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	<title>Natural Gas for America &#187; natural gas in america</title>
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	<description>Bridging the Gap to a Low Carbon Future</description>
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		<title>America is poised to be the world&#8217;s new energy leader, now let&#8217;s vow to claim this crown</title>
		<link>http://naturalgasforamerica.com/america-poised-worlds-energy-leader-vow-claim-crown.htm</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Jan 2012 22:22:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ash</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Countries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Natural Gas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shale Gas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[United States]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CNOOC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Delaware River Basin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Frac Tech Holding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fracking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hydraulic fracturing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hydraulic fracturing basins]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ken Salazar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[natural gas in america]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Saudi Aramco]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shale gas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[shale gas boom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sinopec]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[unconventional gas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[unconventional resources]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://naturalgasforamerica.com/?p=3697</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The race for new-energy dominance is officially on. Earlier this month two of China’s oil giants, Sinopec and Cnooc, as well as Saudi Arabia’s state-owned oil company, Saudi Aramco, announced they would all seek to buy the same 30 percent stake in American hydraulic-fracturing-services firm Frac Tech Holdings LLC. The announcements, arriving amidst great excitement [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The race for new-energy dominance is officially on. Earlier this month two of China’s oil giants, <a href="http://english.sinopec.com/">Sinopec</a> and <a href="http://www.cnoocltd.com/encnoocltd/default.shtml">Cnooc</a>, as well as Saudi Arabia’s state-owned oil company, <a href="http://www.saudiaramco.com/en/home.html">Saudi Aramco</a>, announced they would all seek to buy the same 30 percent stake in American hydraulic-fracturing-services firm Frac Tech Holdings LLC.</p>
<p>The announcements, arriving amidst great excitement about the potential of natural gas development in the United States, could touch off a competition worth up to $2 billion &#8212; and possessing far-reaching implications for both the global energy game and a still-foundering U.S. economy.</p>
<p>China has nearly 50 percent more recoverable shale gas than the United States, yet in 2009 we took the spot of number-one natural-gas producer in the world.</p>
<p>Here’s how: What countries like China boast in quantity they lack in expertise. And technique is where we are king. It was more than half a century ago that Americans pioneered hydraulic fracturing, a process whereby a high-pressured, water-based mixture is pumped into underground shale to release hydrocarbons.</p>
<p>The contribution technological advancement like this to the U.S. energy arsenal has been sizable: It has increased U.S. recoverable oil reserves by at least 30 percent and recoverable gas reserves by at least 90 percent, according to some estimates. That’s a 100-plus-year energy supply we wouldn’t otherwise have socked away.</p>
<p>With coal- and oil-rich nations like China and Saudi Arabia so keenly interested in American energy-extraction methods, it would seem the tables have finally turned. But while we should continue rushing to capitalize on our own good fortunes, regulatory roadblocks continue to hamstring our production.</p>
<p>To wit, New York, New Jersey and the Delaware River Basin have all enacted at least temporary hydraulic fracturing bans, the result of pressure from groups peddling unsubstantiated environmental and health concerns about the drilling method. Just this week the municipality of Binghamton in New York passed a two-year ban on it – a scaremonger’s insurance policy in the event the state-wide moratorium is lifted.</p>
<p>Moves like these only hurt us. A recent PricewaterhouseCoopers study found that aggressive, domestic shale-gas development could employ approximately one million more manufacturing-sector workers by 2025, thanks to increased product demand.</p>
<p>The study also found increased production could help U.S. manufacturers reduce natural gas expenses by as much as $11.6 billion annually through the same year. What’s more, shale gas’ contribution to the U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) was more than $76.9 billion in 2010. In 2015 it will be $118.2 billion; in 2035, $231.1 billion. Add to that the substantial amount to be made domestically and overseas by American manufacturers of shale-gas-related equipment – a chance the Financial Times recently called a “major export opportunity” – and we could see a significant uptick in jobs and general economic activity in certain sectors.</p>
<p>The anti-shale-gas camp’s trump card is the unfounded threat of water contamination from hydraulic fracturing fluid (a liquid that&#8217;s more than 99 percent water itself). Yet there has not been a single confirmed case of polluted drinking water anywhere, which stands to reason since the fracturing takes place more than 8,000 feet below surface level while groundwater sits only a few hundred feet below the earth’s surface.</p>
<p>Even Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar admitted recently there was no concrete evidence of a hydraulic-fracturing-water-contamination link. “With respect to hydraulic [fracturing], because it occurs so far underground, we don’t know any examples of [contamination] on public lands,” he said at a November House hearing.</p>
<p>We have the means and the motive to increase natural gas drilling full-force. It’s high time we did so – before other nations with less know-how but more impetus overtake us.</p>
<p><em>Bob Beauprez is a former Republican Colorado Congressman. He currently serves as editor-in-chief of “A Line of Sight” a policy resource covering issues that affect conservatives across the country and operates a working buffalo ranch in Colorado.</em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p><em>Source: Fox news</em></p>
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		<title>Cheniere Sees Sabine LNG Output to be Taken Up by April</title>
		<link>http://naturalgasforamerica.com/cheniere-sees-sabine-lng-output-april.htm</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 22 Nov 2011 23:32:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ash</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Countries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[LNG]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[United States]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[BG Group]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Charif Souki]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cheniere Energy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gas Natural Fenosa]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Liquefied Natural Gas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[LNG in America]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Sabine Pass LNG]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://naturalgasforamerica.com/?p=3270</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Cheniere Energy will sell all the capacity at its proposed Sabine Pass LNG plant by April. &#8220;We will be sold out by April – all four trains. We have a very large number of parties that we are negotiating with,&#8221; Cheniere&#8217;s Charif Souki told Reuters. Houston-based Cheniere plans to begin construction on the $5 billion [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.cheniere.com/default.shtml">Cheniere Energy</a> will sell all the capacity at its proposed Sabine Pass LNG plant by April.</p>
<p>&#8220;We will be sold out by April – all four trains. We have a very large number of parties that we are negotiating with,&#8221; Cheniere&#8217;s Charif Souki told Reuters.</p>
<p>Houston-based Cheniere plans to begin construction on the $5 billion LNG plant next year, pending regulatory approval, in a bid to export some of the US&#8217; vast reserves of natural gas.</p>
<p>The proposed export plant, which would be the first built in the US in nearly 50 years, will comprise up to four production trains with the capacity to export 4.5 million tonnes per year (mtpa) of LNG each.</p>
<p>The total is equivalent to 2 billion cubic feet per day of natural gas – about 3% of US daily consumption.</p>
<p>Cheniere has already sold 7 mtpa of capacity in two recent deals with Britain&#8217;s <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><a href="http://www.bg-group.com/Pages/BGHome.aspx">BG Group</a></span> and Spain&#8217;s <a href="http://www.gasnaturalfenosa.com/">Gas Natural Fenosa</a> helping to secure financing for the first two trains of the project, which still needs environmental approval from the US federal energy regulator.</p>
<p>&#8220;From the income we will generate from BG and Gas Natural it should not be difficult to finance it,&#8221; Souki said, adding that the company is in the process of raising $5 billion.</p>
<p>Related Reading:  Find the BG Article in Americas and Gas Natural in Europe and link</p>
<p><a href="http://www.naturalgaseurope.com/gas-natural-fenosa-deals-with-cheniere-energy-to-buy-us-shale-gas-sourced-lng-3628">Gas Natural Fenosa Deals with Cheniere Energy to Buy US Shale Gas Sourced LNG</a></p>
<p><a href="http://naturalgasforamerica.com/cheniere-bg-group-sign-lng-export-deal.htm">Cheniere and BG Group Sign LNG Export Deal</a></p>
<hr/>Copyright &copy; 2012 <strong><a href="http://naturalgasforamerica.com">Natural Gas for America</a></strong>. This Feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this material in your news aggregator, the site you are looking at is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact legal@naturalgasforamerica.com so we can take legal action immediately.<br/><span style="float: right;font-size: 7pt"><a href="http://blog.taragana.com/index.php/archive/wordpress-plugins-provided-by-taraganacom/">Plugin</a> by <a href="http://www.taragana.com/">Taragana</a></span>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Shale Gas Revolution</title>
		<link>http://naturalgasforamerica.com/shale-gas-revolution.htm</link>
		<comments>http://naturalgasforamerica.com/shale-gas-revolution.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 04 Nov 2011 23:56:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ash</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Natural Gas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shale Gas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Exelon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[frac]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fraccing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fracking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hydraulic fracturing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[natural gas in america]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shale gas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shale gas revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vallourec in Ohio]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://naturalgasforamerica.com/?p=3168</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[By DAVID BROOKS The United States is a country that has received many blessings, and once upon a time you could assume that Americans would come together to take advantage of them. But you can no longer make that assumption. The country is more divided and more clogged by special interests. Now we groan to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/opinion/editorialsandoped/oped/columnists/davidbrooks/index.html?inline=nyt-per">DAVID BROOKS</a></p>
<p>The United States is a country that has received many blessings, and once upon a time you could assume that Americans would come together to take advantage of them. But you can no longer make that assumption. The country is more divided and more clogged by special interests. Now we groan to absorb even the most wondrous gifts.</p>
<p>A few years ago, a business genius named George P. Mitchell helped offer such a gift. As Daniel Yergin writes in “The Quest,” his gripping history of energy innovation, Mitchell fought through waves of skepticism and opposition to extract natural gas from shale. The method he and his team used to release the trapped gas, called fracking, has paid off in the most immense way. In 2000, shale gas represented just 1 percent of American natural gas supplies. Today, it is 30 percent and rising.</p>
<p>John Rowe, the chief executive of the utility <a href="http://www.exeloncorp.com/Pages/home.aspx">Exelon</a>, which derives almost all its power from nuclear plants, says that shale gas is one of the most important energy revolutions of his lifetime. It’s a cliché word, Yergin told me, but the fracking innovation is game-changing. It transforms the energy marketplace.</p>
<p>The U.S. now seems to possess a 100-year supply of natural gas, which is the cleanest of the fossil fuels. This cleaner, cheaper energy source is already replacing dirtier coal-fired plants. It could serve as the ideal bridge, Amy Jaffe of Rice University says, until renewable sources like wind and solar mature.</p>
<p>Already shale gas has produced more than half a million new jobs, not only in traditional areas like Texas but also in economically wounded places like western Pennsylvania and, soon, Ohio. If current trends continue, there are hundreds of thousands of new jobs to come.</p>
<p>Chemical companies rely heavily on natural gas, and the abundance of this new source has induced companies like Dow Chemical to invest in the U.S. rather than abroad. The French company Vallourec is building a $650 million plant in Youngstown, Ohio, to make steel tubes for the wells. States like Pennsylvania, Ohio and New York will reap billions in additional revenue. Consumers also benefit. Today, natural gas prices are less than half of what they were three years ago, lowering electricity prices. Meanwhile, America is less reliant on foreign suppliers.</p>
<p>All of this is tremendously good news, but, of course, nothing is that simple. The U.S. is polarized between “drill, baby, drill” conservatives, who seem suspicious of most regulation, and some environmentalists, who seem to regard fossil fuels as morally corrupt and imagine we can switch to wind and solar overnight.</p>
<p>The shale gas revolution challenges the coal industry, renders new nuclear plants uneconomic and changes the economics for the renewable energy companies, which are now much further from viability. So forces have gathered against shale gas, with predictable results.</p>
<p>The clashes between the industry and the environmentalists are now becoming brutal and totalistic, dehumanizing each side. Not-in-my-backyard activists are organizing to prevent exploration. Environmentalists and their publicists wax apocalyptic.</p>
<p>Like every energy source, fracking has its dangers. The process involves injecting large amounts of water and chemicals deep underground. If done right, this should not contaminate freshwater supplies, but rogue companies have screwed up and there have been instances of contamination.</p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p><em>This post by David Brooks <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/04/opinion/brooks-the-shale-gas-revolution.html?partner=rssnyt&amp;emc=rss">originally appeared</a> on the <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/pages/opinion/index.html">New York Times Opinion Pages</a>.</em><em> </em></p>
<hr/>Copyright &copy; 2012 <strong><a href="http://naturalgasforamerica.com">Natural Gas for America</a></strong>. This Feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this material in your news aggregator, the site you are looking at is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact legal@naturalgasforamerica.com so we can take legal action immediately.<br/><span style="float: right;font-size: 7pt"><a href="http://blog.taragana.com/index.php/archive/wordpress-plugins-provided-by-taraganacom/">Plugin</a> by <a href="http://www.taragana.com/">Taragana</a></span>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Shale Gas Reserves Could Reignite U.S. Economy</title>
		<link>http://naturalgasforamerica.com/shale-gas-reserves-reignite-economy.htm</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Nov 2011 18:48:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ash</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Countries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shale Gas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[United States]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bringham Exploration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chesapeake]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ConocoPhillips]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[El Paso Corp]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Exxon Mobil]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fracking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[George P Mitchell]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[horizontal drilling]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hydraulic fracturing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hydrocarbons]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[James J. Mulva]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kinder Morgan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[natural gas in america]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Royal Dutch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shale gas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Southwestern Energy Co]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://naturalgasforamerica.com/?p=3156</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In late 1998, Chesapeake Energy Corp., an independent natural-gas producer based in Oklahoma City, exemplified an industry in decline. The company’s stock price had fallen over two years from above $34 a share to 75 cents. Its market value tumbled 93 percent, to $72 million. “They’re running up a down escalator,” Michael Spohn, an analyst at Petroleum Research Group, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="story_head">
<div id="story_meta">
<div>In late 1998, <a href="http://www.chk.com/Pages/default.aspx">Chesapeake Energy Corp.</a>, an independent natural-gas producer based in Oklahoma City, exemplified an industry in decline.</div>
</div>
</div>
<div id="story_content">
<p>The company’s stock price had fallen over two years from above $34 a share to 75 cents. Its market value tumbled 93 percent, to $72 million. “They’re running up a down escalator,” Michael Spohn, an analyst at Petroleum Research Group, said.</p>
<p>When Aubrey K. McClendon, Chesapeake’s chief executive officer and co-founder, announced he might sell the company, there was little interest, Bloomberg Businessweek reports in its Nov. 7 edition.</p>
<p>Falling gas prices had reduced the value of Chesapeake’s reserves from $2.1 billion to $661 million. “We’d had higher highs than others in the industry; then we had lower lows,” McClendon said with characteristic insouciance. “In this business, it’s good to have a short memory and thick skin.”</p>
<p>Good thing he didn’t sell. Thirteen years later, Chesapeake’s market value exceeds $18 billion. Its shares sell for about $28, up 8 percent this year. The company’s 120-acre neo-Georgian corporate campus bustles with construction crews building new office space. Its workforce has grown 30 percent in a year, to 12,200, and its recruiters have 700 jobs to fill. “The United States,” McClendon boasts, “has the capacity to become the Saudi Arabia of natural gas.”</p>
<p>A tall man who wears his wavy silver hair long by CEO standards, McClendon, 52, exudes the confidence of someone who’s certain he’s seen the future. Exploitation of newly accessible supplies of gas embedded in layers of what’s known as shale rock, he predicts, will help revive domestic manufacturing and change the terms of debate about global warming. “It’s a new industrial renaissance,” he said.</p>
<h2>Diverting Billions</h2>
<p>You’d expect that kind of exuberance from a man with everything to gain from seeing his vision made real, but it’s not just independent drillers such as Chesapeake that are talking big. <a href="http://www.conocophillips.com/EN/Pages/index.aspx">ConocoPhillips</a> is investing $2 billion in gas in 2011, up from $500 million two years ago.</p>
<p>Other multi-national oil giants, such as <a href="http://www.exxonmobil.com/Corporate/default.aspx">Exxon Mobil Corp.</a> and <a href="http://www.shell.com/">Royal Dutch Shell Plc</a>, are likewise diverting billions into domestic shale gas projects. “We believe so strongly in natural gas that it’s a major portion of our portfolio,” Conoco CEO James J. Mulva told an audience at the Detroit Economic Club in September.</p>
<p>Last month, the potential for U.S. shale gas spurred <a href="http://www.kindermorgan.com/">Kinder Morgan</a> to acquire rival pipeline operator <a href="http://www.elpaso.com/">El Paso Corp</a>. for $21.1 billion. It also drove the proposed $4.4 billion purchase of <a href="http://www.bexp3d.com/">Brigham Exploration Co</a>. by Norway’s <a href="http://www.statoil.com/en/Pages/default.aspx">Statoil ASA. </a></p>
<h2>Cheaper Gas</h2>
<p>Encouraged by the availability of inexpensive and cleaner domestic gas, some electric utilities are replacing their coal- burning capacity with gas-fired units. Energy-intensive manufacturers of chemicals, plastics, and steel are beginning to bring home operations that they exported years ago.</p>
<p>“We believe natural gas must be part of any discussion on strengthening our country’s long-term economic health,” Mulva said in Detroit. “It should also be part of any discussion on improving energy security, protecting the environment, and, yes, creating jobs.”</p>
<p>On the economic potential of the nascent shale revolution, even some career environmentalists sound impressed, if cautious. “This thing is a potential game-changer,” said Fred Krupp, president of the New York-based<a href="http://www.edf.org/"> Environmental Defense Fund</a> (EDF). Shale production in the U.S. has increased from practically nothing in 2000 to more than 13 billion cubic feet per day, or about 30 percent of the country’s natural-gas supply.</p>
<h2>Cleaner Than Coal</h2>
<p>That proportion is heading toward 50 percent in coming years. The U.S. passed Russia in 2009 to become the world’s largest producer of natural gas. An Energy Dept. advisory panel on which Krupp sits estimated in August that more than 200,000 jobs, both direct and indirect, “have been created over the last several years by the development of domestic production of shale gas.”</p>
<p>At a moment of 9.1 percent unemployment nationally, additional decently paid work is just one potential benefit. “Natural gas burns cleaner than coal, emits less in the way of greenhouse gases, and avoids mercury and other pollutants from coal,” Krupp points out. “So this could be win-win, if&#8211;and this is a big ‘if’ &#8212; we do it the right way.”</p>
<p>Geologists have known for generations that immense, deeply buried shale formations contain copious reserves of methane, or natural gas, which can be burned efficiently to make electricity and run factories. Until recently, however, industry lacked the tools to get at shale gas profitably.</p>
<h2>Casing Protects Wells</h2>
<p>In the early 2000s, the combination of two existing techniques led to a breakthrough. One method is horizontal drilling. The other is hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” a scary-sounding and controversial process involving the high- pressure pumping of millions of gallons of chemical-laced water deep underground to create cracks in shale rock and release trapped gas.</p>
<p>When in 2007 environmentalists began raising reasonable concerns about fracking, industry executives responded with a dismissive, “Just trust us“ &#8212; ensuring that skeptics would trust them less. Just in case concern didn’t turn into panic on its own, the industry for years took the additional step of refusing to disclose the chemicals it uses in fracking.</p>
<p>Lost amid the suspicion and recrimination was a potentially more constructive discussion over improving industry standards for drillers’ concrete-lined steel casing, which, when installed correctly, has successfully insulated wells from drinking water.</p>
<h2>Safe and Profitable</h2>
<p>Now, though, there’s some surprising good news: Despite all the vituperation on both sides, some people from business and environmental circles are quietly at work in Texas, New York, and Washington on guidelines that should ensure a safe, profitable gas revival.</p>
<p>The Environmental Defense Fund, for example, is drafting model state regulations with <a href="http://www.swn.com/Pages/default.aspx">Southwestern Energy Co.</a>, a producer based in Houston. The collaboration is rooted in the recognition that the choice between polluting fossil fuels and pristine alternatives is not simple. For the foreseeable future, the U.S. has to burn a whole lot of something to produce power.</p>
<p>The nation now gets 45 percent of its electricity from coal, 25 percent from natural gas, 20 percent from nuclear, 7 percent from hydro, and 2 percent from wind. Solar barely registers. With current technology, wind and solar probably can’t reach into double digits, let alone bear the bulk of the load.</p>
<h2>Bridge Fuel</h2>
<p>If you want to continue to turn on the lights with the flip of a switch, the real short-term choice is whether to stick with the current mix or replace a substantial amount of coal capacity with less dirty natural gas.</p>
<p>John Podesta, former chief of staff to ex-President Bill Clinton, argues for the latter option. Now head of the Center for American Progress in Washington, Podesta writes on the liberal think tank’s website that natural gas can serve “as a bridge fuel to a 21st century energy economy that relies on efficiency, renewable sources, and low-carbon fossil fuels.” Exploring where that bridge will lead should be one of the country’s most important economic priorities.</p>
<p>Like petroleum, natural gas is a hydrocarbon, a product of decomposed organic material that simmered underground for hundreds of millions of years. Simple in structure&#8211;one carbon atom and four hydrogen atoms&#8211;gas has a convoluted history in the U.S.</p>
<p>In the 1970s, federal price restrictions contributed to underproduction and shortages, leading to wintertime shutdowns of Midwestern schools and factories. Utility executives and consumers came to view natural gas as unreliable.</p>
<h2>Attractive Alternative</h2>
<p>A titanic political fight during the Carter Administration ended in a bizarre compromise: price deregulation combined with restrictions on burning gas to generate electricity. (The coal industry, it should be noted, sponsors a long-established and adroit K Street lobby.) By the 1990s, the limits on using natural gas for power had been eased, and new turbine technology made gas an attractive alternative to coal.</p>
<p>Furious construction of gas-fired power plants ensued, only to be followed by dismay: Gas supplies were not expanding apace. At the turn of the 21st century, some natural-gas basins were nearly tapped out, and once again many utilities, homeowners, and energy-intensive manufacturers dismissed domestic gas as a sucker’s bet.</p>
<p>It might have stayed that way if not for the stubbornness of a Texan named George P. Mitchell. The son of an immigrant Greek goat herder, Mitchell worked his way through Texas A&amp;M University in the late 1930s waiting tables and repairing clothes for students.</p>
<h2>Mitchell’s Influence</h2>
<p>After World War II, he went into the oil and gas business in Houston, working from a tiny office above a drugstore. All through the ‘80s, Mitchell pondered geological studies showing that gas could be found not only in conventional reservoirs but also in deeper, denser “unconventional” shale formations.</p>
<p>Shale is where gas is actually created. Energy men call it “the kitchen,” where hydrocarbons “cook,” and where large amounts of gas remains trapped. Mitchell wondered: Why not drill all the way down to the kitchen? His exploration company probed the Barnett Shale, a slab sprawling 7,000 feet beneath Dallas and Fort Worth. Competitors scoffed.</p>
<p>“We were running low on gas, and I had to find another reservoir somewhere,” Mitchell, now 92, told Bloomberg News. “So I said let’s drill a well and see what this thing is about.”</p>
<p>He invested his faith and capital in hydraulic fracturing, which had been introduced in rudimentary form in the late ‘40s. Injected at enormous pressures and in huge volumes, fracking fluid creates narrow cracks in the shale. Sand diffused in the fluid stays behind and props open the cracks, allowing gas to flow out and up through the well.</p>
<h2>Horizontal Drilling</h2>
<p>“<a href="http://www.mitchellgroup.net/main-menu/energy">Mitchell Energy</a>,” the industry consultant Daniel Yergin writes in his new book, The Quest: Energy, Security, and the Remaking of the Modern World, “cracked the code.”</p>
<p>In 2002, after 60 years in the business, George Mitchell decided to cash out. <a href="http://www.dvn.com/Pages/devon_energy_home.aspx">Devon Energy Co.</a>, a better-capitalized independent in Oklahoma City, acquired his company for $3.5 billion.</p>
<p>Devon brought to the Barnett a knack for horizontal drilling. Improvements in equipment controls and measurement methods allowed its crews to drill down and then turn the gnawing diamond-tipped bit sideways. Drillers penetrate the shale laterally rather than just vertically. This exposes more of the surface area of the formation to extraction and enables multiple wells to be created from each drill pad.</p>
<h2>Shale Stampede</h2>
<p>Devon could not keep the field to itself. Rivals rushed in to lease tracts in Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Oklahoma. Following geologists’ amazingly precise three-dimensional subterranean maps, the drillers went as far east as the Marcellus Shale, a formation that extends below Western New York State, over into Pennsylvania, and all the way down to West Virginia and Tennessee. Few people outside the industry noticed, but a shale stampede was under way.</p>
<p>After almost selling his company during the late-’90s doldrums, Aubrey McClendon dramatically switched strategy and wagered Chesapeake’s future on shale. (A few years later, he lost much of his personal fortune during the financial crisis of 2008 before gaining it back.) Today, Chesapeake is the most active driller of new wells in the U.S., with 177 rigs in operation.</p>
<p>It is the country’s second-biggest overall producer of natural gas, behind only ExxonMobil, which announced in late 2009 that it would join the gas rush by buying <a href="http://www.xtoenergy.com/en/home.html">XTO Energy</a> for $41 billion. <a href="http://www.anadarko.com/Home/Pages/Home.aspx">Anadarko Petroleum Corp.</a> is the third-largest producer, followed by Devon.</p>
<h2>Haynesville Play</h2>
<p>McClendon is descended from a prominent Oklahoma oil family, the Kerrs of Kerr-McGee fame. Prospecting is in his DNA. In 2003 he instituted what he called his “land rush plan”: Chesapeake borrowed heavily and bought leases in the Barnett, some of them in built-up parts of the Dallas-Fort Worth metro area. At midnight after the jets stopped arriving at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport, workers drilled next to the quiet runways. In 2005, McClendon’s geologists discovered gas in a rich shale play in Northwest Louisiana and East Texas called the Haynesville. (Shale projects are commonly referred to as “plays.”)</p>
<p>Also in 2005, Chesapeake paid $2.2 billion for the second- largest gas producer in Appalachia, becoming the biggest presence in the Marcellus play. McClendon, who got his start in the business as a “land man,” or oil and gas lease broker, built a one-of-a-kind database of millions of property records from obscure county courthouses. The digitized trove has allowed Chesapeake to beat rivals to the doorsteps of landowners whose farms or backyards sat atop buried shale gas.</p>
<h2>Margin Calls</h2>
<p>A runup in gas prices&#8211;to nearly $14 per thousand cubic feet in mid-2008&#8211;made McClendon look like a genius. A few months later, he seemed less smart when the economy imploded, dragging down the price of energy and of Chesapeake’s stock (which fell from a high above $69 a share in July of that year to $11 in December).</p>
<p>McClendon personally had borrowed against his large individual holdings to buy yet more company stock. When the bottom fell out, he was hit with margin calls that forced him to liquidate a big chunk of his investments.</p>
<p>Like most entrepreneurs in the up-and-down energy business, McClendon takes occasional setbacks in stride. It helps to have a loyal board of directors. In 2009, the Chesapeake board gave the CEO a $100 million pay package. The company also paid him $12 million for a collection of 19th century maps he owned.</p>
<h2>Better Than Coal</h2>
<p>Why the well-timed company largesse? McClendon, citing pending shareholder litigation over his pay, answers guardedly. He was properly rewarded for his work during 2008, he said, and received an appropriate “retention package” to ensure his remaining as CEO.</p>
<p>As for the maps, he said he had paid out of his own pocket for years to decorate the halls and conference rooms of the company, and it was time for Chesapeake to make him whole. The company denies any impropriety. On Nov. 1, the litigation was settled, and McClendon agreed to rescind the map sale and repay Chesapeake the $12 million, plus interest.</p>
<p>Today, he has assets valued at more than $1 billion, including a 19.2 percent stake in Oklahoma City’s National Basketball Assn. franchise, the Thunder.</p>
<p>Burning natural gas for power, McClendon proudly points out, results in about half the equivalent carbon dioxide emissions of coal. Such observations, however, have not kept him from becoming a target of activists who are trying to shut down fracking &#8212; and have succeeded in some places, such as New York State.</p>
<h2>Shale Gas Welcomed</h2>
<p>Environmentalists, McClendon believes, should feel much more warmly toward him. He readily acknowledges that human activity contributes to global warming. “Why take a chance,” he said, “when we can reduce our carbon emissions through consuming more natural gas and less coal and oil?” It’s in his pecuniary interest to hold that opinion, of course.</p>
<p>Many residents of Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas&#8211;places accustomed to oil and gas development&#8211;welcomed the “shale gale” and its accompanying jobs, packed cafés, land royalties, and rising local tax revenue. The reaction was far more mixed in New York and Pennsylvania, despite the latter’s history of oil and coal exploration.</p>
<p>In the Northeast, some residents objected to heavy truck traffic and rural vistas marred by towering steel rigs and murky wastewater pools. Even more intense were concerns about the effects of shale drilling on drinking water supplies. Some homeowners complained that after gas operations began, well water started tasting bad and children fell ill.</p>
<h2>Industry Defends Fracking</h2>
<p>Activists raised questions about whether the chemicals in fracking fluid were contaminating drinking water with benzene, methanol, and other dangerous substances. In 2008, Businessweek published an article by the nonprofit journalism organization ProPublica that identified episodes of water contamination near (although not all definitively caused by) gas activity in seven states: Alabama, Colorado, Montana, New Mexico, Ohio, Texas, and Wyoming.</p>
<p>In 2010, New York stopped issuing permits for fracking to give environmental authorities there time to study the situation.</p>
<p>Hit with pollution lawsuits, Chesapeake and other producers denied that fracking caused water contamination. For one thing, the companies said, the procedure typically takes place a mile or more below drinking water aquifers and is isolated by massive layers of impermeable rock.</p>
<p>According to the industry, drillers had done more than a million frack jobs going back to 1948 without proof of widespread pollution problems. Drillers also pointed to a study of fracking released in 2004 by the <a href="http://www.epa.gov/">U.S. Environmental Protection Agency</a> that supports their position.</p>
<h2>Film’s Impact</h2>
<p>O.K., environmentalists said, so what chemicals are you mixing into fracking fluid? That’s secret, the industry answered.</p>
<p>“That was a very, very stupid answer,” said Jim Gipson, a spokesman for Chesapeake. “In this country, if you tell people you’re keeping secrets from them, they will naturally assume you are doing something wrong.”</p>
<p>The producers blame the furtiveness on big drilling contractors, companies such as <a href="http://www.halliburton.com/">Halliburton Co.</a>, that actually devise and inject the frack fluid recipes. The contractors insisted that their recipes were safe, but deserved confidentiality as proprietary trade secrets.</p>
<p>The industry’s conduct fueled protests in New York and Pennsylvania, which adopted as their manifesto Gasland, a documentary that made its official debut in January 2010 at the Sundance Film Festival, went on to air on HBO, and was nominated for an Academy Award. The film memorably showed homeowners near drilling operations lighting their tap water on fire and complaining about contaminated waterways.</p>
<h2>Fracking Dangers Overstated</h2>
<p>While Gasland raised relevant questions, it overstated the dangers related to drilling shale gas. It suggested rampant water contamination caused by gas operations. In contrast, a study by researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology released earlier this year found about 20 reported cases of groundwater contamination between 2005 and 2009.</p>
<p>Some of these problems were traced to flawed cement used in well construction, though not to the fracking process itself. Pennsylvania and other states have since toughened drilling construction standards.</p>
<p>Flammable tap water is a real phenomenon in some areas, albeit a rare one. It’s caused by methane seeping into household wells, and it can happen regardless of whether gas drilling is going on nearby. The challenge in tracing the source of methane seepage is that the gas can occur naturally and contaminate water without any industrial activity. (Not that anyone would want an incendiary kitchen faucet, but methane gas in water isn’t toxic, and it evaporates quickly.)</p>
<h2>Methane Occurs Naturally</h2>
<p>This August, Josh Fox, Gasland’s director, accompanied a woman named Natalie Brant when she testified before a hearing on fracking held by members of the New York State Senate. Brant, whose family lives south of Buffalo, testified that before the state’s moratorium on fracking went into effect, several of her eight children developed headaches and nosebleeds, which she attributed to nearby gas drilling. “We’re constantly worried about our children and if they’re going to come down with cancer or other illnesses because of what they’ve been exposed to,” she said. State environmental officials have said that methane occurs naturally in well water in Brant’s part of the state, and that the gas turned up in other water wells in the area before drilling began.</p>
<h2>New Casing System</h2>
<p>Chesapeake’s McClendon (whose company wasn’t specifically implicated by Brant) said claims such as Brant’s, compelling though they may seem, aren’t based on hard evidence pointing to hydraulic fracturing. But in a speech in September at a conference in Philadelphia, he acknowledged a series of “limited gas migration incidents in Pennsylvania in the past three years.”</p>
<p>One of those led state regulators to impose a $900,000 fine on Chesapeake for polluting drinking water in Bradford County. “These incidents were not related to fracking,” McClendon said. Instead, they were caused by faulty well casing. “Only a couple dozen homeowners claim to have been affected,” he said. “And more importantly, the industry worked closely with Pennsylvania’s Environmental Protection Dept. officials to implement an updated and customized casing system that has been effective in preventing new cases of gas migration. Problem identified. Problem solved.”</p>
<p>McClendon has a tendency to exacerbate hostilities by belittling his antagonists. At the Philadelphia conference he described protesters’ “vision of the future” in these derisive terms: “We’re cold, it’s dark, and we’re hungry.”</p>
<h2>Fracking Chemicals Disclosed</h2>
<p>Such condescension notwithstanding, Chesapeake and other natural-gas producers have made concessions. Overcoming some of the concerns of their contractors, Chesapeake and other producers (and the contractors themselves) have begun to disclose the chemical additives used in fracking. An industry- sponsored website, <a href="http://www.fracfocus.org/">www.fracfocus.org</a>, allows companies voluntarily to report the additives on a well-by-well basis.</p>
<p>“We just decided to do what we should have done from the start,” said Chesapeake’s Gipson. Disclosure isn’t universal yet, but it’s headed in that direction. Arkansas, Texas, and certain other gas-producing states have enacted legal requirements for full disclosure as a condition of continued fracking.</p>
<p>At <a href="http://fracfocus.org/">fracfocus.org</a>, visitors will find that some of the stuff in fracking fluid is definitely not what you’d want in your water glass. Ingredients may include hydrochloric acid (initiates cracks), methanol (inhibits corrosion), glutaraldehyde (kills bacteria), and ethylene glycol (winterizes product).</p>
<h2>Accidents Are Rare</h2>
<p>Frack fluid is typically 98 percent to 99.5 percent water and sand, with the additives making up the remainder, according to the industry. When the nasty stuff passes by any drinking water supply, it is supposed to be contained securely within at least two layers of steel casing and two layers of heavy-duty cement.</p>
<p>No one disputes that there can be problems if there are flaws in the steel or concrete. The industry said such accidents have been exceedingly rare.</p>
<p>The 2011 MIT study estimates that between 2005 and 2009 there were some 50 incidents nationwide involving a variety of gas drilling mishaps: groundwater contamination, surface spills, offsite disposal issues, air quality problems, and well blowouts. To provide guidance on how to reduce gas drilling risks, the DOE set up its seven-person shale committee.</p>
<h2>Sniping, Distrust</h2>
<p>The EDF’s Krupp sits on the panel, which is chaired by John M. Deutch, a Director of Central Intelligence during the first Clinton Administration. Other members include the consultant and historian Yergin and several scholars and former regulators.</p>
<p>Despite Krupp’s participation, some environmentalists have written off the DOE committee as an industry-influenced rubber stamp. These critics note that Deutch, a professor at MIT, holds a directorship on the board of Cheniere Energy, a Houston-based liquefied natural-gas company, and formerly served on the board of <a href="http://www.slb.com/">Schlumberger Ltd.</a>, a major drilling contractor.</p>
<p>Even Krupp “has his own connections to the industry,” Dusty Horwitt, senior counsel at the Environmental Working Group, a nonprofit in Washington, said in a radio interview in May.</p>
<p>The sniping reflects distrust of the pragmatism Krupp embraces. A 57-year-old lawyer by training and the son of a New Jersey businessman who recycled rags and cardboard, Krupp heads a nonprofit that promotes the use of market forces to protect the environment.</p>
<h2>August Report</h2>
<p>He regularly takes flak from harder-line activists who oppose his willingness to work with industry. His “industry connection” to shale gas consists of having hired as a senior policy adviser a former employee of the Texas Independent Producers and Royalty Owners Assn.</p>
<p>After conferring with the Sierra Club, the <a href="http://www.nrdc.org/">Natural Resources Defense Council</a>, and other nonprofits, Krupp had considerable influence on the 41-page preliminary report the DOE committee released in August.</p>
<p>The paper calls for mandatory state-enforced disclosure of fracking ingredients, stricter standards on conventional air pollution created by shale operations, and additional research on underground methane migration and greenhouse gas releases associated with gas drilling. The panel persuasively explains the need for government inspection of casing and cementing and for more careful disposal of wastewater that comes up from wells.</p>
<p>The report doesn’t address the sticky question of whether the EPA should be given more authority over gas drilling. At present, state agencies regulate the industry. Gas executives grimace when asked about the EPA being given responsibility for permitting their operations.</p>
<h2>Fracking’s Exemption</h2>
<p>“There’s no evidence the states aren’t doing the job adequately,” said Henry J. Hood, Chesapeake’s senior vice- president and general counsel. “The EPA doesn’t have the manpower or the state-by-state expertise.”</p>
<p>Some environmentalists angrily stress that in 2005 Congress made explicit that another federal law, the Safe Drinking Water Act, doesn’t cover fracking. The exemption certainly reflects the strength of the oil and gas lobby, but with a U.S. House of Representatives controlled by anti-regulatory Republicans, the chances of getting the provision reversed at this point are exactly zero.</p>
<p>Debating it is more of a distraction than anything else and obscures that the EPA has authority to take action against gas drillers and producers that violate the Clean Air and Water Acts. Rather than drawing another bull’s-eye on the EPA’s back, a savvier approach would be to use the DOE report as a blueprint for broadly framed principles that state officials enforce vigorously.</p>
<h2>Education Needed</h2>
<p>Smart industry executives should accept tough standards as the cost of resolving environmental anxiety. In January 2010, one such corporate leader, Southwestern Energy’s executive vice- president and general counsel, Mark K. Boling, picked up the telephone and called Scott Anderson, the Texas-based EDF gas expert whose industry experience makes him suspect in the eyes of some fellow environmentalists. Southwestern traces its roots to an Arkansas gas concern incorporated in 1929.</p>
<p>Boling, a former partner with the Houston law firm Fulbright &amp; Jaworski, has spent his entire legal career promoting the interests of oil and gas clients. Now, he said in an interview, those interests include demonstrating that fracking is safe. “It’s not enough to say we’ve been fracking for 60 years and no one has proved there’s a problem,” Boling adds. “We’ve got to get out there and educate, encourage better regulation, and pick up our performance in every aspect.”</p>
<h2>Working Out Differences</h2>
<p>Boling’s phone call to Anderson produced a cautious series of negotiations leading to a 37-page draft state regulatory code for gas operations. “Our idea is not that this should be adopted word for word by any state,” Anderson explains. “This is not one size fits all. Instead, it’s an attempt to show what a responsible producer and a responsible environmental organization consider best practices. It’s something to work toward.”</p>
<p>A dozen other gas producers have been shown the draft, and many offered comments, which have been incorporated, said Anderson. “What we’re working on are mostly very technical underground issues that have technical solutions,” he said. “Fracturing should be safe, if it is done properly. We have a ways to go, but this is a good model for working out our differences.”</p>
<p>The incentives for working out those differences are compelling. In New York, where local opposition to fracking remains strong in some communities, Governor Andrew M. Cuomo inherited a permitting moratorium on the procedure imposed by his predecessor, David A. Paterson. Since taking office in January, Cuomo has encouraged the drafting of more stringent rules.</p>
<h2>Jobs at Stake</h2>
<p>Released for public comment in September, the proposal would allow fracking subject to rules suited to New York’s geology and regional politics. It would prohibit drilling within 2,000 feet of public drinking water supplies or 500 feet of the state’s 18 primary aquifers. Drilling within the watersheds that provide unfiltered water to New York City and Syracuse would be banned altogether.</p>
<p>Even with these and many other restrictions, the Cuomo plan would make more than 80 percent of the Marcellus Shale within New York viable for drilling, said Joe Martens, the state’s commissioner of environmental conservation. “Our most conservative estimate is that we could add more than 13,000 jobs, direct and indirect,” Martens said. “The higher estimate is nearly 54,000 jobs.”</p>
<h2>Fracking’s Economic Benefits</h2>
<p>That kind of boost could bring struggling towns in Western Upstate New York back to life. “Right across the border in Pennsylvania,” Martens said, “we can see the jobs and tax revenue that can come with shale gas.” Assuming that New York regulators receive the resources to enforce the proposed toughened rules and effectively protect water supplies, he said, “New Yorkers deserve to get the same [economic] benefits.”</p>
<p>The potential for creating jobs goes beyond the bereft former farm towns of rural New York. Every day, Dow Chemical alone uses the equivalent of 700 million cubic feet of gas and ethane (a natural gas derivative).</p>
<p>That’s as much as all of Australia consumes on a daily basis. More plentiful domestic gas supplies now priced at around $4 per thousand cubic feet have allowed Dow to announce multibillion-dollar expansions of facilities in Louisiana and Texas, according to Executive Vice-President James R. Fitterling.</p>
<h2>Impact on Dow</h2>
<p>“We expect to employ up to 1,300 workers per project to construct our two new propane dehydrogenation units and a new ethylene cracker,” he told an energy conference in Houston on Sept. 26. “We also expect between 400 and 500 new, long-term Dow jobs to operate and maintain the facilities.” That’s just one chemical company.</p>
<p>Some electric utilities are overcoming their deep-seated uneasiness over natural gas to shift parts of their operations from coal to gas. The switch is inviting because many coal- burning facilities are antiquated, and the country already has large amounts of more modern, underused natural-gas utility capacity (a holdover from overbuilding in the late 1990s.)</p>
<p>The coal industry is fighting fierce rear-guard battles to prevent the move to gas. But a variety of federal antipollution rules taking effect in coming years will provide an additional reason to consider gas. Power companies in 15 states, including California, Florida, and Pennsylvania, have recently announced expanded use of natural gas, often at the expense of coal, according to America’s Natural Gas Alliance, a trade group.</p>
<h2>Steady Power</h2>
<p>“We need to find a way to take advantage of this historic opportunity to cut back on burning coal, which is the worst energy option,” said the EDF’s Krupp. And he said that as an advocate of more wind- and solar-generated electricity. The best way to exploit renewable power on a large scale is to use it in conjunction with natural-gas plants. Gas-fired generation ensures steady power when the wind isn’t blowing or the sun isn’t shining. “Done the right way,” Krupp said, “there’s just a lot to be said for natural gas.”</p>
<div>Source: <a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-11-03/shale-gas-reserves-have-potential-to-reignite-u-s-economy.html">Bloomberg</a></div>
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		<title>Should the US Export Natural Gas</title>
		<link>http://naturalgasforamerica.com/export-natural-gas.htm</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Jun 2011 21:34:36 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Countries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[United States]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gas exports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gas-oil substitution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Natural Gas]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[The boom in shale gas production has changed the conversation in Washington from one of how to manage dependence on imported natural gas to a debate over whether (and to what extent) to export the fuel. I’m unsure of exactly where I come down on the matter. But I want to lay out a series [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The boom in shale gas production has changed the conversation in  Washington from one of how to manage dependence on imported natural gas  to a debate over whether (and to what extent) to export the fuel. I’m  unsure of exactly where I come down on the matter. But I want to lay out  a series of questions that I think ought to be addressed before  policymakers make a decision one way or the other.</p>
<p>The standard economic argument in favor of exports is  straightforward: All economies gain from trade. If the United States  starts exporting gas, that will raise average U.S. gas prices. But this  damage will be more than offset by increased revenues to U.S. producers  and those they support.</p>
<p>This is a good starting point for discussion, but it is just that.  Here are four potential complications that policymakers and analysts  should be thinking about:</p>
<p><strong>Volatility.</strong> The standard argument in favor of market  linkage is that integrating markets reduces volatility. People  typically use a bathtub analogy: if I double the size of my bathtub  (read: gas market), any disturbance I encounter (read: weather events or  political turbulence) will be dispersed in a larger body of water, thus  reducing the size of any waves (read: price spikes) that result. But  this argument has limits. If my initial market has relatively low  volatility, and I integrate it with another that has considerably bigger  swings, I may end up facing more volatility myself. To push the bathtub  analogy a bit further, if I double the size of my bathtub, but I now  need to share it with a bear, I might not actually be better off.</p>
<p>This matters because volatility, in itself, creates economic losses,  since it becomes more difficult to efficiently allocate resources in the  face of changing resource prices. This is uncontroversial. If  international linkages (i.e. allowing exports) result in greater  volatility, then there will be a balance to be struck: policymakers will  need to ask whether or not the equilibrium gains from trade outweigh  the losses from increased volatility. In principle, of course, one could  simply internalize the losses from volatility through an appropriate  tax, rather than incorporating volatility considerations into export  policy decisions. But since such a tax is likely to be politically  infeasible, that is not a fallback upon which one can rely.</p>
<p>One caveat to all this: It is not obvious that allowing exports would  increase volatility in the U.S. natural gas market. To be certain, one  would expect that geopolitical shocks elsewhere in the world would have a  greater impact on U.S. gas markets if the United States were exporting  robustly. But the existence of international demand could also reduce  U.S. volatility in the face of periodic domestic demand shortfalls. (Of  course, full integration could also help blunt domestic shocks through  increased imports, but that isn’t what’s being debated here.) The net  impact is something that needs to be examined quantitatively.</p>
<p><strong>Gas-Oil Substitution. </strong>There are few cheap  opportunities to substitute natural gas for oil in the U.S. economy. The  same isn’t true in those parts of the world that still use considerable  amounts of oil in power generation. Exporting gas to those countries  could help reduce global oil consumption, resulting in a range of  benefits to the United States.</p>
<p><strong>Foreign Policy Opportunities. </strong>Not everything in life  is about economics. I can imagine, in particular, a few areas where the  foreign policy benefits or damages of exports would be impossible to  put a dollar figure on. The first is climate change. It does not really  matter from the atmosphere’s perspective whether U.S. gas is used to  displace coal fired generation in the United States, China, or  elsewhere. But it may matter considerably for climate diplomacy. Insofar  as increasing gas exports reduces the amount by which the United States  is able and willing to cut its own greenhouse gas emissions, that could  be damaging to the U.S. position in the world.</p>
<p>The second area involves exports to strategically important  countries. U.S. gas exports to Europe, for example, might help wean the  continent off Russian gas, with attendant international security  benefits to the United States. Similarly, if U.S. gas exports help  integrate global gas markets, resulting in more transparency in the  setting of gas prices, that could have widespread diplomatic  consequences.</p>
<p>The last area involves the potential to get dragged into  international disputes in which the United States would otherwise have  little interest. If increased exports tie the U.S. economy (through  trade) to the vagaries of conflicts in other parts of the world, U.S.  policymakers may feel more compelled to intervene, lest the economic  consequences become unpleasant. This is currently a fact of life in the  oil markets; might it become more of one in the world of gas too?</p>
<p><strong>Distributional Consequences.</strong> I noted at the outset  that standard trade theory points out that losses to U.S. consumers from  exports should be more than outweighed by gains to producers. But that  is little solace to those who consume gas. I am partial to the  theoretical argument that says that policy should largely be determined  by macroeconomic efficiency considerations, and that progressive  taxation and other government policy should be used to deal with any  distributional problems that arise. The reality, though, is that the  second part – i.e. rectifying inequality – often doesn’t happen. In such  cases, it strikes me as appropriate to take distributional issues into  consideration in the initial decisionmaking process.</p>
<p>Different policymakers and analysts might be pulled in different  directions depending on their answers to these questions. As I noted at  the top, I’m not sure where I personally come down in the end. I do  know, though, that before charging full speed ahead into exporting U.S.  natural gas, it’s important that people think through these issues.</p>
<p><em>Michael A. Levi is the David M. Rubenstein Senior Fellow for Energy and the Environment</em></p>
<p><em>Source: <a href="http://blogs.cfr.org/levi/2011/06/29/should-the-united-states-export-natural-gas/">Council on Foreign Relations</a><br />
</em></p>
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		<title>Natural Gas Can Help Move the Economy Forward</title>
		<link>http://naturalgasforamerica.com/natural-gas-can-help-move-the-economy-forward.htm</link>
		<comments>http://naturalgasforamerica.com/natural-gas-can-help-move-the-economy-forward.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Nov 2010 08:11:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Environment]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Natural Gas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[clean energy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Greg Ebel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[natural gas in america]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shale Basins]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spectra Energy Corp.]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.naturalgasforamerica.com/?p=1356</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The fuel has advantages over competing resources In his Nov. 3 press conference, President Obama voiced support for the role of natural gas in a forward-looking energy policy. In his words: &#8220;We&#8217;ve got, I think, broad agreement that we&#8217;ve got terrific natural gas resources in this country. Are we doing everything we can to develop [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>The fuel has advantages over competing resources</em></p>
<p>In his Nov. 3 press conference, President Obama voiced support for the role of natural gas in a forward-looking energy policy. In his words: &#8220;We&#8217;ve got, I think, broad agreement that we&#8217;ve got terrific natural gas resources in this country. Are we doing everything we can to develop those?&#8221;</p>
<p>The answer to the president&#8217;s question is no, we are not doing everything we can to develop our natural gas resources. But with his words, we have the making of a bipartisan agreement on the gifts provided by natural gas: energy security, jobs, investment and environmental benefits.</p>
<p>Natural gas is domestically abundant and can help us in our quest to lessen our ties to foreign oil. Our prolific natural gas reserves — 100 years&#8217; worth today and growing — stem largely from our ability to extract gas from rock formations known as shale. For years, shale gas was viewed as neither plentiful enough nor adequately cost-effective to pursue in earnest. But now, thanks to greater geologic and scientific insight and developments in drilling and production techniques, producers are unlocking shale&#8217;s enormous potential.</p>
<p>Indeed, shale gas has begun to tip the scales such that experts deem the boom a game changer, the most significant energy innovation of the century to date. Shale gas accounted for 1 percent of our natural gas supply in 2000. Today it represents about 20 percent, and by 2035 it could grow to 50 percent.</p>
<p>The timing couldn&#8217;t be better, especially as we move to lower the carbon-intensity of our economy. Last year, we witnessed the largest absolute and percentage decline in energy-related carbon dioxide emissions since 1949. Emissions declined 7 percent, or 405 million metric tons, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. A key contributor: fuel-switching in the electric sector from coal to natural gas. That&#8217;s a trend we should encourage and facilitate, through inclusion and equitable treatment of natural gas in our national energy solutions.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s something else to factor in to our thinking: Natural gas makes up the largest portion of U.S. power generation capacity. Yet it accounts for just 23 percent of actual electricity used. A growing role for natural gas is also favorable to ratepayers, since modern natural gas-fired power plants are among the most cost-effective to build.</p>
<p>Last week, voters spoke loud and clear in terms of their concerns about the economy. Greater use of natural gas means more jobs and economic opportunities. The natural gas industry supports more than 2.8 million U.S. jobs and contributes $385 billion annually to the national economy. It&#8217;s an industry that&#8217;s adding jobs — experiencing a 17 percent increase over the past several years. Thousands more jobs will be created as we capitalize on the vast reserves of unconventional gas.</p>
<p>Finally, natural gas is our cleanest-burning conventional fuel, producing 45 percent less carbon dioxide than coal and 30 percent less than fuel oil. And it produces no mercury, only trace amounts of sulfur dioxide and far less nitrogen oxide than other fossil fuels. Increasing the use of natural gas to replace more carbon-intensive fuels can help address a number of environmental concerns like climate change, a priority in the U.S. and around the globe.</p>
<p>No one argues the need for a greater slate of renewable energy options. But the sobering reality today is that fossil fuels supply about 85 percent of America&#8217;s energy needs. Even with an acceleration of renewables like solar, wind and biomass, by 2035, renewables are expected to provide just 11 percent of our supply. While we&#8217;re working to bring wind, solar and geothermal to scale, natural gas has an important role to play in the overall energy mix, ensuring critical back-up generation in the near-term, and continuing as a long-term, cost-effective fuel.</p>
<p>Achieving common ground begins with common-sense choices. As the balance of power shifts in Washington, we should look to natural gas as the balanced energy choice: clean, reliable, versatile, abundant and domestic. It is a proven resource, backed by proven technology, in-place, expandable infrastructure and talented Americans dedicated to delivering on its tremendous promise. Let&#8217;s get to work, Washington.</p>
<p><em>Greg Ebel is president and chief executive officer of Spectra Energy Corp. in Houston.</em></p>
<p>Source: <a href="http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/editorial/outlook.7287371.html">Houston Chronicle</a></p>
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		<title>Exco Resources To Buy Haynesville/Bossier Shale Properties From Southwestern Energy Co.</title>
		<link>http://naturalgasforamerica.com/exco-resources-to-buy-haynesvillebossier-shale-properties-from-southwestern-energy-co.htm</link>
		<comments>http://naturalgasforamerica.com/exco-resources-to-buy-haynesvillebossier-shale-properties-from-southwestern-energy-co.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 24 Jun 2010 18:16:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Haynesville Shale]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shale Basins]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[BG Group PLC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bossier]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Exco Resources Inc]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[haynesville]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[natural gas in america]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[shale gas in America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Southwestern Energy Co]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.naturalgasforamerica.com/?p=864</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In a press release issued this week, oil and natural gas explorer Exco Resources Inc. announced its plans to buy part of the Haynesville and Bossier shale properties in East Texas from Southwestern Energy Co. at a price of $355 million. The deal comes less than a month after Exco sold 50 per cent of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In a press release issued this week, oil and natural gas explorer <a href="http://www.excoresources.com" target="_new">Exco Resources Inc.</a> announced its plans to buy part of the Haynesville and Bossier shale properties in East Texas from <a href="http://www.swn.com" target="_new">Southwestern Energy Co.</a> at a price of $355 million.</p>
<p>The deal comes less than a month after Exco sold 50 per cent of its shale assets in Appalachia to British gas producer <a href="http://www.bg-group.com" target="_new">BG Group Plc</a> for $835.2 million.</p>
<p>The new properties that Exco plans to acquire are located within the area of mutual interest that was established by that acquisition, meaning that BG will have the opportunity to buy 50 per cent of these properties as well.</p>
<p>Exco execs don&#8217;t forsee this being a problem, however:</p>
<p><em>&#8220;Assuming BG Group participates in the acquisition, Exco and BG Group will each double their working and net revenue interests in much of the common acreage,&#8221; Dallas, Texas-based Exco <a href="http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/29156/20100617/exco-resources-southwestern-energy.htm" target="_new">said</a>.</em></p>
<p>Exco said the purchase will increase its interest in over 900 gross drilling locations. The assets include producing properties with current gross production of more than 51 million cubic feet per day (Mmcf/d) from 9 producing wells and about 20,000 net acres prospective for the Haynesville and Bossier shales.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/story/exco-resources-inc-announces-agreement-to-acquire-haynesvillebossier-shale-properties-from-southwestern-energy-company-2010-06-16" target="_new"><strong>READ THE FULL PRESS RELEASE</strong></a></p>
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		<title>Natural Gas As A Major Resource For Our Energetic Future</title>
		<link>http://naturalgasforamerica.com/natural-gas-as-a-major-ressource-for-our-energetic-future.htm</link>
		<comments>http://naturalgasforamerica.com/natural-gas-as-a-major-ressource-for-our-energetic-future.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Jun 2010 17:09:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Environment]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Natural Gas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eagle Ford]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[LNG]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[natural gas in america]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[renewable energy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rice University]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shale Basins]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[shale gas in America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[shale plays]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[shale rock]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[South Texas Money Management]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Baker Institue]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.naturalgasforamerica.com/?p=800</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[What if I told you a domestic fuel exists that emits only half the greenhouse gases of coal and can be found in abundant supply to last the United States at least 45 years? Many of you already know what it is: natural gas. Technological advances are unlocking natural gas reserves in deep shale rock [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What if I told you a domestic fuel exists that emits only half the greenhouse gases of coal and can be found in abundant supply to last the United States at least 45 years? Many of you already know what it is: natural gas. Technological advances are unlocking natural gas reserves in deep shale rock strata around the world. The more people search for new reserves, the more they find.</p>
<p>The United States has enough shale gas that prices can range in a comfortable zone for the next few decades. Enough exists to make planning for future electricity generation easier for utilities. Five years ago, the U.S. government believed 140 trillion cubic feet of natural gas existed in North America. This year, a private industry estimate pegs the supply at more than 1,000 trillion cubic feet. As oil continues to spill out of the Gulf of Mexico seabed, the United States slowly is waking up to a new energy future. Renewable fuels are still part of the future, but natural gas can add decades to the time needed for wind, solar and other renewables to increase in efficiency and come down in price.</p>
<p>Enough natural gas can be found domestically that the United States has little need now for liquefied natural gas terminals to receive foreign natural gas. LNG supplies will go to other markets, such as China. The world has enough shale gas that natural gas cartels are unlikely to form. Even Europe has enough shale gas to wean itself off Russian supplies. This perspective comes from a recent Wall Street Journal article by Amy Myers Jaffe of the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy at <a href="http://www.rice.edu" target="_new">Rice University</a>.</p>
<p>“We have a lot of gas to (drill),” Jaffe said recently in San Antonio during a symposium on shale gas held by  South Texas Money Management Ltd. Other symposium speakers detailed how the shale gas revolution is bringing gobs of income to South Texas landowners. One of the best new shale gas plays, called Eagle Ford, stretches from the Texas-Mexico border to the Gulf Coast. La Salle and McMullen counties reportedly are among the hot spots for shale gas exploration and drilling. Landowners, who may have paid, say, $200 per acre, receive thousands of dollars per acre for leases, plus royalties.</p>
<p>Natural gas prices now fluctuate above $4 per thousand cubic feet. <a href="http://www.bakerinstitute.org" target="_new">The Baker Institute</a> projects natural gas prices will stay below $7 through 2040, although some spikes could occur briefly. It wasn&#8217;t long ago that natural gas prices soared above $14.</p>
<p>SOURCE:<br />
<a href="http://neftegaz.ru/en/news/view/95178/" target="_new">Neftegaz: &#8220;Natural Gas As A Major Ressource For Our Energetic Future&#8221;</a></p>
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		<title>Unconventional Gas as the Dominant Source by 2020</title>
		<link>http://naturalgasforamerica.com/unconventional-2020.htm</link>
		<comments>http://naturalgasforamerica.com/unconventional-2020.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 01 May 2009 21:20:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Natural Gas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shale Gas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[frac]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[haynesville shale]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[horizontal drilling]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[natural gas in america]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.naturalgasforamerica.com/?p=239</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Ziff Energy Group has a press release called &#8220;Shale Gas Outlook to 2020&#8221; on their website predicting that unconventional gas plays now active across North America will account for 53% of the continent’s gas production by 2020. The production of economical natural gas from shales during the next ten years is being attributed to advances [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ziff Energy Group has a press release called &#8220;<a href="http://www.ziffenergy.com/download/pressrelease/PR20090408-02.pdf">Shale Gas Outlook to 2020</a>&#8221; on their website predicting that unconventional gas plays now active across North America will account for 53% of the continent’s gas production by 2020.</p>
<p>The production of economical natural gas from shales during the next ten years is being attributed to advances in technology such as horizontal drilling and multi-stage hydraulic fracturing stimulation (called &#8216;frac&#8217;).  The press release references a slowdown in drilling &#8220;except for the prolific Haynesville Shale&#8221;.</p>
<p>- C. Keddy</p>
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		<title>Obama Seeks New Era of Energy Exploration in the U.S.</title>
		<link>http://naturalgasforamerica.com/obama-seeks-new-era-of-energy-exploration-in-the-us.htm</link>
		<comments>http://naturalgasforamerica.com/obama-seeks-new-era-of-energy-exploration-in-the-us.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2009 21:32:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Environment]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Natural Gas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[natural gas in america]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[obama]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://naturalgasforamerica.com/?p=153</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Marking Earth Day with his energy plan pitch, President Obama called for a ‘new era of energy exploration on America” and argued that his proposal would help both the U.S. economy as well as the environment at the same time. Obama said that America as a nation needs more domestic production of natural gas. Obama [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-155" title="President Obama speaking on Earth Day, April 22, 2009." src="http://www.naturalgasforamerica.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/obama1.jpg" alt="obama1 Obama Seeks New Era of Energy Exploration in the U.S." width="130" height="87" /></p>
<p>Marking Earth Day with his energy plan pitch, President Obama called for a ‘new era of energy exploration on America” and argued that his proposal would help both the U.S. economy as well as the environment at the same time.</p>
<p>Obama said that America as a nation needs more domestic production of natural gas. Obama sees clean, reliable domestic gas as a short to mid-term solution to fuel independence and a bridge for America to an independent and sustainable energy era.</p>
<p>On this past Monday, Vice President Joe Biden marked Earth Day by announcing that $300 million in federal stimulus money will go to cities and towns to purchase more fuel efficient vehicles.</p>
<p>By: Caroline Keddy</p>
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