Sentences with phrase «lot more natural gas»

We're seeing a lot more natural gas because of its price and the retirement of coal - fired power plants.
If nuclear power suddenly goes away in New York, we will be burning a lot more natural gas.

Not exact matches

Apart from the obvious environmental benefits, this made a lot of economic sense pre-2008 when natural gas was expensive and looking to get more so.
More likely, there are still nuclear plants running, and there may even be some natural gas plants lingering in the system — not running at full capacity, but they have the ability to power up quickly when there's not a lot of sun or wind.
I suspect that we will be hearing a lot more about hydrogen cars too; the fossil fuel companies might well fund a fake «hydrogen economy» because the cheapest hydrogen is made by steam reforming of natural gas; people think that this is somehow better than just running a car on CNG.
Or, in more interesting and game - changing scenarios, the standard high pressure tank can hold the SAME amount of natural gas at LESS pressure, making filling the tank much easier, or ANG tanks can be free - shape containers since the pressures are a lot less and the cylindrical shape is not necessary.
«In a lot of ways the sort of renaissance we've seen in «upstream» in North America, particularly in natural gas, made the decision to come down a bit more heavy - handedly on coal easier,» Medlock explained.
We should have a lot more reactors spinning turbines, and use natural gas for more productive uses.
While this covers a lot of ground, it basically says that a robust strategy to produce more U.S. oil and natural gas has benefited and will keep benefiting the manufacturing sector — and along with it, job creation and economic growth.
«We are... producing a lot of natural gas, which serves as a bridge to more renewable fuels.
Whatever the merit of the argument for natural gas as a bridge fuel may be (never quite decided myself), that bridge is a lot more frayed now than when people started making the argument a decade or so ago.
• Clinton: «We are... producing a lot of natural gas, which serves as a bridge to more renewable fuels, and I think that's an important transition.»
The fact that lye is a byproduct of the chlorine industry will have many people nervous — but barring any provable pollution or toxicity issues for the environment, I must say this sounds a whole lot more appealing to me than burning up natural gas to get rid of my remains.
But the truth is a lot more complicated than a talking point, something which a Dutch advertising watchdog has recognized as it takes two fossil fuel companies to task over misleading ads about natural gas being the «cleanest of all fossil fuels.»
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