SUPPORTING STATEMENT partB

SUPPORTING STATEMENT partB.pdf

Monthly Natural Gas Production Report

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B. Collections of Information Employing Statistical Methods
B1. Description of Respondent Universe and Sampling Plan
The universe consists of all operators of producing wells in the United States
(excluding Alaska) that produce natural gas, including Offshore wells. A natural
gas operator forms the responding unit. A cut-off sample of well operators is
selected monthly. It is refined to give the targeted coverage in all areas with the
minimum amount of operators. For the 2010 survey, EIA met its quality goal with
about 240 operator respondents. The cut-off sample is designed to provide about
90 percent coverage at the lower-48 level and an adequate percent coverage in
seven areas. The seven areas include the Gulf of Mexico Federal Offshore,
Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, Wyoming, and Other States (defined
as all remaining States excluding Alaska).
The cut-off sample is selected from a current commercially available data source
(HPDI LLC) and the EIA-23 frame. These provide the most recent and accurate
available data. All estimates are based on the simple ratio estimate method with
the exception of Other States which is currently determined by applying the ratio
of 2008 total gross natural gas production published in the EIA Natural Gas
Annual to the 2008 EIA-914 survey production. The 2010 EIA-914 frame
consisted of roughly 8,300 operators who produce at least 1,000,000 cubic feet of
gas per day.
B2. Data Aggregation Procedures
Currently, well operator respondents are asked to submit monthly reports of their
natural gas production for seven areas. The respondent data submitted for each
area are processed by EIA using its Standard Energy Processing System (STEPS),
a general-purpose survey processing system originally developed by the Bureau
of Census. EIA has an established procedure for both follow-up of nonrespondents and for verification of data filed. Data filed on the EIA-914 are
aggregated in STEPS and undergo a series of mathematical checks for
reasonableness and accuracy. EIA uses documented techniques to estimate total
monthly natural gas production volumes for the total US and the seven areas
(techniques described in EIA-914 Monthly Gas Production Report Methodology).

EIA-914 Monthly Gas Production Report Methodology
EIA implemented the methodology described here in April 2010 and applied it
historically to all of 2009 as well as to the current months. Fundamentally there
are two parts to the process: the sampling and the estimation. Both represent
changes to previous methodologies, and each is described separately below.

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Sampling Methodology
The EIA-914 survey collects natural gas production volume information on a
monthly basis from a sample of well operators (companies). Production volumes
are requested specifically for Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Wyoming, New
Mexico, Federal Offshore Gulf of Mexico, and all Other States (except Alaska).
Sampling occurs every month and is called a monthly refresh of the sample. The
latest available HPDI monthly data is used to select companies to add to the
sample group. (HPDI is a commercial vendor of production data.) The sample
group of companies changes by 1 or 2 every month. This keeps the sample current
and avoids a major change in the sample caused by less frequent updating. A
cutoff sample based on company production rates is used.
Data Preparation
The HPDI database is used for both the sampling and the estimation processes.
HPDI acquires well or lease level data from State agencies, places it in their own
database format, and sells it. A new HPDI database is acquired every month.
HPDI data for five of the smaller producing States is missing or inadequate. For
Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee, annual production data
from the EIA-23 survey (Annual Survey of Domestic Oil and Gas Reserves) is
used to supplement the HPDI database. Hereafter, references to HPDI data
include supplemental data from the EIA-23 survey for these five States.
The monthly production data are split into two parts: the group of companies that
comprise last month’s sample and the group of non-sampled companies. The nonsampled group is sorted largest to smallest based on production from the lower-48
States. A second sorting for Oklahoma only is also done (more on this below).
HPDI data for the most recent months are usually significantly incomplete. A six
month average natural gas production level is calculated by company for the most
current 6 month period where data are or are nearly complete. The non-sampled
companies are sorted by this 6 month average.
Cutoff Sample
The sampling process uses cutoff criteria of 20 MMcf/d by company for Lower
48 production. For the State of Oklahoma a cut off of 10 MMcf/d is used to
increase the coverage in Oklahoma. (Oklahoma has an abundance of small
companies, so a lower cut off helps keep the percent coverage up in Oklahoma.)
Adding and Dropping Companies
Each month, companies whose surveyed production rate falls below the sample
cutoff point are reviewed to determine whether or not they should remain in the
sample. If a company is below the cutoff (20 MMcf/d in the lower 48 or 10
MMcf/d in Oklahoma) for 6 consecutive months it is contacted and asked why. If
the decline in production is not reversible or repairable in the near future the
company is dropped from the survey.

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When adding a company, the sorted non-sampled HPDI data is used. The highest
production level in the non-sampled group of companies is about 20 MMcf/d.
Data for the largest companies in the non-sampled group can be reviewed quickly
and any company in the non-sampled group that produces more than 20 MMcf/d
for 4 months in a row (previous to the last few months of incomplete data) is a
candidate to be added to the sample. Production is double checked and confirmed
for these identified companies. Once identified, a selected company is informed
with a phone call and a survey information packet is sent. The same process is
applied to Oklahoma production data with a 10 MMcf/d cutoff.
Other Ways Companies are Added or Dropped
Mergers and acquisitions, or buying and selling properties can cause a company’s
production level to move above or below the sample cut off value. An attempt is
made to accommodate the larger events in the sample as soon as possible after
they occur. These larger events usually appear in news reports, newsletters, press
releases, industry trade journals, etc. Small events involving small companies or
small volumes of production are ignored if they involve only companies in the
non-sampled group. Most smaller mergers and property sales are unknown.
Potential Sources of Errors
Unknown, deficient reporting of, or improperly handled mergers and property
sales are likely the largest cause of sample errors. These events are continuous
and make the sample calibration data (HPDI data) a very dynamic data set. The
company production in the historical HPDI data set must be merged to match the
reported sample data every month. The unknown or missed events are usually
small and probably don’t contribute large errors, but it is still possible to miss a
larger event. The historical sample data used to make estimates can be missing
production or have too much production and therefore adversely affect the
production estimates because of name changes, multiple name spellings,
companies that report under multiple names in the HPDI data set, the lag between
the time of a merger and the time of its appearance in the HPDI data set, past
multiple mergers, and the potential to improperly assign EIA operator codes. It is
impossible to account for all of the mergers and property sales.
Estimating Methodology
The Simple Ratio Method (SR) is used for all the individual States in the EIA-914
report. The SR method allows the use of the most current historical data available
to determine a straightforward ratio. The short lag times mean that any changes in
the sample over the shorter lag will be as small as possible and can normally be
neglected.
For the Other States group of states, the ratio of the EIA-895A survey (Annual
Quantity and Value of Natural Gas Production Report) to the EIA-914 survey
annual volumes in the previous calendar year is applied to the current monthly

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EIA-914 volumes to calculate the estimate. This is the same process used
previously for the Other States group.
Simple Ratio Method
The SR method uses a ratio of the total production to the current sample’s
production at some point in history. This ratio is then applied to the current
reported sample volume to estimate the current total production volume. The ratio
is a 6-month average ratio calculated at some lag time that varies by State. The
time frame for the 6 month average ratio calculation is moved ahead one month
every month so that the lag time is a constant over time. Lag times vary from 6 to
18 months for the different states. Lags are necessary because the HPDI data is
incomplete in current months. Some States require a longer lag than others to get
back to a time when the data is complete to calculate the 6-month average ratio.
Currently a 6-month lag is used for Wyoming, New Mexico, and Louisiana, 9months for Texas, 12-months for the Federal Gulf of Mexico, and 18-months for
Oklahoma. At these lag times the reported production in HPDI should be less than
0.5% different than the final reported production. Recent changes in HPDI’s data
collection in Oklahoma may allow a shorter lag time in the future. The equations
are as follows:
 i L5 TPi
 
i  L SP
i
Avg SRi L  
 6










TPesti  Si  Avg SRi L
where:
Avg SR = Simple Ratio, 6-month average
TP
= Total Production, from HPDI
SP
= Sample Production, current sampled group of companies
historical production, from HPDI
L
= Lag time in months
TPesti = Total Production estimate for the current month
Si
= Sampled production for the current month
i
= Current or estimation month.

B2.1 Revisions
Revisions to aggregated data are published when respondents submit revised data
for prior months or late data for the current month according to the EIA-914
Revision Policy.
B2.2 Security

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Several steps have been taken to assure confidentiality and security of respondent
data and estimates during data processing and report preparation. One example is
that respondent data can be submitted to EIA using the secure file transfer (SFT)
system. SFT is based on the secure hypertext transfer protocol (HTTPS), an
industry standard method to send information over the web using a secure,
encrypted process. All information is protected by 128-bit encryption to maintain
the privacy and confidentiality of transmitted data. See Section A10 for a
discussion on confidentiality of the data.
B3. Methods to Maximize Response Rates
Form EIA-914 is collected under EIA’s mandatory data collection authority and
its response rate has been good. For example, the 2009 production weighted
response rate for the eight areas averaged 99 percent. To maximize response rates,
the form was designed for ease of completion, and instructions were written in a
clear and concise manner to make them easily understood. Potential respondents
initially tested the form and instructions, which were modified based on their
feedback. Furthermore, small operators who usually have low response rates are
not sampled.
Forms are e-mailed as early as possible to maximize the time that respondents
have to complete the surveys; the forms and instructions are available on the EIA
Website. Survey non-respondents are contacted by telephone to discuss the
requirement to file and any problems or questions that are delaying filing. Followup letters regarding the failure to file are also mailed to non-respondents. Specific
schedules are followed for telephone calls and letters to non-respondents. Every
effort is made to assist respondents in completing the survey and submitting it in a
timely manner.
B4. Contacts
For additional information concerning the survey design, please contact Gary
Long of the Department of Energy, Energy Information Administration 214-7206182. For more information regarding the approval request, please contact Jason
Worrall 202-586-6075.

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File TitleMicrosoft Word - SUPPORTING STATEMENT partB.doc
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