According to the New York Times, a report by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology states that natural gas will increasingly replace coal as a source of this country's energy over the next few decades. According to the report, natural gas will eventually make up 40% of the U.S. energy market, up from its current 20% share.
Some companies that make equipment for coal- and gas-fired generating stations say that the switch to gas from coal has already begun. One reason is that switching to gas will make it easier to meet air quality standards for conventional pollutants, like smog and mercury. Helping to facilitate the change are plentiful supplies of natural gas created by shale drilling.
T.Boone Pickens, the Texas oilman, said that the study paid too much attention to the electricity sector and not enough to using natural gas as a fuel for transportation. “You’ve got plenty of gas to do both,” he said.
The study noted that the only natural gas car sold by a major car company in the United States, the Honda GX, costs an extra $5,500, while the VW Passat TSI Eco-fuel, sold only in Europe, costs only $3,700 extra. Converting a gasoline vehicle to natural gas is also much more expensive here than in Europe, the report said, and it suggests that the reasons be examined.
High-mileage fleet vehicles, like taxis, could be economically converted to natural gas, the study said. But the recent history of natural gas vehicles in the United States suggests that buses and small delivery vehicles are more likely candidates for conversion than the great mass of privately owned vehicles.
Natural gas vehicles emit about three-quarters as much carbon dioxide per mile as gasoline-powered ones. The switch would not have a large impact on carbon — only about a ton per vehicle per year for a typical American car, according to the report.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/25/business/energy-environment/25natgas.html
Friday, June 25, 2010
Wednesday, June 9, 2010
Wyoming Tightens Environmental Rules
According to the Houston Chronicle & The Associated Press (6/8): Energy companies operating in Wyoming will be required to disclose the chemicals they use in a number of drilling techniques, including hydraulic fracturing, under rules approved by the state's Oil and Gas Conservation Commission. "They appear on the surface to be workable," Rick Robitaille, the Petroleum Association of Wyoming's vice president.
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
More Marcellus Activity
May 28, 2010 - (Wall Street Journal) Shell agrees to acquire East Resources for $4.7 billion. East Resources is one of the largest companies operating in the Marcellus Shale, and it owns 1.25 million acres across several states. The deal also gives Shell the mineral rights to areas in Texas' Eagle Ford Shale. Analysts say the deal shows a continued interest (by Shell) in producing gas from North American shale.
May 28, 2010 - (Reuters) Penn Virginia purchases 10,000 Marcellus acres for $19.5 million from two private oil and gas companies. The acquired acreage is primarily in the Potter, Somerset and Tioga counties in Pennsylvania. The deal increases Penn Virginia's ownership in the area to about 45,000 net acres, the company said.
May 28, 2010 - (Reuters) Penn Virginia purchases 10,000 Marcellus acres for $19.5 million from two private oil and gas companies. The acquired acreage is primarily in the Potter, Somerset and Tioga counties in Pennsylvania. The deal increases Penn Virginia's ownership in the area to about 45,000 net acres, the company said.
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