| Over one-third of natural gas produced in North Dakota is flared or otherwise not marketed |
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24/11/2011 02:51 (188 Day 13:12 minutes ago) | |||||
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The FINANCIAL -- Natural gas production in North Dakota has more than doubled since 2005, largely due to associated natural gas from the growing oil production in the Bakken shale formation.
Gas production averaged over 485 million cubic feet per day in September 2011, compared to the 2005 average of about 160 MMcfd.
A 2010 report by the North Dakota Pipeline Authority highlights an example of this, stating that one county was able to reduce its flaring from December 2008 to December 2009 by 62% with the addition of two new natural gas plants and the expansion of associated gas gathering systems. The report also details several other projects that have either come online recently or are planned to for the immediate future, which may reduce the amount of natural gas flared. The North Dakota Department of Mineral Resources estimated that in May 2011, nearly 36% of the natural gas produced did not make it to market.
Most of this gas—29% of the total gas produced—was flared. The remaining natural gas that did not make it to market—7% of total gas produced—is unaccounted for or lost, which means the gas may have been used as lease and plant fuel, or encountered losses during processing or transportation. According to current North Dakota state regulations, producers can flare natural gas for one year without paying taxes or royalties on it, and can ask for an extension on that period due to economic hardship of connecting the well to a natural gas pipeline. After one year, or when the extension runs out, producers can continue flaring but are responsible for the same taxes and royalties they would have paid if the natural gas went to market.
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