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[ Seite: 1, 2, 3 … 39, 40, 41 … 348, 349, 350, neuster Beitrag ]
schrieb am 30.09.10 08:05:22
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.:
40.233.824 von saarwebweb am 29.09.10
18:00:45Nö, Kontrakt zum Zeitpunkt x mit y Preis.
schrieb am 30.09.10 15:08:42
USA: Erstanträge auf Arbeitslosenhilfe sinken stärker als erwartet.
Hoffentlich "erstarkt" die US-Wirtschaft wieder und Gas wird
verstärkt, trotz -vielleicht -geschlossener Quellen,
nachgefragt?
schrieb am 30.09.10 16:42:10
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.:
40.240.599 von lotto35 am 30.09.10
15:08:42Erneuter Lageranstieg über Erwartung ......
EIA Erdgasbericht: Die Erdgas-Lagerhaltung steigt um 74 BCF,
erwartet wurde ein Anstieg um 70 BCF.
..ich fürchte ich kann nochmal bei 0,30 nachkaufen.....
schrieb am 30.09.10 18:49:41
Immerhin sind wir hier informiert.
Wir könnens nur noch nicht umsetzen:
European Natural-Gas Trading Rose 11% Last Year
By Lars Paulsson - Sep 30, 2010 11:41 AM GMT+0200
Natural-gas trading volumes in Europe rose last year on increased
activity in the U.K. and Germany, even as consumption of the fuel
dropped, Prospex Research Ltd. said.
Gas contracts bought and sold in the region, including
over-the-counter deals, exchange trades and unrecorded over-the-
counter transactions, rose 11 percent to 21,856 terawatt-hours, the
London-based consultants said in a draft of a report scheduled for
publication tomorrow.
European trading in the fuel remains dominated by the U.K., where
the volume of traded contracts was almost 17 times greater than
consumption. Buyers and sellers included the utilities Centrica Plc
and Scottish & Southern Energy Plc and banks such as Morgan
Stanley and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Europe’s biggest market for
the fuel accounted for more than three quarters of the regional
trading volume, according to the report.
“The double impact of a financial-market crisis followed by
economic recession hit the U.K. market harder than the smaller and
younger mainland markets,” authors including Nigel Harris of
Kingston Energy Consulting Ltd. wrote in the report. “By mid-2009,
the U.K.’s trading activity had picked up again and continued to
grow in 2010,” they wrote.
German, Dutch, Gains
Natural-gas volumes bought and sold in the U.K. in 2009 amounted to
16,684 terawatt-hours, a gain of 4 percent from the previous year.
German activity rose 134 percent to 955 terawatt- hours, while the
Netherlands, the second-biggest traded market after the U.K.,
gained 23 percent to 2,680 terawatt-hours, according to the
report.
The commodity’s churn-rate, or the number of times a country’s
consumption volume is traded, was 6.6 in the Netherlands, 3.7 in
Belgium and 1.1 in Germany.
European natural-gas consumption slumped 6.3 percent last year from
2008, as factories used less of the fuel during the worst recession
since World War II, Prospex said.
Global trade in natural gas increased 7.7 percent last year, BP Plc
said June 9 in its annual Statistical Review of World Energy.
Global trade in liquefied natural gas grew 7.6 percent in 2009,
bolstered by rising exports from Qatar and Russia, even as the
recession squeezed worldwide gas use, BP said.
Prospex Research gathers data from official statistics, exchange
volumes and estimates from brokers and trading companies to compile
the reports. The European Gas Trading 2010 report is published
tomorrow.
To contact the reporters on this story: Lars Paulsson in London at
lpaulsson@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Stephen Voss at
sev@bloomberg.net
schrieb am 01.10.10 09:17:07
Was ich nicht nachvollziehen kann ist die Divergenz zwischen WTI
und Gas.
Erdgas ist ein Energieträger wie Öl auch. Wenn Erdgas so billig ist
wie selten, dann sollte es sich doch lohnen, die Gaskraftwerke auf
Hochtouren laufen zu lassen.
Ich verstehe es einfach nicht.


schrieb am 01.10.10 11:30:29
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.:
40.245.995 von Fuenfvorzwoelf am 01.10.10
09:17:07Dito, wer aber produziert auf Vorrat? Wer bindet
soviel Geld? Betriebswirtschaftlich der Wahnsinn!
schrieb am 01.10.10 13:43:18
Energy Department says natural gas supplies rise
By The Associated Press (AP) – 19 hours ago
Natural gas inventories grew more than analysts expected last week
but remained lower than year-ago levels, the Energy Department said
Thursday.
Natural gas held in underground storage in the lower 48 states
increased by 74 billion cubic feet to 3.414 trillion cubic feet for
the week ended Sept. 24, the Energy Department said.
Supplies are 4.6 percent less than last year's level of 3.580
trillion cubic feet and 6.3 percent more than the five-year average
of 3.212 trillion cubic feet, the Energy Information Administration
said in its weekly report.
Analysts had predicted an increase of 67 billion cubic feet to 71
billion cubic feet in the supplies, according to a survey by
Platts, the energy information arm of McGraw-Hill Cos.
Natural gas fell 13.7 cents to $3.825 per 1,000 cubic feet in
morning trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
schrieb am 01.10.10 13:46:52
Gas demand to grow in non-OECD states
1 October 2010
DUBAI — Long-term gas demand will grow mostly in non-OECD countries
with China and India showing the most impressive growth rates
and the Middle East having the largest incremental growth,
according to an International Energy Agency expert.
Hideomi Ito, Natural Gas Analyst with the IEA, said on Thursday
that the OECD Europe gas demand would grow only by 0.8 per cent per
year over 2007-30. Limited demand growth in the medium term in OECD
countries will also affect gas demand, he said
He told a fertilizer convention in Dubai that economic recovery and
requirements from power generators are two major uncertainties
determining the long-term gas demand.
He said that gas would be increasingly used to back up wind,
implying need for flexibility in transmission and storage.
Ito explained that China’s gas demand has been increasing by
10bcm/y over the past years. China consumed 89bcm in 2009, close to
UK or Germany’s gas demand and demand increasing by over 20 per
cent in H1 2010. Chinese companies see demand reaching 200 bcm by
2020.
China has been investing to secure new supplies and improving
distribution network in addition to implementing plans to boost
domestic gas production, he said.
India’s gas demand increased by 38 per cent to 59 bcm in 2009, Ito
said. By 2013, China and India will have a combined LNG import
capacity of 65 bcm, roughly what Europe imported in 2009, he
added.
The IEA expert said that unconventional gas will be a global game
changer.
One way to define unconventional gas is as natural gas that
cannot be produced at economic flow rates nor in economic
volumes of natural gas unless the well is stimulated by a large
hydraulic fracture treatment, a horizontal wellbore, or by using
multilateral wellbores or some other technique to expose more of
the reservoir to the wellbore.
Ito said that growth of the US unconventional gas has had regional
and international consequences.
The regional consequences included low utilisation of US LNG
terminals and change in investments.
The global consequences included drop in spot prices due to
aggravation of oversupply, more LNG being available for other
markets such as Europe and Asia, LNG projects targeting the US
being discouraged, and increasing interest for unconventional gas
in importing countries, but also in major producing/exporting
countries as well.
He said that the potential of unconventional resources is still
poorly mapped and quantified even in the US. It is difficult to
apply the same methodology as for conventional gas.
There are also uncertainties on how much of this gas is actually
recoverable.
The success of unconventional gas will depend on the identification
of the location and potential of the best areas, availability of
rigs and engineers, acceptance by local communities and landowners,
resolution of environmental issues such as water management, and
the possibility to link to existing pipeline infrastructure, Ito
pointed out.
Once some potential has been identified, public support and
environmental regulations will be the key, he said.
business@khaleejtimes.com
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