ABANDONMENT
- Authority granted by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to stop
using facilities or stop providing service rendered by a natural gas company
in interstate commerce. Abandonment of gas allows producers to find new buyers
at newly negotiated rates. Gas not subject to FERC jurisdiction does not require
abandonment.
AFFILIATED MARKETER - A marketing company that is owned either
by an interstate pipeline, or a corporation that also owns an interstate pipeline
subsidiary.
AGENT -
A legal representative of buyers, sellers or shippers of natural gas in negotiation
or operations of contractual agreements.
ALTERNATE FUEL
- Other types of fuels that can be used by customers in the place of natural
gas such as coal, oil or propane.
BACKHAUL
- Transportation with the receipt point downstream of the delivery point. The
gas does not actually flow upstream but does benefit the pipeline system by
increasing delivery capacity. For this reason, backhauls are rarely curtailed,
even in peak periods.
BALANCING
- Making deliveries of gas into, or withdrawals from, a pipeline equal to the
contracted amount. Balancing may be accomplished daily, monthly or seasonally,
with penalties generally assessed for excessive imbalances.
BASE LOAD
- Amount of gas used on a day with no heating requirements (0 Degree Days).
BASE PRESSURE INDEX
- A device which continuously and automatically compensates to correct gas volume
at operating pressure to volume at base pressure, without regard for any correction
for temperature.
BEST EFFORTS
- An agreement by a contracting party to do his best to complete some specified
result. In a gas transportation contract it might represent a pledge by the
transporter to use his best efforts to transport the shipper's gas.
BCF - Billion
cubic feet; 1 million MCF.
BLANKET CERTIFICATE
- A FERC authorization covering multiple transactions under a single certificate.
BOIL OFF
- Volume of gas that is converted from LNG to gas due to the heat gain of the
storage vessel.
BROKER
- A company that brokers gas, without ever taking title to the gas. The broker
receives a fee for matching a buyer and a seller of gas.
BTU - British
Thermal Unit. A measure of the heat value of a fuel. One BTU is the amount of
heat required to raise the temperature of one pound of water one degree Fahrenheit.
BTU, DRY
- Heating value contained in a cubic foot of natural gas measured and calculated
free of moisture content. Contractually, dry may be defined as less than or
equal to seven pounds of water per one million cubic feet.
BTU, SATURATED (WET)
- The number of BTUs contained in a cubic foot of natural gas fully saturated
with water under actual delivery pressure, temperature and gravity conditions.
BY-PASS
- Method by which a customer gains access to direct deliveries of gas from a
supplier other than its traditional supplier. Distributors may "by-pass" their
pipeline supplier by building interconnects with other pipelines; industrial
customers may "by-pass" their local distributor by tapping directly into an
interstate pipeline.
CALORIMETER
- An apparatus for measuring the amount of heat released by the combustion of
a compound or mixture.
CAPACITY BROKERING
- Process by which a party sells or rents firm capacity it holds on a pipeline.
CASINGHEAD GAS
- Gas produced with oil in oil wells; taken from the well through the casinghead
at the top of the well. Casinghead gas has high priority for delivery under
state prorationing laws, since shutting in gas would also mean shutting off
oil production.
CCF - 100
Cubic Feet.
CD CONVERSION
- Process by which pipeline customers can convert firm demand sales volumes
to firm transportation under Orders 436/500.
CERTIFIED CAPACITY
- The total certified capacity of a pipeline is the sum of the increments authorized
in various certificates by the FERC. If a particular construction program will
change the transmission or storage capacity of the pipeline, the certificate
filing must explain the change.
CITY BANK
- Delivery point imbalance. See Imbalance.
CITY GATE
- The physical location where gas is delivered by a pipeline to a local distribution
company (LDC).
COGENERATION
- The sequential production of electricity and useful thermal energy from the
same energy source. Natural gas is a favored fuel for combined-cycle cogeneration
units, in which waste heat is converted to electricity.
COMPRESSED NATURAL
GAS (CNG) - Natural gas in high-pressure surface containers that is
highly compressed (though not to the point of liquefaction). CNG is used extensively
as a transportation fuel for automobiles, trucks and busses in some parts of
Italy, New Zealand, and in Western Canada.
COMMODITY CHARGE
- That portion of a natural gas rate based upon the volume actually purchased.
CONFIRMED NOMINATION
(Scheduled Quantity) - An agreement by a seller to deliver/cause delivery or
a transporter to receive and deliver a specific quantity of gas for a specified
period at various points under a Sales or Transportation Agreement or for all
contracts at one specific point. The confirmed nomination is in response to
a purchaser's or shipper's nomination.
CONTRACT DEMAND
- Daily quantity of gas which the supplier agrees to furnish and for which the
buyer agrees to pay, under a specific contract.
CUBIC FOOT
- The amount of gas required to fill a volume of one cubic foot under standard
conditions of temperature, pressure and water vapor. Roughly, one cubic foot
equals one thousand BTU's.
CUSHION GAS
- The gas required in a reservoir, used for storage of natural gas, so that
reservoir pressure is such that the storage gas may be recovered.
CURTAILMENT
- Reduction of gas deliveries because of a shortage of supply or because demand
for service exceeds a pipeline's capacity. Usually there is a hierarchy of customers,
in which some may be required to partially or totally cut back takes of gas
before others. Industrial users, for example, are usually curtailed before service
to residential users.
DECATHERM/ONE
MMBTU - 10 Therms; 1 MMBTU; 1 million BTU.
DEGREE DAY DEFICIENCY
(DDD) - A unit that represents one degree of deviation from 65o
in the mean daily outdoor temperature and that is used to measure heat requirements.
Example: If high temperature is 50o F and low temperature is 26o
F, then the mean temperature is 38o F and the DDD is 27 (65o
minus 38o).
DELIVERY POINT
- A point at which gas leaves a transporter's system completing a sale or transportation
service transaction between the transporter company and a sale or transportation
service customer.
DEMAND CHARGE
- The portion of a gas charge that reflects a customer's contract requirements.
Usually a set monthly fee, based on contract requirements.
DIRECT CUSTOMER
(DIRECTS) - A direct end-user customer of a pipeline, service is provided
without the presence of an LDC and is non-jurisdictional (unregulated).
DISCOUNTS
- Reduced transportation rates offered to capture alternate fuel load, may be
across the board or selective.
DESIGN DAY
- The day in which the design DDD occurs and is used to plan gas supply.
DISPLACEMENT
- The method by which equivalent volumes of gas are delivered from one point
on a pipeline's system to another point without a continuous flow of molecules
from the first point to the second. "Backhauls" are one form of displacement.
DOWNSTREAM PIPELINE
- The pipeline receiving natural gas at a pipeline inter-connect point.
END-USER
- Any entity which is the ultimate consumer for natural gas. An end-user purchases
the gas for consumption but not for resale purposes.
ENTITLEMENT
- Working interest owner's share of production. This quantity may not equal
actual sales due to contractual or market conditions.
FERC
(Federal Energy Regulatory Commission) - The federal agency created in 1977
to regulate, among other things, interstate wholesale sales and transportation
of gas at "just and reasonable" rates. Formerly the Federal Power Commission.
FERC-OUT
- Clause in a producer/pipeline contract that allows a pipeline to adjust the
price to reflect regulatory actions by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
FLEX RATES
- Monthly price changes in pipeline rates, within a minimum/maximum range.
FIRM LOAD
- High priority load that must be served on the peak day.
FIRM TRANSPORTATION
- Transportation services for which facilities have been designed, installed,
and dedicated to a certified quantity. Firm transportation service takes priority
over interruptible service.
FORCE MAJEURE
- An "Act of God" or unexpected and disruptive event beyond the control of buyer
or seller which interferes with a party's ability to perform under a contract.
A force majeure event will typically relieve a party from a contract obligation.
FUEL -
A quantity of gas required by a transporter to provide the transportation service.
The majority of fuel is utilized by compression facilities. Also called fuel
use, compressor fuel or shrinkage.
GAS
DAY - A period of twenty-four (24) consecutive hours commencing at
a specified hour on a given calendar day and ending at the same specified hour
on the next succeeding calendar day.
GAS INVENTORY CHARGE
(GIC) - A charge proposed by a number of pipelines to be collected
from sales customers to cover the costs of holding gas reserves to supply those
customers. The charge, somewhat similar to the old minimum bill, would be based
on the amount of gas a customer reserves but does not take.
GAS PLANT
- Any plant which performs one of the following functions: removing liquefiable
hydrocarbons from wet gas or casinghead gas (gas processing); removing undesirable
gaseous and particulate elements from natural gas (gas treatment); removing
water or moisture from the gas stream (dehydration).
GATHERING SYSTEM
- A series of pipe connecting one or more natural gas wells which is used to
deliver gas into a mainline transmission system. The system is typically managed
by a single operator.
GRI (Gas
Research Institute) - FERC approved GRI funding unit.
HINSHAW
PIPELINE - Refers to a section of the Natural Gas Act that exempts
from FERC regulation the transportation and sale for resale of interstate natural
gas provided that it is received within the boundaries of a state, it is consumed
within the state, and the facilities and rates are regulated by the state.
INDEXING
- Tying the commodity price in a contract to other published prices, such as
spot prices for gas or alternate fuels.
IMBALANCE
- A. Receipt Point Imbalance - When a producer delivers a quantity
of gas that is larger or smaller than the quantity nominated by the shipper.
B. Delivery Point
Imbalance - When a pipeline delivery point takes a quantity of gas less
than the quantity nominated by the shipper, also known as a city bank.
C. End-User Imbalance
- When an end-user has gas transported to the LDC's citygate and that quantity
is larger or smaller than the end-user's actual use for the period. Depending
upon the LDC's policies, these may be offset in another manner such as sales
gas for underdeliveries.
D. Pipeline Imbalance
- The total imbalance between a pipeline and a shipper equal to the algebraic
sum of the Receipt Point Imbalance and the Delivery Point Imbalance.
IMBALANCE STATEMENT
- A monthly report from a pipeline that shows the imbalance between the pipeline
and the shipper for a particular transportation agreement. See Imbalance.
INDEX PRICE
- A price for natural gas delivered to a specified point for a specified period
that is based on actual transactions. A gas contract may use an index based
formula to determine the price of gas sold.
INTERCONNECT
- A point at which facilities of two pipelines interconnect.
INTERRUPTIBLE LOAD
- Load used by customers with alternate fuel who have elected to purchase under
the optional rate schedule. This load may be curtailed at the gas company's
option to lower the amount of gas during a particular period.
INTERSTATE GAS
- Gas transported through interstate pipelines to be sold and consumed in states
other than the one in which it was produced.
INTRASTATE GAS
- Gas sold and consumed in the state where it was produced and not transported
in interstate pipelines.
JURISDICTIONAL
- That portion of the pipeline's activities subject to regulatory oversight.
Untitled Document
LANDFILL
GAS - Gas produced by aerobic and anaerobic decomposition of a landfill
generally composed of approximately 55% methane and 45% carbon dioxide, sometimes
refined with membrane methods to eliminate the carbon dioxide.
LATERAL
- A pipe in a gas distribution or transmission system which branches away from
the central and primary part of the system.
LOAD FACTOR
-The rates of the average day to the peak day. A peak load of twice the average
results in a load factor of 50%. If the load is the same each day of the period,
the load factor is 100%.
LDC - Local
Distribution Company - A company engaged in the sale and distribution of natural
gas for ultimate consumption.
LNG - Liquefied
Natural Gas.
LPG - Liquefied
Propane Gas.
MARKETER
- A company, other than a pipeline or LDC, that buys and resells gas for a profit.
Marketers also perform a variety of related services associated with moving
their product to buyers, including arranging transportation, monitoring deliveries
and balancing. An independent marketer is not affiliated with a pipeline, producer
or LDC.
MARKET OUT
- A price clause in a producer/pipeline contract that allows a pipeline to adjust
the price to be market responsive.
MCF - One
thousand cubic feet. The average domestic user consumes 100-200 Mcf annually.
Very roughly, 1 Mcf = 1 MMBtu = 1 Dth.
MEAN TEMPERATURE
- Sum of the daily high and low temperatures divided by two.
METHANE (CH4)
- The first of the paraffin series of hydrocarbons. The chief constituent of
natural gas. Pure methane has a heating value of 1012 Btu per cubic foot.
MMBTU -
1,000,000 BTU, 1 Decatherm, 10 Therms.
MMCF -
One million cubic feet; 1,000 MCF; 10,000 CCF.
NATURAL
GAS - Gaseous hydrocarbons - principally methane - found in porous
geological formations.
NATURAL GAS ACT
OF 1938 (NGA) - Federal law giving the FPC/FERC jurisdiction over:
1) Interstate transportation of gas; 2) The sale in interstate commerce for
resale of gas; and 3) companies that do either of those things.
NATURAL GAS POLICY
ACT OF 1978 (NGPA) - Enacted in an era of concern over energy shortages
and increasing reliance on oil imports, this federal law adopted a phased-in
deregulation for "new" natural gas, or gas discovered after 1977 ("old" gas
was to remain regulated) and incentive prices for certain types of natural gas
to encourage increased exploration and production. Also established an incremental
pricing surcharge to some industrial users. Total decontrol may come in this
session of Congress, given the strong bipartisan support for a "simple" decontrol
bill introduced by Democrat Philip Sharp from Indiana, Chairman of the House
Energy and Power Subcommittee. His bill decontrols gas as contracts expire or
are renegotiated, with final decontrol of all prices set for January 1, 1993.
NETBACK PRICING
- A contractual arrangement in which the price of gas at the wellhead is based
on what it sells for at the burner-tip. The market price is defined as the burner-tip
price, less transportation and distribution costs, including the profit margins
of pipelines and distribution and distribution companies.
NOMINATION
- A request for a physical quantity of gas under a specific purchase, sales
or transportation agreement or for all contracts at a specific point. A nomination
will continue for specified number of days or until superseded by another service
request for the same contract.
NON-JURISDICTIONAL
- That portion of the pipeline's activities that are unregulated.
NON-PERFORMANCE
- Failure to deliver gas under an interruptible contract in the spot market.
NOTICE OF INQUIRY
(NOI) - Procedure used by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
to gather information on a specified industry issue. Normally calls for comments
from all interested parties and in some cases, reply comments and/or public
hearings.
NOTICE OF PROPOSED
RULING (NOPR) - A proposal by the FERC to change its rules. Sometimes
preceded by a Notice of Inquiry. Normally calls for comments from all interested
parties and in some cases, reply comments and/or public hearings. A NOPR may
or may not result in a final rule.
ODORANT
- Any material added to natural or LP gas in small concentrations to impart
a distinctive odor. Odorants in common use include various mercaptans, organic
sulfides, and blends of these. Compare MERCAPTANS.
OPERATOR
- An entity which manages and controls a facility and the gas moving through
that facility. The operator performs the day to day operations, contract scheduling,
communications, and routinely monitors, tests, and repairs facilities and/or
measurement equipment. The operator is not necessarily the owner. A producer
operator operates a well. A transportation operator operates a gathering system,
pipeline or legal distribution company. A plant operator operates a processing
or extraction plant. A consumer operator operates an end use facility.
ORDER 436
- A FERC rule promulgated in October, 1985, establishing a voluntary, open-access
system of transportation. The major components of the rule are: an expedited
abandonment policy; blanket certification and self-implementing non-discriminatory
transportation; and optional, expedited certificates for new pipeline projects.
Order 436 transportation included an option for the pipeline's firm customers
to reduce their contract demand for sales volumes over a five-year period. Transportation
was also to be allotted on a "first come, first served" basis. This order has
now been replaced by Order 500.
ORDER 500 -
An interim rule on open-access transportation, replacing Order 436, after it
was vacated by the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals in August, 1987. In the AGD
-v- FERC decision, the Court did not order FERC to rewrite the open-access rules,
but criticized the Commission for failing to explain how the order would relieve
interstate pipelines of high take-or-pay burdens. Order 500 embodies all the
elements of Order 436 with three additional features: forcing producers to credit
transportation volumes against accruing take-or-pay (cross-crediting); allowing
pipelines to directly bill customers for part of past take-or-pay charges; and
providing pipelines with an opportunity to fashion new gas charges to take care
of future take-or-pay (which have since been called gas inventory holding charges
or supply reservation fees).
ORIGIN
- See Source.
OVERRUN
- Volumes of gas taken above the correct maximum, may be authorized or unauthorized.
Unauthorized overruns can result in penalties charged by the pipeline.
PEAK
DAY - Maximum sendout occurring during a 24-hour period.
PEAK HOUR
- Maximum sendout during a one-hour period.
PEAK SHAVING
- Supply fuel gas for distribution systems from an auxiliary source (of limited
supply, higher cost) during periods of maximum demand when the primary source
is not adequate.
PIPELINE
- An entity engaged in the sale and transportation of natural gas in intrastate
or interstate commerce.
PIPELINE CAPACITY
- The maximum quantity of gas that can be moved through a pipeline system at
any given time based on existing service conditions such as available horsepower,
pipeline diameter(s), maintenance schedules, regional demand for natural gas,
etc.
PIPELINE DAY
- The 24-hour period designated by each pipeline company for the operation of
its pipeline system.
PRESSURE BASE
- The factor for pressure used in determining a gas quantity, expressed in terms
of pounds of pressure per square inch that the gas would exert on the walls
of a container of one cubic foot volume.
PRIOR PERIOD CORRECTION
- Restatement of a production month's measurement allocation or contract quantities
in subsequent months.
PROCESS GAS
- Gas use for which alternate fuels are not technically or economically feasible
(applications requiring precise temperature controls or flame characteristics.
PROCESSING PLANT
- See Gas Plant.
PRODUCER
- Any party owning, controlling, managing, or leasing any gas well and/or any
party who produces in any manner natural gas by taking it from the earth or
waters.
PTR - (Plant
Thermal Reduction) - The BTU equivalent of the liquid products extracted from
the producer's gas plus the portion of plant fuel necessary to extract those
liquids, plant flare and other plant losses. When expressed as MCFs this is
referred to as Plant Volume Reduction or PVR.
PVR - (Plant
Volume Reduction) - See PTR.
RATE
BASE - The investment value established by a regulatory authority upon
which a utility is permitted to earn a specified rate of return.
RELEASED GAS
- Gas previously contracted and dedicated between producers/brokers and a transporter
company which, through mutual agreement between the parties, was thereafter
"released" from contract and ultimately made available for purchase by third
parties.
RECEIPT POINT
- A point at which gas enters a transporter's system, may be a wellhead, an
interconnect or a processing plant tailgate.
RESERVATION FEE
- Similar to a demand charge.
ROYALTY
- The amount paid to interest owners. In gas and oil operations, usually based
on a percentage of the total production.
SENDOUT
- Total volume of gas supplied from all sources for a particular period.
SHIPPER
- A legal entity who contracts with a transporter to move gas over the transporter's
system.
SHRINKAGE
- See Fuel.
SHUT-IN WELL
- A well that has been completed but is not producing. (It may be shut-in for
tests, repairs, or to await construction of gathering lines.) In recent years
wells have been shut-in when buyers refused to take the gas, or when producers
decided that the market price of gas was not sufficient to meet operating costs.
SOURCE
- The field or block in which the well is located.
SPECIAL MARKETING
PROGRAMS (SMP's) - A program launched by FERC (now ruled illegal by
the courts) that allowed producer gas--previously committed to a pipeline or
distribution company--to be released and sold at market prices to an end-user
or distributor whose alternative gas or fuel sources enabled it to switch suppliers
rather than pay the higher prices generally charged by the pipeline. FERC intended
the SMP's to allow gas producers to make price concessions and market gas that
would otherwise be shut-in, while relieving pipelines of take-or-pay liabilities.
The D.C. Circuit found that SMP's discriminated against "captive" customers.
SPOT MARKET
- A market characterized by short-term, typically interruptible or best efforts
contracts for specified volumes of gas.
SPOT SALE
- Short term sale of gas to an end-user, LDC, or pipeline for which the duration
varies.
STORAGE
- Subsurface facilities used to store gas which has been transferred from its
original location. Usually consists of natural geological reservoirs like depleted
oil or gas fields or water-bearing sands sealed on top by an impermeable cap
rock.
STORAGE GAS
- Supplemental sources of gas available from pipeline supplier. Limitations
are set on maximum daily quantities as well as seasonal quantities that may
be withdrawn.
SYSTEM SUPPLY
- Purchases of natural gas for the purchaser's own system supply requirements.
TAKE
OR PAY - The clause in a gas supply contract which provides that for
a specific period, a specific minimum quantity of gas must be paid for, whether
or not delivery is accepted by the purchaser. Some contracts contain a time
period in which the buyer may take later delivery of the gas without penalty.
TAILGATE
- The outlet side of a gas plan that connects to the pipeline.
TARIFF
- A gas company schedule detailing the terms, conditions and rate information
applicable to various types of natural gas service. This document is filed with
and approved by FERC or a state regulatory body.
TEMPERATURE SENSITIVE
LOAD - That portion of the total load used for heating which is temperature
sensitive. During cold periods this is the largest part of the sendout.
THERM -
100,000 BTU.
311 TRANSPORTATION
- Self-implementing transportation under Order 436/500. Pipelines which provide
311 service must do so on a non-discriminatory basis, but have the ability to
shut down 311 service across the board whenever they choose. For most pipelines,
this has been the only open access service available.
7(c) TRANSPORTATION
- Section 7(c) of the Natural Gas Act is FERC's authority to issue certificates
for transportation and sale-for-resale of gas in interstate commerce. It can
do this individually, or generically (as in the various blanket certificate
programs and Order 436/500). Today Section 7(c) transportation typically refers
to orders approving specific transportation proposals for identified shippers
and pipelines.
TRANSPORTATION AGREEMENT
- An agreement between a shipper and transportation company which defines the
terms and conditions of the transportation services and transportation transfer
to be provided.
TRANSPORTER
- A legal entity which has the capability of providing the service of transporting
gas. Transporter includes gathering companies, pipeline companies and local
distribution companies.
UNACCOUNTED
FOR GAS - The difference between purchases and sales. It is caused
by measurement errors, leakage, cycle billing and other differences.
UPSTREAM PIPELINE
- The first pipeline to transport natural gas en route to an inter-connect point
for delivery to another pipeline.
WACOG
- Weighted Average Cost of Gas. Formula used by pipelines to determine the cost
of gas underlying their sales rate.
WELLHEAD
- The physical connection to the actual well supply. Frequently used to describe
the pipeline receipt point, even if a gathering system is used.
WIND CHILL FACTOR
- Equivalent temperature of still air for a given temperature and wind speed.
WORKING INTEREST
OWNER - The interest in a mineral property or serves which entitle
the owner to the production from the property, usually subject to a royalty
and sometimes to other non-operating interests. A working interest permits the
owner to explore, develop and operate the property.
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