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Boston, Mass – April 12, 2021 – Capacity Center, a Skipping Stone subsidiary, released the 2020 Pipeline Capacity Market Year in Review report today. In 2020, 768 separate entities completed more than 61,000 capacity release trades on over 100 pipelines.

“Notably 90% of capacity release trades are in the spot market with terms of less than a year,” said Skipping Stone President Greg Lander. “While the Top 5 trading firms are the same firms as last year, there was a good bit of jockeying in the rest of the Top 20. The two biggest movers were NRG, which jumped from number 12 to number 6, and Vitol who jumped from number 25 to number 12.”

The report is packed with charts and analysis for 2020, including:

  • Top 20 Pipeline Capacity Traders
  • Top 20 Capacity Pipelines and Release Percentages
  • Top 10 Producer-Marketers Holding Firm Capacity
  • Top 10 LDCs Holding Firm Capacity
  • Trading Partner Diversity Rankings… and much more

For your complimentary report click here.

For more information about the rankings and analysis, contact inquiry1@capacitycenter.com or (978) 717-6144.
For an editable press copy contact nyoung@skippingstone.com.

About Capacity Center

Capacity Center is owned and operated by the energy markets consulting firm, Skipping Stone LLC. Its automated services monitor capacity release offers, system notices and deal award information, and provide available transactions and their details as they occur to its customers via email for trading, risk and regulatory compliance, and for deal origination and valuation purposes. Please visit CapacityCenter.com for more information.

Boston, Massachusetts – April 9, 2020 – Skipping Stone, a global energy markets consulting and technology services firm released today the results of their coronavirus impact study of the energy industry. The study was performed in March and focused on anticipated business and operational impacts as well as electricity demand destruction.

The study measured management viewpoints from three energy sectors, gas and electric utilities, wholesale and retail energy gas and electric marketers and energy services and technology companies. March was chosen as awareness of the crisis in the U.S. was early, the federal and state governments had just begun to react, and the infected and mortality counts were just starting to grow. As such, in March the impacts on business were just becoming evident with the future unknown.

Some results were consistent across the three types of energy market participants. For example, 80% of all the companies had already ramped up customer communications in March. All three sectors were equally uncertain how long coronavirus would impact business operations with answers evenly spread across 30–60 days, 61-90 days, and more than 90 days. Only 10% believe the impacts will last longer than 6 months. The three sectors generally agreed on the financial impacts with 22% responding they expect a significant negative impact on revenue and profits, 52% anticipating some impact, and 25% indicating they don’t expect any financial impact.

Other results highlight different viewpoints among the three sectors studied. For example, the challenges from the huge shift to home-based workers was viewed differently. All sectors anticipate reduced productivity; however, the wholesale/retailer sector scored this concern much higher. Utilities indicated more challenges with IT issues and getting decisions made than the other two sectors.

Plans to cut costs varied widely between the sectors. 36% of utilities had no specific plans to cut costs, while only 4% of energy services and technology companies indicated no plans for cost cutting. 28% of wholesale and retailers anticipate either layoffs or salary reductions and 34% of the services and technology sector plan to do the same. Only 8% of utilities indicated plans for either layoffs or salary reductions.

For demand destruction assessment, Skipping Stone enlisted Scoville Risk Partners who has been utilizing its proprietary analytics software and databases to measure week-over-week demand reductions in wholesale power markets in key U.S. population centers due specifically to the coronavirus.

Electricity demand decreased in correlation to either a rise in coronavirus cases or state government stay at home orders. New York City, a coronavirus hot spot experienced demand decline in the first week of March of 1.41% and by the last week demand had declined by 14.87%. In California demand decline correlates to Governor Newsome’s March 19th stay at home order. In the period prior to the 19th, electricity demand for the utility SCE, serving southern California, was normal. The week after the stay at home order, SCE demand fell by 8.29% with a further drop to a demand reduction of 12.89% the last week of March.

“We hope that this study can be used by the energy industry to benchmark early assumptions against actual outcomes for emergency response planning for crises such as the coronavirus,” said Skipping Stone Chairman and CEO Peter Weigand. “While it would be nice if this were a once in a lifetime crisis, my sense is the frequency of regional and global events is only going to grow going forward. Although it seems we can’t prevent them, we can be better prepared.”

For a complimentary copy of the study results, visit https://skippingstone.com. For continuous updates on electricity demand destruction, visit www.ScovillerRiskPartners.com

CapacityCenter_com 1000Online Access to Pipeline Capacity Deals on All Pipelines

Boston, Mass – December 5, 2018 – Capacity Center announced the launch of its new service offering, Capacity Locator. This new service allows subscribers to see every biddable capacity release offer on every pipeline in one online location. Users can click through from Capacity Locator straight to the pipeline EBB if they are interested in bidding on available capacity. The service shows all current open offers by pipeline with the ability to refresh throughout the day to keep up to speed as the market changes.

Capacity Locator is free to subscribers and complements Capacity Center’s other information services: Capacity Offer Bulletins (detailed offers emailed as they are posted), Capacity Awards Reports (daily summary with pricing data of all deals done the previous day), Open Season Alerts, and Critical Notices (outages, OFO’s and any notices impacting gas flow). Companies can choose from among the 104 pipelines in the Capacity Center system and subscribe to those pipelines they are interested in or active on.

“Capacity Locator was developed to save time and effort for users who monitor pipeline bulletin boards throughout the day to shop for capacity deals. Capacity Locator allows the user to monitor all the offers on all the bulletin boards in one location and jump straight to the bulletin board to bid on a deal of interest,” explained Greg Lander, Capacity Center President.  “With the number of deals increasing each year, and profits more and more dependent on taking advantage of deals as they become available, the ability to keep up to speed and yet maintain labor costs were the key drivers behind Capacity Locator.”

About Capacity Center

Capacity Center www.capacitycenter.com operates the only 24/7/365 natural gas pipeline data center covering 104 US pipelines. Its proprietary systems monitor and track capacity release offers, deal awards, system notices, and open seasons. Subscribers can select from one to all pipelines. Capacity Center also provides market analytics and historical capacity transaction data to trading companies, pipelines, regulators, retailers, financial institutions, and others. Capacity Center is wholly owned by Skipping Stone, LLC.  www.skippingstone.com

For additional pipeline capacity market information and/or analysis, please contact Katherine Castillo, kcastillo@skippingstone.com or 978-717-6144.

Media contact: Nancy Young, Marketing Director, Skipping Stone, nyoung@skippingstone.com,  (832) 279-3029.