Dominion Logo Have You Seen D Today
Customer Service Products News Investors About Us Contact Us
» Search
GO
Customer Service
Rate Tariff Information
Energy Choice
Energy-Saving Tips
Industrial Customer Care
Gathering-Producer Services
Pipeline Integrity Management Program
Gas Safety Tips
Gas Furnace Plastic Pipe Recall Notice
Contact Us
Natural Gas Prices —
Frequently Asked Questions

Dominion Peoples
Printer Version Print-Friendly Version

Select a topic below, or scroll down.

1. What's happening with natural gas prices?
2. Could you explain some of the market factors that have led to rising natural gas prices at the national level?
3. Gas prices have been volatile the past few years. Have we seen more of the same this year?
4. What is Dominion Peoples' current natural gas price?
5. Does Dominion Peoples earn higher profits when natural gas costs increase?
6. What can customers do to cope with higher winter heating costs this year?
7. I’ve heard about Energy Choice. How does the program work and can I potentially save money over Dominion Peoples’ Annual and Quarterly Gas Cost Rate?
8. Natural gas costs seemed relatively low in the 1990s. What happened?
9. Natural gas is primarily a domestically produced fuel while the United States has to import more than half of the oil its uses. Oil prices never used to have an impact on natural gas prices. Why have rising oil prices also led to rising natural gas prices now?
10. What impact does weather have on national market prices for natural gas?
11. How can the industry resolve the current imbalance between natural gas supply and demand, to return prices to more reasonable levels?
12. How quickly could new gas supplies from new exploration and production activity flow into the national market?
13. Why is it so hard for natural gas producers to keep up with demand?
14. What factors are preventing natural gas producers from moving into new, potentially promising natural gas producing areas?
15. Drilling more new wells can bring more gas to market in the short run, but if federal regulators fail to permit drilling in previously untapped areas, in reality, will we see a long-term solution to the tight natural gas supply situation that has led to sharply higher prices over the past five years?
16. Until, and unless, new areas are opened to exploration and production activity, what can the energy industry do to fill the natural gas supply gap?

Q: What’s happening with natural gas prices?

A: Nationally, natural gas prices have more than doubled in the past three years, because the production of new gas supplies has not kept pace with increasing demand. Natural gas is increasingly popular for use in homes, businesses, factories and electric power-generation because it is efficient, clean and reliable. This demand/supply imbalance has sharply increased market prices over the past three years.

Q: Could you explain some of the market factors that have led to rising natural gas prices at the national level?

A: Over the past few years, the construction and operation of dozens of new, natural gas-fired electrical generation plants has increased the overall demand for gas nationally. Unfortunately, the new gas production has not kept pace with that increasing demand.

Q: Gas prices have been volatile the past few years. Have we seen more of the same this year?

A: Yes. Natural gas is one of the most volatile commodities traded on the New York Mercantile Exchange, or Nymex. National market prices fluctuate widely, up and down, depending on such factors as hotter-than-normal weather and hurricanes, which disrupted the production and pipeline transportation of natural gas from the Gulf of Mexico. Also, the cost of competing fuels, such as oil, also can impact natural gas prices.

Q: What is Dominion Peoples’ current natural gas price?

A: Rates and tariffs can be viewed online.

^ Top

Q: Does Dominion Peoples earn higher profits when natural gas costs increase?

A: No. The Annual and Quarterly Gas Cost Rate, which accounts for majority of a customer's bill, represents costs associated with securing natural gas for our customers. By state law, Dominion Peoples cannot earn a profit on these costs, which is subject to quarterly adjustment. When natural gas prices rise, we pass along those higher costs directly to customers. Likewise, when gas costs fall, we pass along those savings to customers.

Q: What can customers do to cope with higher winter heating costs this year?

A: Dominion encourages customers to use energy more efficiently. Before winter, customers can improve their home insulation and have their furnaces and other natural gas appliances inspected by a qualified professional contractor to maximize efficiency and comfort.

Dominion’s Budget Billing Plan provides a way for customers to manage their gas bills to avoid seasonal fluctuation. Budget customers pay a predetermined amount per month to even out their natural gas bills. Dominion bases the budget amount on gas prices and customer usage over the past 12 months, and current gas prices.

Q: I’ve heard about Energy Choice. How does the program work and can I potentially save money over Dominion Peoples’ Annual and Quarterly Gas Cost Rate?

A: Dominion Peoples urges customers to check out their options to purchase natural gas from one of the suppliers participating in the Energy Choice program. You can review a list of current Energy Choice supplier offers online.

^ Top

Q: Natural gas costs seemed relatively low in the 1990s. What happened?

A: During the 1990s, consumers enjoyed natural gas at affordable prices because available natural gas supplies exceeded customer demand. In the year 2000, increasing demand and stagnant domestic natural gas production had combined to increase prices sharply. Supply and demand are now in a very tight balance and changes in the weather and economic activity have an almost immediate impact on the wholesale price of natural gas.

Q: Natural gas is primarily a domestically produced fuel while the United States has to import more than half of the oil its uses. Oil prices never used to have an impact on natural gas prices. Why have rising oil prices also led to rising natural gas prices now?

A: Historically, the factors that led to rising oil prices, such as political instability or war in major production areas, such as the Middle East, did not affect U.S. natural gas prices, because more than 90 percent of the natural gas used in this country was produced domestically. Many large industrial customers can switch between natural gas and oil. In the past, in times of rising natural gas prices, these customers would switch to lower-priced oil, thus relieving demand and upward price pressure on the natural gas market. Today, however, with oil prices spiking at prices of upwards of $60 or $70 per barrel, many of these customers cannot afford to switch to oil in the face of rising natural gas prices. Furthermore, to cope with rising oil prices, large industrial customers who can switch between natural gas and oil have been switching from oil to natural gas, which further increased demand, and thus, prices, for natural gas.

Q: What impact does weather have on national market prices for natural gas?

A: Weather can exert major impact on gas prices. For example, this past winter, warmer-than normal weather in December 2004 helped lower national market gas prices. For another example, sustained periods of colder-than-normal winter weather in 2000-2001, and again in 2002-2003, resulted in sharply higher national market natural gas prices and depleted utilities’ gas storage inventories to historically low levels. In the past year, the industry has replenished gas natural gas storage levels nationally, but the natural gas production still has not kept pace with increasing demand on the national market.

^ Top

Q: How can the industry resolve the current imbalance between natural gas supply and demand, to return prices to more reasonable levels?

A: The solution to the current natural gas supply/price crunch is to increase the supply of natural gas on the market. Boosting natural gas production would moderate market prices in the short term, and result in more reasonable prices in the long term.

Q: How quickly could new gas supplies from new exploration and production activity flow into the national market?

A: Even with dramatic production efforts, it typically takes six to 18 months to bring new wells into production and to bring additional gas supplies from those new wells to the market.

Q: Why is it so hard for natural gas producers to keep up with demand?

A: Producers are working hard just to maintain current production levels. The 6,000 companies that produce natural gas in the United States, including Dominion E&P, face some stiff challenges:

  • Many wells that have produced abundant natural gas for years are becoming depleted. For example, during the last 10 years, average depletion rates have climbed from 16 to 28 percent each year, according to the Independent Petroleum Association of America. In simple terms, this means drillers must produce additional volumes of one-fourth of existing production each year just to stay even.
  • It is sometimes difficult and more costly to pull natural gas from mature reserves. That’s why it’s important for producers to be able to move into fresh supply areas and use the best technologies to find and produce more natural gas.
  • Even when producers hold valid leases, they often face months of delays in getting federal or state permits to start working on bringing new energy supplies to market.

^ Top

Q: What factors are preventing natural gas producers from moving into new, potentially promising natural gas producing areas?

A: Production in existing major onshore natural gas fields, such as Texas, Oklahoma, Appalachia, and the major offshore areas of the Gulf of Mexico has already peaked, and the industry must turn to new areas within the United States, such as offshore areas in the eastern Gulf of Mexico and off the East and West Coasts. However, federal regulations currently prohibit any exploration and production activity in these areas.

Also, access to potentially rich natural gas deposits in large portions of the Rocky Mountain region is severely restricted. These current restrictions severely constrain the potential for increased natural gas production in these areas.

Federal and state officials must take the lead in overcoming a pervasive “not in my backyard” attitude toward energy infrastructure development. As a nation, we must reevaluate current restrictions on access to new sources of supply in light of technology developments that have reduced the costs, uncertainty and environmental impact of gas exploration and production.

Q: Drilling more new wells can bring more gas to market in the short run, but if federal regulators fail to permit drilling in previously untapped areas, in reality, will we see a long-term solution to the tight natural gas supply situation that has led to sharply higher prices over the past five years?

A: No. Drilling more wells in established production areas does bring more gas to the market, at least in the short term, but, ultimately, these new wells just deplete existing production areas faster, and the new wells are not as productive as the earlier wells drilled in these areas. It’s like when you get a 32-ounce milk shake. If your friends want to share that milkshake, they’ll put in their own straws. However, unless they also buy a bigger milkshake in a bigger cup, those extra straws, like new gas wells drilled in existing production areas, will just empty that original 32-ounce milkshake faster.

Q: Until, and unless, new areas are opened to exploration and production activity, what can the energy industry do to fill the natural gas supply gap?

A: Until such drilling restrictions are removed, the industry must turn to non-traditional sources of natural gas, such as imports of liquefied natural gas (LNG). LNG imports, which are transported in tanker ships from such sources as Trinidad, Algeria, Nigeria and Venezuela, are processed at specialized ports, such as Dominion’s Cove Point, Maryland, facility. LNG imports, which now account for less than 1 percent of U.S. natural gas consumption, could account for 10 to 15 percent of gas consumption 15 to 20 years from now, if pursued aggressively.

^ Top