Southwestern Energy Company

- 13.23

Worth Watching Stocks: Southwestern Energy Company (NYSE:SWN ...
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Southwestern Energy (also known as SWN, NYSE: SWN) is an oil and natural gas company based in Houston, Texas.


10 December 2010 Southwestern Energy Company Visits the NYSE - YouTube
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Activities

Its primary current activity is, according to the company, the "development of the unconventional gas reservoir located on the Arkansas side of the Arkoma Basin" and in its press statement, its "operations are focused within the United States on development of two natural gas reservoirs located in Arkansas and Pennsylvania. Its operations in Arkansas are focused on a natural gas reservoir, Fayetteville Shale, and its operations in northeast Pennsylvania are focused on the natural gas reservoir, Marcellus Shale. The Company engages in natural gas gathering activities in Arkansas, Texas, Louisiana, Pennsylvania and West Virginia."


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Operations in New Brunswick, Canada

There has been a major political debate about hydro-fracking in New Brunswick, Canada, with protests being held since August 2011 in Fredericton, Sussex, Hampton, Norton and Rexton. Local residents in areas where exploration is undertaken are "concerned that the seismic testing could lead to hydro-fracking in their communities" and that the fracking would "harm their air and water quality."

In 2010 Corridor Resources, in partnership with Apache Resources, who operated in the McCully Field play, the first company to use the "controversial mining practice known as hydraulic fracturing or hydro-fracking" in New Brunswick, announced that "it found more natural gas in place in southern New Brunswick than is available in all of western Canada's proven reserves."

According to Ralph Carr, the mayor of Sussex, New Brunswick, by December 2011, "global players" in natural gas exploration and extraction SWN Resources and Apache, had "announced their intentions to aggressively search for gas in the deep shale deposits that lay beneath us." Shale gas was discovered in that area in c. 2003, but new technologies such as fracking have made its extraction viable. Carr argued that controversy about shale gas development in New Brunswick was partially fuelled by media attention, when Calgary-based Windsor Energy Inc. conducted seismic testing within the town boundaries, before Sussex town council had given official permission. Carr argued against an outright ban on shale gas production but admitted that, "[m]issteps and mistakes by some companies involved with shale gas production have caused environmental damage and tarnished the image of the industry as a whole."

In July 2011, Tom Alexander, SWN's general manager for New Brunswick, assured residents that they were only exploring, not fracking. In July SWN seismic equipment was vandalized in an isolated work camp in Cumberland Bay. In early August 2011, 40 people from Penniac, Taymouth, Stanley, Rogersville and several First Nations blocked a road north of Stanley, stopping Southwestern Resources Canada trucks used in seismic testing. As part of ongoing protests against Southwestern Energy's shale gas development, there has been a blockade on Route 134 in Mi'kmaq territory in New Brunswick.

On 3 October 2013, the Court of Queen's Bench in New Brunswick granted SWN Resources an injunction to end the protests of the Elsipogtog First Nation. However, the protesters were undeterred, and on 17 October, they brought matters to a head with a demonstration that blocked the highway and set several police cars afire. The situation "exploded in violence, sending dozens of people to jail and reducing five police cars to smouldering ruins". The RCMP said "more than 40 protesters were arrested for various offences including firearms offences, uttering threats, intimidation, mischief and for refusing to abide by a court injunction". On 29 November the protestors and 70 RCMP officers blocked traffic for several hours.

Source of the article : Wikipedia



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