Locator: 48385B.
WTI: $69.70.
New wells:
- Sunday, March 30, 2025: 86 for the month, 197 for the quarter, 197 for the year,
- 41131, conf, Murex, LA-Riley Kyle 25-36H MB,
- 40155, conf, Hess, EN-Schroeder-157-94-1102H-2,
- 39693, conf, Hess, TI-Beauty Valley-158-95-1423H-6,
- Saturday, March 29, 2025: 83 for the month, 194 for the quarter, 194 for the year,
- 41020, conf, CLR, Alfsvaag Federal 7-31H,
- 40857, conf, BR, West Kellogg 4A UTFH-B,
- Friday, March 28, 2025: 81 for the month, 192 for the quarter, 192 for the year,
- 40512, conf, Phoenix Operating, Daniele 26-35 2 5H,
- 40511, conf, Phoenix Operating, Daniele 26-35-2 4H,
- 40510, conf, Phoenix Operating, Daniele 26-35-2 2H,
- 40509, conf, Phoenix Operating, Daniele 26-35-2 1H-LL,
- 40474, conf, Hess, GO-John-156-98-0508H-3,
- 40447, conf, Phoenix Operating, Daniele 26-35-2 3H,
RBN Energy: what's ahead for New England's power grid? Is more natural gas part of the answer?
Two factors — public concern about soaring utility bills and President Trump’s strong opposition to offshore wind — are forcing New England to rethink its once-ambitious plans for a renewables-heavy electric grid and reassess how to meet its power-generation needs in the late 2020s and early 2030s. One possibility would be to expand the region’s access to piped-in natural gas, but midstreamers’ previous efforts to add pipeline capacity were beaten back time and again. In today’s RBN blog, we discuss New England’s ongoing debate about what to do next.
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