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DAILY ENERGY NEWS  | 11/06/2025
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Come on, come on, come on let me show you what it's all about...


Reuters (11/03/25) reports: "The U.S. has become the first country to export 10 million metric tonnes (mmt) of liquefied natural gas in a single month, according to preliminary data from financial firm LSEG. The U.S. exported a record 10.1 mmt of the liquid fuel in October, up from a revised figure of 9.1 mmt in September, LSEG data showed. The Plaquemines facility, located in Louisiana, sold 2.2 mmt last month, surpassing its previous high of 1.6 mmt in September, the data showed. Cheniere's Corpus Christi export facility exported 1.6 mmt, also a record for the plant. With Sabine Pass exporting 2.6 mmt in October, the company sold a combined 4.2 mmt, or 42% of all of the LNG exported by the U.S. When completed, the Corpus Christi Stage 3 operation will allow Cheniere to export more than 50 million metric tonnes per year starting in 2026, CEO Jack Fusco said in a recent earnings call. Venture Global and Cheniere were responsible for 72% of the country's total exports in October, LSEG data showed."
The Jackson 5 - ABC

"Our economy depends on conservation, recreation and sustainable tourism, not extraction. Those financial and environmental guardrails reinforce one another." 

 

– U.S. Rep. Zoe Lofgren, (D-CA)

Make Alaska Productive Again.


Wall Street Journal (11/04/25) opinion: "Amid partisan bickering over the government shutdown, Senate Republicans are still doing some useful work that could help Americans and the U.S. economy. Last week the Senate approved a resolution, 52-45, to reverse the Biden Administration’s giant Alaska land grab. No state suffered more from the Biden team’s lawless war on fossil fuels than Alaska. A case in point was the Interior Department’s move to restrict oil and gas leasing on 11 million acres in Alaska’s National Petroleum Reserve. Congress expressly set aside this region in 1923 for oil and gas development, but the Biden climateers didn’t care. Mr. Biden claimed to be honoring the 'culture, history, and enduring wisdom of Alaska Natives.' But Alaska’s indigenous leaders opposed his restrictions. The Biden “plan effectively locked up about half of the National Petroleum Reserve—an area Congress explicitly set aside for energy production—ignored Alaska Native voices, violated clear Congressional intent, and undermined our state’s ability to responsibly develop the resources that support our communities and strengthen our nation,” Alaska Sen. Dan Sullivan explained last week."

Europe, maybe you should try a bit harder.


Associated Press (11/06/25) reports: "Energy ministers from the United States and European countries were holding talks Thursday in Greece on how to use a newly upgraded regional pipeline network to better supply war-torn Ukraine as the Trump administration seeks to further ramp up gas exports to Europe. U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum were attending the meeting in Athens, hosted by the Atlantic Council, the Washington-based think tank. President Donald Trump is seeking to use America’s position as the world’s top exporter of liquified natural gas to press the EU to buy more U.S. gas, linking energy exports to broader trade negotiations. With Europe already the largest market for American LNG, attention has shifted to the so-called Vertical Corridor, a north-south gas route linking Greece with Bulgaria and Romania. Wright welcomed plans by the European Commission to phase out all Russian gas supplies to the EU over the next two years, saying it will 'both starve the Russian war machine and build a growing future relationship' between European nations and the United States."

Welcome to common sense, Bill.


Los Angeles Times (11/05/25) reports: "Last week, Bill Gates published a 17-page memo on his personal website that critics said pitted climate and public health efforts against each other, when they should instead be working in tandem. Monday night, speaking at Caltech in Pasadena, Gates doubled down, brushing off the critiques that came from across the ideological spectrum, including from climate scientists and President Trump. Stressing that philanthropic resources are finite, Gates said he’s shifted some of his efforts from preventing climate change to reducing human disease and malnutrition in a world that he said will undoubtedly become warmer. Gates’ critics within the climate science world say he is focusing on the wrong things. 'He’s sort of perpetually downplayed the importance of the clean energy transition with the technology we have in favor of promoting some future tech,' said Michael E. Mann, a climate scientist at the University of Pennsylvania. It could take decades for some of those technologies to be implemented at scale, said Mann."

Energy Markets

 
WTI Crude Oil: ↓ $59.13
Natural Gas: ↑ $4.29
Gasoline: ↑ $3.08
Diesel: ↓ $3.70
Heating Oil: ↑ $248.43
Brent Crude Oil: ↓ $63.05
US Rig Count: ↓ 566

 

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