The HOGR case reflects a scenario in which more abundant
domestic natural gas resources and better technology enhance natural gas supplies, keeping projected annual average spot natural gas prices below $ 4.50 per million Btu through 2040.
Not exact matches
Natural gas and
domestic oil production got a shout - out in the address as part of the President's vision of supporting
domestic energy
resources, something that several Republican lawmakers were pleased, and perhaps surprised, to hear.What I thought was more interesting was the President specifically calling out how big of a consumer of energy the U.S.
But Senator Pete V. Domenici of New Mexico, the senior Republican on the Energy and
Natural Resources Committee, has opposed any effort to end the tax incentives for
domestic production of oil and
gas.
A case that assumes significantly higher
domestic oil and
natural gas resource availability results in lower
natural gas prices, thus increasing
natural gas's share of generation and lowering power - sector CO2 emissions.
We are blessed as a nation to have an abundance of
domestic energy
resources, such as coal,
natural gas, nuclear, and hydroelectric, all of which provide affordable base load power and contribute to a stable, reliable, and resilient grid.
Increase existing
domestic onshore oil and
natural gas liquids (NGLs) production of approximately 8 million barrels a day by 3 - 4 million barrels a day through the acceleration of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing to develop the enormous unconventional oil and NGL
resources that underlie many parts of our country;
Those abundant U.S.
natural gas resources, which can meet and exceed our
domestic needs, while allowing for exports to a world that will need 40 percent more in supplies in the next decade.
Subtitle B: Disposition of Allowances -(Sec. 321) Amends the CAA to set forth provisions governing the disposition of emission allowances, including specifying allocations: (1) for supplemental emissions reductions from reduced deforestation; (2) for the benefit of electricity,
natural gas, and / or home heating oil and propane consumers; (3) for auction, with proceeds for the benefit of low income consumers and worker investment; (4) to energy - intensive, trade - exposed industries; (5) for the deployment of carbon capture and sequestration technology; (6) to invest in energy efficiency and renewable energy; (7) to be distributed to Energy Innovation Hubs and advanced energy research; (8) to invest in the development and deployment of clean vehicles; (9) to
domestic petroleum refineries and small business refiners; (10) for
domestic and international adaptation; (11) for
domestic wildlife and
natural resource adaptation; and (12) for international clean technology deployment.
A Senate Energy and
Natural Resources full committee hearing on June 19, on «How to harness a game - changing resource for export, domestic consumption, and transportation fuel» (archived webcast and witness written testimony here) focused first and foremost on a push for expediting increased export of domestically produced natural gas to the world
Natural Resources full committee hearing on June 19, on «How to harness a game - changing
resource for export,
domestic consumption, and transportation fuel» (archived webcast and witness written testimony here) focused first and foremost on a push for expediting increased export of domestically produced
natural gas to the world
natural gas to the world market.
The IEO2017 Reference Case projects that China's
domestic natural gas production will reach 39 Bcf / d by 2040, driven primarily by the development of shale
gas resources.
Alaska «s North Slope accounted for 25 percent of U.S.
domestic oil and
natural gas production in 1988, but production has plummeted because the U.S. government has largely prevented exploration for new
resources in the state both onshore and offshore.
Natural gas currently generates two - thirds of the country's electricity, but
domestic gas resources are set to begin depleting rapidly and almost all imports come from a single country, Myanmar, leaving Thailand vulnerable to supply disruptions.
Some countries with GTL facilities lack
domestic oil
resources but have access to
natural gas.
Rather than invest where the best tax regime can be found, oil and
natural gas companies invest where the
resource is located, continuing to spend billions of dollars on new and existing
domestic projects each year despite U.S. tax rates that are the highest in the developed world.
Many countries showing improvements in access were
natural gas producers, suggesting that
domestic availability of this
resource could be an advantage.
Mr. Sweeney, who advises clients on a broad range of U.S.
domestic and international oil and
gas, coal, and other
natural resource, infrastructure and finance transactions, comes to Akin Gump from K&L Gates, where he was a partner.