Locator: 51125B.
SpaceX (SPCX): $154, down about 3%.
Dow opens at record high: 53,229.
- NASDAQ down 1%, trading at 25,930.
- S&P: 7,520.
Rivian: dramatic reversal. Diluted shares. Sells 75 million shares to raise cash to pay DOE loan. Previously reported.
Senator Mitch McConnell: hospitalized for about three weeks; staff says he is "continuing his recovery." Was admitted June 14, 2026.
Hormuz Strait: still not fully open.
- Israel continues to attack Hezbollah in Lebanon.
**********************************
Back to the Bakken
WTI: $69.57. Up slightliy
New wells reporting:
- Wednesday, July 8, 2026: 14 for the month, 14 for the quarter, 367 for the year,
- 41232, conf, Oasis, Hoehn 5202 41-24 5B
- 41231, conf, Oasis, Hoehn 5202 41-24 4B,
- 41230, conf, Oasis, Hoehn 5202 41-24 2B,
- 41194, conf, Oasis, Hoehn 5202 41-24 3B,
- 40624, conf, Devon Energy, Skaar 15-22 7H,
- Tuesday, July 7, 2026: 9 for the month, 9 for the quarter, 362 for the year,
- 41620, conf, Devon Energy, Sanders 34-27 6H,
RBN Energy: as data centers come to more northeast states, natural gas market prepares for growth. Link here. Archived.
A
number of states have been early movers in the data center world, but
several in the Northeast — while not yet major data center hubs — are
laying the groundwork for a much bigger role. On top of that, a few
states may turn out to be real surprises. There are also a handful of
states intentionally shying away from the data center spotlight that
could be wildcards. In today’s RBN blog, we examine the plans of several
Northeastern states and how they could impact the region’s natural gas
market.
After being in virtual limbo for the past
couple of years, the Northeast gas market is reawakening, which we’ve
detailed in several previous blogs and our latest Drill Down Report, Wake Me Up.
Pipeline projects to expand connectivity between Appalachia and demand
centers are moving forward for the first time in years, including into
the previously off-limits New York/New Jersey and New England market
areas. Regional flow dynamics are poised to shift as expansions
debottleneck production and pathways out of the Appalachia producing
region, deepening seasonal patterns.
At the same time, structural changes, such as coal retirements
and new data centers, are driving additional gas demand, and we’re
already seeing more gas-related projects in areas where data centers are
planned or under construction. In our most recent blog,
we turned our attention to the states with already-giant data center
footprints — including Virginia and Ohio — that receive gas from
Appalachia and how pipeline developers are responding. Today’s blog
shifts the focus to several states flying under the radar.
Let’s start with the area known as the Chesapeake-Delaware Corridor (green-shaded area in Figure 1 below) Maryland (medium-green area) is emerging as a key up‑and‑coming data center market, with spillover from Northern Virginia’s Data Center Alley (see Sweet Virginia)
combining with a growing roster of large campuses. Key operators
include QTS Realty Trust, Digital Realty, COPT Data Center Solutions and
Aligned Data Centers, the last of which is building a roughly 264-MW,
four‑building campus in Frederick County (light-green area to right at
bottom of Figure 1). Much of the momentum centers on the Quantum
Loophole data center, a 2,100‑acre redevelopment of the former Alcoa
Eastalco site that hosts Aligned’s Quantum Frederick campus and other
hyperscale builds. Big projects like TeraWulf’s planned 1,000-MW
Chesapeake Data campus in Charles County, Atmosphere’s 300-MW Dickerson
Data Center in Montgomery County, and the 150-MW Security Land Baltimore
project, along with existing footprints from Amazon and Meta, add up to
multi-gigawatt sites. These could change Maryland from a niche market
to a secondary data center hub. Policy‑wise, Maryland is still crafting
rules around data-center growth. Some counties are developing
data-center-specific frameworks after community pushback, and there is growing talk of more cohesive statewide oversight as power demand ramps up.