Gov. Justice Reiterates Support For W.Va. Natural Gas Drillers As Industry Struggles

West Virginia’s top official says the state is prepared to do “anything” to help the state’s struggling oil and natural gas industry. 

Speaking at the annual winter meeting of the Independent Oil and Gas Association of West Virginia on Wednesday, Jan. 22, Gov. Jim Justice told the crowd of drillers and producers that his administration believes the industry is vital to the state’s economic health and that he’s in lockstep with the industry in supporting legislative relief. 

“I can’t be any more sympathetic,” Justice said. “I do really believe that we’re doing things to make things better.”

Justice assured the audience he intended to sign House Bill 4091. The bill, which creates an expedited permitting process for drillers, passed in the House and is under consideration in the Senate. 

He also expressed support for H.B. 4090, which reduces the severance tax on low-producing wells and siphons some of the proceeds toward plugging orphaned wells. Justice vetoed a version of the bill that passed last session.

The governor urged natural gas producers to ride out the current record-low gas prices. 

“If you can survive for two or three more years, the opportunity to the upside for you, for this is off the chart. It’s off the blooming chart,” he said. “Because the stars have aligned. Now, it maybe took me a little while to catch up, but I’m there. I’m all in.”

Justice was light on specifics. He mentioned recently speaking with President Donald Trump and representatives from China regarding energy issues and reiterated his support for bringing downstream manufacturers to the region. Last fall, Justice signed an executive order creating a task force aimed at bringing petrochemical manufacturers to the state.

Justice, a businessman whose family operates coal companies across Appalachia, also dismissed the notion the “coal guy” didn’t support the state’s natural gas industry. 

“In some way I’ve been painted into this thing that ‘Well, Justice is a coal guy, he doesn’t really care about gas,’” he said. “It’s so ridiculous. It’s unbelievable.”

He also urged drillers to take their concerns to the Legislature. 

“There are things that are going through our Legislature today. There are things that will help,” he said. “But the biggest thing that you have got, and I will help you in every way, is we have got to convince them of the number of opportunities, jobs and everything that are at stake and how close on the bubble you are to an economic catastrophe.”

Drillers paid $146 million in severance taxes to the state in 2019. Projections for 2020 are $98 million, according to the state tax department. 

‘Running For Our Life’

Some of the state’s largest oil and gas producers also presented at the meeting. Top of mind: low natural gas prices.

“There are days I wonder if I’m working for Blockbuster and don’t know it,” said Al Schopp, regional senior vice president for Antero Resources.

He said in the current low gas price environment, Antero is banking on growing its liquid natural gas exports. He praised the Legislature’s previous work on co-tenancy and urged lawmakers to drop the severance tax on low-producing wells entirely. 

“That’s how we’ll keep the state strong,” he said. “That’s how we keep working.”

Derek Cutwright, senior vice president for Southwestern Energy, expressed similar dismay over the tough economics facing the industry, but said Southwestern is focused on becoming more efficient to stay competitive. 

“The analogy that we’re running for our life in this price environment is pretty accurate,” he said. “It looks grim, but we’ve made progress as an industry.”

Appalachian Underground Gas Storage Hub Gov. Justice's 'No. 1 Economic Focus'

West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice said a major underground natural gas liquids storage facility proposed for the Ohio Valley is a top economic priority for his office.

Speaking at the annual winter meeting of the Independent Oil and Gas Association of West Virginia in Charleston Wednesday, Justice said administration officials spoke this week to a “major player” involved in the development of the Appalachian Storage and Trading Hub, although he did not offer specifics. Justice said he would be reaching out to federal officials shortly to continue advocating for its development.

“The number one economic focus on my office today is the natural gas hub,” Justice said.

If built, the hub would allow more natural gas liquids to remain in Appalachia. Storage is a key infrastructure investment needed to attract petrochemical manufacturers to the region.

 

Justice touted his relationship with President Donald Trump and Energy Secretary Rick Perry as reasons why he was confident storage hub, which has been in development for almost a decade, would be built.

 

He said the hub is crucial to the state’s future prosperity.

 

“The hub ensures, the hub ensures job boom in West Virginia forever,” he said. “It ensures our security forever, the way I see it. Forever. “

The project would be built with a combination of private investment and a $1.9 billion loan guarantee from the Department of Energy, which is being applied for by the project’s developer, the Appalachia Development Group, LLC.

 

ADG’s CEO Steve Hendrick told meeting attendees he had growing confidence in the hub becoming a reality.

 

“Something that many people may have thought was a pipedream just a few years ago, no pun intended,” he said. “Something that many may still think is a dream, well I’m here to tell you, and any doubters who might be still out there, that the hope I’ve carried with me since we got this started and enganged in the effort, which shockingly was some nine years ago, this hope is based in reality and opportunity that is right on the tips of our fingers.”

 

A year ago, the project got approval for the first of two application phases for a $1.9 billion U.S. Department of Energy loan. Last summer, ADG annouced it was hiring an outside firm, Parsons Corporation, to help with the second phase and data collection.

 

Speaking at the conference, Hendrick said a number of sites have been selected for consideration, including in West Virignia.

 

 

A new report fedeal report released in December found  developing ethane storage in Appalachia could provide a boost for the entire petrochemical industry. The American Chemistry Council estimates the hub  could attract up to $36 billion in new chemical and plastics industry investment and create 100,000 new area jobs.

 

Environmental groups have expressed concern the storage hub would turn the Ohio Valley into a petrochemical manufacturing center, which could negatively affect public and environmental health.

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