Sentences with phrase «recoverable natural»

We have about 2.744 quadrillion cubic feet of technically recoverable natural gas.
Access to the world's largest remaining conventional, undiscovered oil and natural gas reserves — 13 percent of recoverable oil and 30 percent of recoverable natural gas resources — is at stake.
A new EIA report shows that shale resources in the United States and worldwide represent 10 percent of the world's crude oil and 32 percent of the world's technically recoverable natural gas resources.
[iii] According to the EIA report, the United States has recoverable oil resources that are 36 times larger than its proved oil reserves and recoverable natural gas resources that are 7 times larger than its proved natural gas reserves for 2014.
The Arctic contains the world's largest remaining conventional, undiscovered oil and natural gas, estimated at 13 percent of recoverable oil and 30 percent of recoverable natural gas resources.

Not exact matches

If you did that, I guarantee you that you would not see a 22 % difference between Canadian natural bitumen and Venezuelan extra heavy oil, and you'd be adding a strong incentive to reduce emissions for 434 billion barrels of recoverable reserves of extra heavy oil.
These spontaneous factors of a free decision not articulated in propositions, not explicitly focussed, not recoverable by introspection, can of course ex supposito never be critically judged and elucidated by reflection and theoretical verification, by express confrontation with the explicit precepts of the natural law, the Gospel and the Church.
The wet - glue labeled can, whether aluminum or stainless steel, might after all be the ultimate in environmentally friendly packaging: easily recoverable and taking advantage of the «natural» appeal of simpler forms of packaging.
This new cold war is all about trade and resources: According to a 2008 study by the U.S. Geologic Survey, the Arctic has 20 percent of the planet's undiscovered and recoverable oil and natural gas deposits.
quote: «Not every acre of land under lease contains commercially recoverable oil or natural gas resources.
Apart from these unrecoverable sources of fossil fuel the Arctic is also endowed with large amounts of recoverable oil and natural gas.
The U.S. Energy Information Agency (EIA) reports that over 1,300 trillion cubic feet of technically recoverable shale and tight natural gas and 89 billion barrels 9 of technically recoverable shale oil resources currently exist in discovered shale and tight sandstone plays.
Temperature increases in the Arctic of a just few degrees could unleash the huge storehouse of methane, which some have estimated would be comparable to burning all recoverable stocks of coal, oil, and natural gas.
Proved reserves of oil and natural gas are volumes that geologic and engineering data demonstrate with reasonable certainty to be recoverable under existing economic and operating conditions.
While natural gas reserves reached another record in 2014 and oil reserves were the highest since 1972, the technically recoverable resources from which they came are enormous and will continue to supply proved reserves for Americans for decades to come.
The part of these resources that become economically recoverable resources will depend on the market price of natural gas from foreign sources, including both pipeline gas and liquefied natural gas, as well as the capital and operating costs and productivity of shale gas production within China.
ENERGY OVERVIEW Energy Minister: Ernesto Martens Rebolledo Head of PEMEX: Raul Munoz Leos Proven Oil Reserves (1 / 1 / 03E): 12.6 billion barrels (see Reserves and Production) Oil Production (2002E): 3.6 million barrels per day (bbl / d), of which 3.18 million bbl / d was crude Oil Consumption (2002E): 1.93 million bbl / d Net Oil Exports (2002E): 1.68 million bbl / d Crude Oil Refining Capacity (1 / 1 / 03E): 1.7 million bbl / d Natural Gas Reserves (1 / 1 / 03E): 8.8 trillion cubic feet (Tcf)(see Reserves and Production) Natural Gas Production (2000E): 1.33 Tcf Natural Gas Consumption (2000E): 1.38 Tcf Recoverable Coal Reserves (2000E): 1.3 billion short tons Coal Production (2000E): 10.86 million short tons Coal Consumption (2000E): 13.41 million short tons Net Coal Imports (2000E): 2.55 million short tons Electric Generation Capacity (2000E): 38.9 million kilowatts Net Electricity Generation (2000E): 194.37 billion kilowatthours (bkwh); 74 % thermal, 18 % hydro, 5 % nuclear, 3 % other Net Electricity Consumption (2000E): 182.8 bkwh Net Electricity Imports (2000E): 2.07 bkwh
The Beaufort and Chukchi seas off the coast of Alaska contain more technically recoverable oil and natural gas than the Atlantic and Pacific coasts combined, according to government estimates.
Two days ago, the New York Times reported that the French Parliament is «leaning» towards a ban on hydraulic fracturing, the American - made technological revolution in production that has vastly increased the known economically recoverable global reserves of natural gas.
Vast quantities of coal — proven to exist — remain in the ground — but not included on the reserve tally because they are not economically recoverable at current prices — in part due to the availability of oil and natural gas.
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