"Was a great high wall there that tried to stop me? Was a great big sign
there said private Property but on the back side it didn't say nothing. That
side was made for you and me." -- Woody Guthrie 1912-1967, American Folksinger
and Songwriter
According to the Dept of Energy they project that the demand for natural gas
could reach up to 30Tcf per year between 2015to 2020; this represents an increase
of 41% from the current 23Tcf consumed each year. The Energy information administration
(EIA) estimates there are roughly 1,729 Trillion cubic of natural gas reserves
in the United States. The national petroleum council estimates that only 1,451
trillion cubic feet are recoverable. At the current rate of consumption and
assuming we are able to tap all the available reserves of natural gas, we have
roughly a 75 year supply of this precious commodity. However if we use the
2015-2020 consumption figures then it drops down to 57 years and that's assuming
we are able to tap the entire 1,729 with using the higher reserve figures from
the EIA and not the lower figure issued by the national petroleum council.

http://www.eia.doe.gov
It's extremely unlikely that we will be in a position to tap all the reserves
due to the following problems:
- Some of these supplies are on federally protected land and its very hard
or next to impossible to get permission to drill on these lands.
- Environmental groups will object to drilling in certain locations and thus
could significantly delay or prevent drilling completely.
- Transportation facilities. This is probably the biggest factor in determining
new drilling sites. First of all it's not easy to transport natural gas as
is the case with oil. If there is no existing network of pipelines then drilling
does not makes sense as natural gas cannot be transported easily and the
building of new pipelines might make the endeavor economically unfeasible
at that point in time.
Gas production has already peaked in the US and it appears to have peaked
in Canada too. Some experts claim that production in Alberta peaked in 2001
when it produced 5.1 Tcf; Alberta is the largest exporter of natural gas to
the huge US market. To make maters worse as oil production is ramped up in
the Tar sand regions of Canada larger amount of natural gas will be consumed
locally. The extraction process consumes huge amounts of natural gas.
The situation appears to be so bad that the old Fed Head Alan Greenspan testified
twice before the congressional committee on this issue. In June 2003 he made
the following statement in front of them "Yesterday the price of gas for
delivery in July closed at $6.31 per million British thermal units (Btu). That
contract sold for as low as $2.55 in July 2000 and for $3.65 a year ago." He
was trying to illustrate that demand had increased so much and supplies were
extremely tight; hence the market was ripe for an extreme move. It appears
that so far they have paid very little attention to him. Perhaps when this
contract trades in the 9.00-11 dollar ranges they might start to pay attention.
In 1973 pertoleum and gas fired plants produced 17% and 18% of the electricity
while nuclear power plants produced 3%. Today petrolem plants produce less
then 3%, nuclear power plants 20% and gas powered plants are still producing
18%. However the output has more then doubled since 1973 hence we are using
a lot more natural gas now then we were in 1973. Since the 1990's natrual gas
was being pumped as the solution to our problems, not only was it cleaner buring
but supposedly there was no supply problem in sight. Almost all the power plants
buidl in the 90's were gas fired and almost all new houses built today come
with natural gas furnaces. Business and consumers fully embraced natural gas
as they bought the hype that was being put out by the so called nutty experts.
According to the American gas association 55% of American homes use natural
gas for heating or cooking. Now they are starting to realize all is not well
and in a few years they will find out just how bad things really are.
The world has huge reserves of natural gas but the problem is transporting
these readily avaialbe resounces. Bill O'Grady an energy analyst from A.G.
Edwards sums up this situation rather well. "There's lots of natural gas
in the world, but there are no pipelines running from Kazakhstan to Los Angeles."
Then there is a lot of noise about LNG (liquid natural gas) being the solution
to our problems. LNG facilities are extremely expensive and very attractive
targets for terrorits. LNG facilities not only cost a fortune but also take
years to build; hence there is a huge lag period between implementation and
production.
According to the Gas technology institute (GTI) it now costs roughly 155 million
dollars to build a LNG tanker. The regassification termial cost on average
one billion dollars but it can be as low as 100 million and as high as 2 billion
depending on location. The biggest cost is the actual liquefaction plant, prices
range from 1.5 billion to 2 billion dollars. Hence to get this operation rolling
you need a liquefaction plant, LNG tankers and then a regassiication plant.
The cost of this operation runs in the billions of dollars and it's not something
that can be implmented immediately; such facilities take years to build. Thus
even if the US fully embraced this concept seveal years would have to elapse
before they started to pay off.
Then there are severe dangers associated with LNG tankers;
1) First of they are massive; the size of 3 football fields and ones forward
view is extremely limited. In fact these tankers are so huge that ones forward
view for ¾ of a mile is blocked. This means that you cannot clearly
see if the caost is clear; a potentially dangerous situation in our opinion.
2) They are 12 stories high, have a top speed of roughly 20 knotts and it
takes 5 miles to bring these ships to a halt. If terrorists ever had to get
hold of one of these the damage they could cause would be totally unimaginable.
3) They carry approximately 20 billion gallons of natural gas which contains
the energy of roughly 55 Hiroshima bombs. To put this into perspective in the
1944 LNG disaster one square mile of Cleveland was incinerated; todays LNG
tankers contain 20 times more energy then this.
We think several of the above reasons will serve to limit the growth of LNG
facilities in the US. Even if they don't it's going to take years to build
them so they will not be able to provide any sort of relief for the next several
years; by that time natural gas could be trading as high as 21 dollars.
Let's take a look at what the charts are saying.

www.prophetfinance.com
This is a 2 year chart of the continuous contract. One can see after soaring
to a high of 15 dollars it has experienced a rapid and brutal correction. This
move down was exacerbated by the fact that so many hedge funds had taken out
huge long positions on the futures markets; when the market turned their haste
to bail out created a melt down. Amaranth Advisors alone lost 6.5 billion dollars
on this trade and will be going belly up soon Full
Story. As they say one man's disaster is another's opportunity. The technical
picture looks extremely good given the fact that demand is simply going to
skyrocket in the years to come. AT Tactical Investor we refer to such occurrences
as an intra market positive divergence signal. As with all sectors some stocks
will do very well and some will not budge. However If you spend time doing
a little footwork you should be able to position yourself in the right stocks.
If you don't have the time then you can join us and let us do the work for
you. We have identified several interesting stocks in this sector.
The old main up trend line (black) has now become a zone of resistance and
note the last 3 break out attempts failed. One positive is that the main down
trend line has been penetrated to the upside and so it appears that a new trend
is in the process of emerging. Since natural gas has taken off so fast in such
a relatively short period of time we expect it to pull back a bit before taking
off again.
Conclusion
Unlike oil there are huge supplies of natural gas all over the world; the
problem however is getting those supplies to the right markets. In that sense
the situation in natural gas could be described as being worse then the current
oil situation. At least if a new huge well of oil is found, transporting those
supplies from A to B is a very simple process; the same cannot be said of Natural
gas. This is one of the reasons there has been a huge push for nuclear energy
and eventually we believe there will be a push for coal which we refer to as
the other black gold.
"Procrastination is the grave in which opportunity is buried." --
Source Unknown