Southwestern Energy

Southwestern Energy is an American natural gas exploration and production company organized in Delaware and headquartered in Spring, Texas.[1] The company is ranked 642nd on the Fortune 500.[2] In the 2018 Forbes Global 2000, Southwestern Energy was ranked at 1973rd.[3]

Southwestern Energy Company
IndustryPetroleum industry
Founded1929 (1929) (as Arkansas Western Gas Company)
HeadquartersSpring, Texas, U.S.
Key people
William J. Way, CEO
Julian M. Bott, CFO
ProductsNatural gas
Production output
2.133 billion cubic feet of natural gas equivalent per day (2019)
Revenue $3.038 billion (2019)
$0.891 billion (2019)
Total assets $6.717 billion (2019)
Total equity $3.246 billion (2019)
Number of employees
923 (2019)
Websitewww.swn.com
Footnotes / references
[1]

The company's primary exploration and production activities are in the Appalachian Basin in Pennsylvania and West Virginia. The company also controls 2,518,519 net undeveloped acres in New Brunswick, Canada, which are subject to an indefinite moratorium on hydraulic fracturing and cannot be developed at this time.[1]

As of December 31, 2019, the company had 12.721 trillion cubic feet of natural gas equivalent of estimated proved reserves, of which 68% was natural gas, 29% was natural gas liquids, and 3% was petroleum, and all of which was in the Appalachian Basin.[1]

History

The company traces its roots to Arkansas Western Gas Company, which was established in July 1929 as a subsidiary of Southern Union Gas Company of Dallas.

In 1985, the company acquired Mustang Fuel for $200 million in stock.[4]

In 2013, the company acquired assets in the Marcellus Shale from Chesapeake Energy for $93 million.[5]

In December 2014, the company acquired 413,000 net acres in the Upper Devonian, Marcellus and Utica shales in West Virginia and Southwest Pennsylvania from Chesapeake Energy for $5.375 billion.[6][7]

In December 2018, the company sold its assets in the Fayetteville Shale for net proceeds of $1.65 billion.[8]

Controversies

Public opposition to hydraulic fracturing in New Brunswick, Canada

In 2003, shale gas was discovered in New Brunswick, Canada. In March 2010, Southwestern successfully bid for exclusive licenses from the Department of Natural Resources of New Brunswick to conduct an exploration program. In 2010, Corridor Resources, in partnership with Apache Corporation, which operated in McCully Field, announced that "it found more natural gas in place in southern New Brunswick than is available in all of western Canada's proven reserves." In July 2011, the company assured residents that it was only exploring, not drilling using hydraulic fracturing. Seismic equipment owned by Southwestern was vandalized in an isolated work camp in Cumberland Bay. In August 2011, protests against hydraulic fracturing were held in Fredericton, Sussex, Hampton, Norton and Rexton, New Brunswick. Local residents were "concerned that the seismic testing could lead to hydro-fracking in their communities" and that the fracking would "harm their air and water quality." According to Ralph Carr, the mayor of Sussex, New Brunswick, by December 2011, Southwestern and Apache, had "announced their intentions to aggressively search for gas in the deep shale deposits that lay beneath us." Carr argued that controversy about shale gas development in New Brunswick was partially fueled by media attention, when Windsor Energy conducted seismic testing within the town boundaries before Sussex town council had given official permission. Carr argued against an outright ban on shale gas production but admitted that, "[m]issteps and mistakes by some companies involved with shale gas production have caused environmental damage and tarnished the image of the industry as a whole." In early August 2011, 40 people from Penniac, Taymouth, Stanley, Rogersville and several First Nations blocked a road north of Stanley, stopping the company's trucks used in seismic testing. There was a blockade on New Brunswick Route 134 in Mi’kmaq territory in New Brunswick. On October 3, 2013, the Court of Queen's Bench in New Brunswick granted Southwestern an injunction to end the protests of the Elsipogtog First Nation. However, the protesters were undeterred, and on October 17, they blocked the highway and set several police cars on fire. The situation "exploded in violence, sending dozens of people to jail and reducing five police cars to smouldering ruins". The Royal Canadian Mounted Police said "more than 40 protesters were arrested for various offences including firearms offences, uttering threats, intimidation, mischief and for refusing to abide by a court injunction". In 2015, the provincial government in New Brunswick imposed a moratorium on hydraulic fracturing and in May 2016, the government announced that the moratorium would continue indefinitely.[9][10][11][12][13][14][1]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.