Posts Tagged ‘a-natural-gas’
Tuesday, August 10th, 2010
Boone Pickens ‘s plans to save the United States from its energy dependence on so-called hostile petro-powers is, simply put, full of hot air. The abundance of shale gas in the US will no more free the country’s motorists from dependence on foreign oil than have either the American production of over ten billion gallons of corn-based ethanol or the rollout of GM’s electric-powered Volt . There’s a reason for the fact that, for a given amount of energy, natural gas prices today trade at a fraction of the price of oil. If people could just switch from using one fuel to the other, that price gap would quickly be arbitraged away. But they can’t–at least not where it counts the most. Not that there hasn’t been scope for substitution. Few households in North America still burn oil to heat their homes–most switched to much cheaper domestically produced natural gas after the OPEC oil shocks of the 1970s. Even fewer North Americans rely on burning oil to generate power for their homes. And most petrochemical producers can switch from oil to a natural gas feedstock. But unfortunately, the majority of oil consumed in the United States–and indeed in the rest of the world–is used as a transport fuel. On average it’s about 60 per cent of all the oil consumed, and as much as 90 per cent of each new barrel that comes out of the ground. And that’s exactly where prices for oil and natural gas disconnect. Planes fly on jet fuel made from oil, ships run on bunker fuel made from oil, and, most importantly, motor vehicles run on gasoline or diesel made from oil. And with good reason: oil packs about four times the energy density of natural gas. And it carries about 20 times the energy density of the lithium-ion battery found in an electric car. That’s a key reason why neither electric- nor natural gas-powered cars have made any sizeable inroads into the North American vehicle market. The 110,000 or so natural gas-powered vehicles in the US, most of them urban buses, remain an insignificant fragment of a 250 million-vehicle market. And the story isn’t any different with electric powered cars: GM doesn’t expect to sell more than 10,000 of its heralded Volt next year. Another reason is the absence of a fuel distribution system. Outside of urban centers, there are few gas stations that supply natural gas, which means that, at best, the fuel can only be used for urban commutes. To build a national distribution system for the fuel would require subsidies that far exceed anything already squandered on encouraging home-grown ethanol production. Switching to natural gas is no more attractive an alternative for most American motorists right now than switching to corn-based ethanol or electric power. And until it is, expect natural gas and oil prices to stay disconnected, leaving the American economy as dependent as ever on foreign oil suppliers.
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Jeffrey Rubin: Boone Pickens’s Plan Full of Hot Air
Tags: a-given-amount, a-natural-gas, boone-pickens, energy, ever-on-foreign, fuel, natural-gas, north, north-america, price, save-the-united, united, united-states
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Tuesday, July 13th, 2010
DENVER — The Environmental Protection Agency on Tuesday was holding the second of four public meetings to gather comments about an upcoming study of how drinking water might be affected by a method of extracting natural gas. The decades-old process – called hydraulic fracturing, or fracking – pumps water and chemicals underground at high pressure to help extract trapped oil and natural gas. The fluids break open fractures in shale formations, and sand or another substance is pumped in to keep the fractures open. The fluids then returns to the surface, and natural gas flows from the fractures into a well. Fracking has been around for decades, but amid a natural gas drilling boom, members of Congress have questioned whether it could taint drinking water or harm human health. Critics said a 2004 EPA study that found no evidence of threats to drinking water was flawed. The EPA doesn’t regulate fracking, leaving it to states. U.S. Reps. Diana DeGette and Jared Polis, both Colorado Democrats, are among those pushing for federal oversight. Besides potential effects on drinking water, critics have raised concerns including whether fracking, which can use millions of gallons of water, could deplete aquifers. America’s Natural Gas Alliance, an advocacy group for the gas industry, submitted comments last week that, in part, supported focusing the study on effects on drinking water. It also sought input on the makeup of EPA study and advisory panels. “History demonstrates that hydraulic fracturing can generate abundant, secure energy supplies, without adverse consequences to drinking water,” alliance President and CEO Regina Hopper said in a letter to the EPA. Las Animas County resident Tracy Dahl, though, suspects that his southern Colorado well that has produced clean, clear drinking water for the last seven years was muddied by fracking at an adjacent property June 30. “That evening, we checked the cistern and there was 500 gallons of murky, nasty water where it had always been clean before,” said Dahl, 51. “Seems to me to be a pretty direct correlation. Whether we can prove it or not is another matter.” He said he is now driving 80 miles roundtrip to Trinidad to get drinking water. “I saw this coming years ago. I was petitioning every politician I could think of to try to come up with stronger regulations to prevent this. Then to have to just see it happen anyway, it’s fantastically frustrating,” said Dahl, a technical specialist in renewable energy who was set to testify Tuesday. The EPA held its first public meetings on the study last week in Fort Worth, Texas. Other meetings are scheduled July 22 in Canonsburg, Pa., and Aug. 12 in Binghamton, N.Y. ___ Online: http://www.epa.gov/safewater/uic/wells_hydrofrac.html
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EPA Fracking Meeting Held In Denver
Tags: a-natural-gas, a-pretty-direct, congress, drinking-water, fractures, have-questioned, makeup, meetings, meetings-on-the, president, regina-hopper, sand-or-another, trinidad, water-or-harm
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Tuesday, July 13th, 2010
DENVER — The Environmental Protection Agency on Tuesday was holding the second of four public meetings to gather comments about an upcoming study of how drinking water might be affected by a method of extracting natural gas. The decades-old process – called hydraulic fracturing, or fracking – pumps water and chemicals underground at high pressure to help extract trapped oil and natural gas. The fluids break open fractures in shale formations, and sand or another substance is pumped in to keep the fractures open. The fluids then returns to the surface, and natural gas flows from the fractures into a well. Fracking has been around for decades, but amid a natural gas drilling boom, members of Congress have questioned whether it could taint drinking water or harm human health. Critics said a 2004 EPA study that found no evidence of threats to drinking water was flawed. The EPA doesn’t regulate fracking, leaving it to states. U.S. Reps. Diana DeGette and Jared Polis, both Colorado Democrats, are among those pushing for federal oversight. Besides potential effects on drinking water, critics have raised concerns including whether fracking, which can use millions of gallons of water, could deplete aquifers. America’s Natural Gas Alliance, an advocacy group for the gas industry, submitted comments last week that, in part, supported focusing the study on effects on drinking water. It also sought input on the makeup of EPA study and advisory panels. “History demonstrates that hydraulic fracturing can generate abundant, secure energy supplies, without adverse consequences to drinking water,” alliance President and CEO Regina Hopper said in a letter to the EPA. Las Animas County resident Tracy Dahl, though, suspects that his southern Colorado well that has produced clean, clear drinking water for the last seven years was muddied by fracking at an adjacent property June 30. “That evening, we checked the cistern and there was 500 gallons of murky, nasty water where it had always been clean before,” said Dahl, 51. “Seems to me to be a pretty direct correlation. Whether we can prove it or not is another matter.” He said he is now driving 80 miles roundtrip to Trinidad to get drinking water. “I saw this coming years ago. I was petitioning every politician I could think of to try to come up with stronger regulations to prevent this. Then to have to just see it happen anyway, it’s fantastically frustrating,” said Dahl, a technical specialist in renewable energy who was set to testify Tuesday. The EPA held its first public meetings on the study last week in Fort Worth, Texas. Other meetings are scheduled July 22 in Canonsburg, Pa., and Aug. 12 in Binghamton, N.Y. ___ Online: http://www.epa.gov/safewater/uic/wells_hydrofrac.html
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EPA Fracking Meeting Held In Denver
Tags: a-natural-gas, a-pretty-direct, congress, drinking-water, have-questioned, makeup, president, regina-hopper, sand-or-another, study, substance, trinidad
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Thursday, March 18th, 2010
LOS ANGELES — Authorities are investigating whether a motorcycle gang rigged a Southern California police building with booby traps after becoming angry when police monitored the funeral of a member. Hemet police spokesman Lt. Duane Wisehart said Thursday it was one of several possible motives being considered regarding the attacks. “They are definitely one of the suspects,” Wisehart said. “It’s coincidental at minimum.” About 30 members of the Vagos, California’s largest motorcycle gang, were arrested Wednesday as part of a crackdown in Riverside and Shasta counties in California, Arizona, Nevada and Utah. California Attorney General Jerry Brown and Riverside County District Attorney Rod Pacheco scheduled a news conference later in the day to discuss the attacks. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has offered a $50,000 reward for information in the case. About 100 members of the Vagos gang attended the Dec. 29 funeral at a church across the street from the anti-gang unit’s headquarters in Hemet, authorities said. Officers monitored the memorial but did not attend the service. Some of the Vagos members were questioned or followed as they left town. “They were there, we were there,” said Riverside County sheriff’s Capt. Walter Meyer, who oversees the regional gang task force. “Is there information that could indicate it was possibly them? Absolutely.” Meyer, however, said members of other gangs had not been ruled out as suspects. “Obviously we have angered somebody,” he said. Two days after the Vagos funeral, someone drilled a hole in the roof of the police building and diverted a natural gas line from a heater, filling the space with flammable gas. The trap was discovered before anyone was hurt. Last month, a contraption rigged to a security gate at the building sent a bullet whizzing past an officer. Nobody was hurt in that attack or another incident when an unspecified, dangerous device was found near an officer’s car. Meyer said there are about 200 Vagos members in Riverside County. The gang specializes in methamphetamine sales, identity theft and violence, he said. Hemet is located in Riverside County’s San Jacinto Valley and has a population of about 75,000 people.
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Biker Gangs Suspected In Police Building Booby Traps
Tags: a-church-across, a-natural-gas, a-security-gate, after-the-vagos, attacks, attorney, california, duane-wisehart, funeral, jacinto-valley, monitored-the, riverside-, riverside-county, street, vagos
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Wednesday, February 24th, 2010
We have all been subjected to the new (stolen) Jay Leno Show promos during the Olympics. I’d like my curling finals Palin-free, but it’s apparently not to be. Thanks to his prime-time failure, Jay has his old show back. I’m a Letterman girl; I can’t help it-whining bugs me. Sarah Palin will appear right alongside gold-medal winners as one of Jay’s welcome back guests next week. How can this be? David Letterman’s unfortunate joke last summer had a long shelf life. Half of the Paliban think Letterman actually raped one of the Palin girls. Why wouldn’t they? Her statement insinuated he was a pedophile. Jay Leno, however, is in high-favor with the half-term governor. Sarah, what’s the difference between jokes about your daughter being impregnated by Alex Rodriguez and John Edwards? Do tell. On September 2, 2008, Jay Leno joked: “Governor Palin announced over the weekend that her 17-year-old unmarried daughter is five months pregnant. Oh, boy, you thought John Edwards was in trouble before, now he’s really done it!” WOW! Sarah is going on the air with a guy who said John Edwards impregnated her daughter who was a minor? Don’t get me wrong, John Edwards is an asshat, but knocking up a minor? Well, we’re still waiting for that tape. Dang, is this covered in the “Sarah Palin Satire Clause”? Later he joked: “And we’re learning more and more about Governor Palin. Apparently her daughter’s name is Juno.” Precious! AND then …”All the Republicans are heaping praise on Governor Palin. Fred Thompson said, as an actor, he could see them making a movie about Sarah Palin and her family. Didn’t they already make that movie? I think it was called ‘Knocked Up!’” I think Sarah owes David Letterman a fruit basket and an “I’m sorry I jumped on your case, it was working for me then.” So many jokes from Jay Leno, but I found one I agree with: “She said at her church, Governor Palin, said she asked everyone to pray for a natural gas pipeline, which she said was God’s will. And today, God said, “Hey lady, I don’t deal with oil companies. That’s more Satan’s area.” Yet another chapter of Hypocrisy Now! With Sarah Palin . (My apologies to Democracy NOW! With Amy Goodman) More on David Letterman

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Shannyn Moore: Hypocrisy NOW! With Sarah Palin…
Tags: a-fruit-basket, a-long-shelf, a-natural-gas, church, david-letterman, difference, edwards, family, governor-palin, olympics, paliban, palin, sarah-palin
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Monday, February 8th, 2010
CBC.ca Power plant explosion under investigation Los Angeles Times The inquiry will focus on whether recently issued safety protocols were disregarded during the purging of a natural gas pipeline. Middletown, Conn. – Possible gaps in safety protocols at the Kleen Energy power plant are at the center of the … Negligence? Conn. Gas Blast Criminal Probe Begins ABC News Victims of power plant explosion identified NECN Blast Probe Looks at Gas-Line Clearing Wall Street Journal Fort Wayne Journal Gazette
Tags: a-natural-gas, blast-probe, center, kleen, kleen-energy, looks-at-gas, probe, purging, street
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Thursday, January 7th, 2010
DENVER — Supporters of Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter’s successful overhaul of the state’s oil and gas regulations hope his decision not to seek re-election won’t mean the rollback of the protections for wildlife and the environment. The Democrat’s announcement Wednesday that he is dropping out of the race prompted praise from conservationists for his support of new oil and gas rules – and concerns about any efforts to repeal them. No other Democrat has stepped forward since Ritter announced his decision. Republican gubernatorial candidates Scott McInnis and Dan Maes have said the regulations approved on Ritter’s watch have discouraged energy development. Each has promised thorough reviews of them if elected. Colorado and national industry groups have denounced the regulations as the most restrictive in the country. The rules, which took effect last April, balance protecting the state’s wildlife and landscapes and allowing energy development, conservation, hunting and angling, the groups said. “Gov. Ritter deserves credit for proving that wildlife protection and responsible energy development are not mutually exclusive,” said Steve Torbit, the National Wildlife Federation’s executive director for the Rocky Mountain region. Supporters will work with state officials to make sure the regulations stay in place, Torbit said. Laws giving more weight to the environment, wildlife and public health and safety were approved in 2007 amid a natural gas boom in the Rockies. Conservation groups as well as hunters and anglers lobbied for more attention to the effects on wildlife, air and water quality. Drilling boomed in western Colorado, home to some of the country’s largest deer and elk herds, greater sage grouse and cutthroat trout – and a tourism and hunting industry worth hundreds of millions of dollars. Ritter courted hunters and anglers when he ran for governor in 2006. He responded to concerns about the impacts of development by backing legislation that revamped the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission. Now, more members on the regulatory body must come from outside the industry, addressing criticism that the panel was stacked in the industry’s favor. The rules were approved after months of public hearings, meetings with various interest groups and deliberations by the oil and gas commission. “I think the Ritter administration stood up for Colorado’s wildlife at a pivotal juncture in our history,” said Suzanne O’Neill of the Colorado Wildlife Federation, which includes hunters and anglers. The task isn’t finished, said Ivan James of the Colorado Bowhunters Association. Rules on how far drilling rigs must be from homes and waterways, reclamation standards and wildlife guidelines still must be considered. Torbit said he rejects the argument that the oil and gas regulations are behind the drop in drilling in Colorado. The economic slowdown coupled with a huge supply of natural gas are the culprits, he said. “I’m very, very concerned that the opposition party is using the oil and gas rules as the excuse for every problem that everybody has,” Torbit said. “If their kid gets a `D’ in math, it’s suddenly Gov. Ritter and the oil and gas rules.” Former Colorado congressman McInnis, the GOP front-runner in the governor’s race, believes the regulations are out of balance and have cost Colorado high-paying jobs and tax revenue, said campaign spokesman Sean Duffy. If elected, McInnis would start discussions of the rules with all the interested parties, Duffy said. “People want a governor who’s going to say, `We’re going to preserve jobs as well as the environment,’” Duffy said.
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Bill Ritter’s Retirement: Conservationists Hope Announcement Won’t Means Appeals Of His Tight Oil And Gas Rules
Tags: a-natural-gas, country, democrat, environment, industry, national, public-health, race, ritter, the-regulations
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