL exports expand.

Outlook

  • Near-Term: Increases in associated gas and NGL output from the Permian may flow through EPD’s gathering and fractionation networks.
  • Long-Term: Strong balance sheet and conservative financial management allow for steady expansions and reliable distributions.

5. ONEOK (NYSE: OKE)

Company Snapshot

  • Market Cap (Approx.): $25–30 billion
  • Dividend Yield (Approx.): 5–6%
  • Core Operations: Gathering, processing, and transportation of natural gas and NGLs primarily in the Mid-Continent and Williston Basin.

Investment Thesis

  • Strategic Basin Exposure: Positioned in the Bakken (Williston) and Mid-Continent (Oklahoma, Kansas) where natural gas and NGL production can surge under favorable drilling economics.
  • Recent Expansion Moves: ONEOK’s acquisition of Magellan Midstream in 2023 broadened its asset base, diversifying the company’s commodity mix and expanding pipeline mileage.
  • Fee-Based Revenue Model: A heavy reliance on fee-based contracts protects against commodity price downturns.

Outlook

  • Near-Term: Heightened drilling in the Bakken could lift gas and NGL volumes for ONEOK’s gathering and processing systems.
  • Long-Term: Integration of assets from the Magellan acquisition could improve economies of scale and support stable cash flows.

Risk Factors & Considerations

  1. Permitting & Legal Challenges: Even with federal support, local and environmental litigation can delay major pipelines.
  2. Commodity Price Swings: Sharp declines in oil or natural gas prices can slow upstream drilling, lowering volumes.
  3. Interest Rate Environment: Higher rates raise the cost of capital for new infrastructure projects and can pressure distributions for high-yield MLPs.
  4. Global Economic Shifts: If global LNG or oil demand softens, export-driven volume growth could underperform expectations.

Conclusion & Investment Implications

Under President Trump’s renewed emphasis on fossil fuel production, these five pipeline companies—Kinder Morgan, Williams, Energy Transfer, Enterprise Products Partners, and ONEOK—are well-positioned to capture incremental volume growth and capitalize on expedited infrastructure approvals. While each faces unique market and regulatory risks, their strategic asset footprints, stable fee-based contracts, and potential for heightened utilization present a favorable outlook for midstream investors over the next few years.

Final Note: Prospective investors should monitor evolving policy initiatives, global energy market trends, and company-specific updates (balance sheet strength, capital expenditure plans, distribution strategies) to make well-informed decisions.

ED Note:

With a heavy focus by the incoming administration on speeding up the advancement of Ai Tech, the energy sector benefits, especially those companies that will carry that energy to it's destinations!

We curenty have no positions in the companies mentioned however we are placing them on our watch list for now!


This report is provided for general information only and does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell securities. Always conduct independent research or consult a financial advisor for personalized guidance.

Monday, April 18, 2011

Skywest Energy Corp (OIl and Gas) 100% success in drilling results and increase in production.

Oil DrillerImage via WikipediaSkyWest Energy Corp.

TSX VENTURE: SKW

Apr 18, 2011 09:00 ET


CALGARY, ALBERTA--(Marketwire - April 18, 2011) - SkyWest Energy Corp ("SkyWest", "we", "us", "our" or the "Company") (TSX VENTURE:SKW) is pleased to announce we have filed on SEDAR our audited financial statements and related Management's Discussion and Analysis ("MD&A") for the year ended December 31, 2010. Selected financial and operational information is outlined below and should be read in conjunction with our audited financial statements and the related MD&A which are available for review at www.sedar.com.

FINANCIAL AND OPERATING HIGHLIGHTS
Our 2010 year end results include approximately six months of production from the reverse take-over of EMM Energy Inc. and 15 days of production from the acquisition of Base Resources Inc. The year-end results also include 5 operated Cardium horizontal oil wells which were brought on production in 2010 with 4 of the 5 being brought on in December 2010.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Science - Making gasoline from greenhouse gases moves into testing phase.

Carbon Sciences Begins Performance Testing of Breakthrough Catalyst in Commercial Facility

Company’s Catalyst is Key to Solution for Replacing Petroleum as a Source of Transportation Fuels

Santa Barbara, CA - March , 2011 - Carbon Sciences, Inc. (CABN),
the developer of a breakthrough technology to transform greenhouse gases into gasoline and other portable fuels, today announced the commencement of the testing of its dry reforming of methane technology in a commercial facility.

Byron Elton, Carbon Sciences’ CEO, commented, “We recently announced an aggressive 2011 development plan. The first step is the performance testing of our breakthrough catalyst in a commercial facility with multiple reactors using protocols required by the oil and gas industry. We have recently engaged a commercial testing firm to perform this task. The equipment build out is underway and actual testing will commence shortly. The results from this exercise will provide us with valuable data for starting the design of a commercial grade catalyst.”

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Making Gasoline without Crude Oil - GTL Technology

Carbon Sciences CEO article featured in Corp! Magazine

Santa Barbara, CA - February 3, 2011 - Carbon Sciences, Inc. (CABN), As a recent UC Davis study indicates, the global oil supply is set to run dry 90 years before replacements, such as renewable energy, are ready. Such measurements are helpful in driving development and establishing market-ready deadlines, but perhaps their largest contribution is the conversation they spark about how to address this problem.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Carbon Sciences Successfully Synthesizes Revolutionery Catalyst Needed to Make Gasoline Without Using Crude Oil

Se below
Making Gasoline "without oil"!


Catalyst is Key to Demonstrating the Commercial Feasibility of the Company’s Breakthrough CO2 Based Gas-to-Liquids (GTL) Technology

Santa Barbara, CA - August 9, 2010 - Carbon Sciences, Inc. (CABN), the developer of a breakthrough technology to transform greenhouse gases into gasoline and other portable fuels, today announced the successful synthesis of a proprietary raw catalyst, an essential step toward demonstrating commercial feasibility of the technology.

“In June of this year, we filed a landmark patent application for our breakthrough CO2 based Gas-to-Liquids technology,” said CEO Byron Elton. “The production of this catalyst is the actual laboratory scale implementation of the catalyst formulation and its synthesis process disclosed in the patent. It is a major step forward for us,” he added.

The major challenge in CO2 based GTL reactions is the activation of stable carbon dioxide and methane molecules. This company’s novel and proprietary catalyst provides a simpler and cleaner route by activating these stable molecules and converting them to gasoline. Gas-to-liquid reactions are regulated through temperature, concentration, pressure and contact time. This catalyst accelerates these reactions, enabling them to be carried out under the most favorable thermodynamic regime and at much lower temperature and pressure. “Our catalyst, in conjunction with an optimized reactor and total plant design, will be the key factors in reducing both the capital and operating costs of our next generation GTL technology”, Elton said.

“A fully active and stable catalyst will be the key to our success,” said Dr. Naveed Aslam, inventor of the technology. “Synthesizing our proprietary raw catalyst is a vital step in a multi-stage catalyst synthesis and activation process,” he added.

Gas-to-liquids (GTL) is a complimentary refinery processes that converts natural gas and other gaseous hydrocarbons into longer chain hydrocarbons such as gasoline. Carbon Sciences estimates that they can produce 138 billion gallons of gasoline a year (the annual amount used in the U.S.) with 23 trillion cubic feet of natural gas and 586 million tons of CO2 without using crude oil or competing with current natural gas consumption.

About Carbon Sciences, Inc.

Carbon Sciences Inc. is developing a breakthrough CO2 based gas-to-liquids technology to transform greenhouse gases into liquid portable fuels, such as gasoline, diesel and jet fuel. Innovating at the forefront of chemical engineering, we are developing highly scalable clean-tech processes to produce liquid fuels from naturally occurring or human-made greenhouse gas emissions. From sources such as natural gas fields, refinery flare gas, landfill gas, municipal waste, algae and other biomass, there is an abundant supply of inexpensive feedstock available to produce large and sustainable quantities of liquid fuel to replace petroleum for global consumption, thereby eliminating our dependence on petroleum. 



Website
http://www.carbonsciences.com.

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Previous Articles about Carbon Sciences:
Oil Company exec jumps into Green Tech
Carbon Sciences files landmark patent application 
Carbon Sciences files second patent application 
Belief in energy independence drives Carbon Sciences 
Getting in on the ground floor of world changing green technology

CNN interviews Carbon Sciences CEO
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