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Exporting US natural gas? - Printable Version +- ShareholdersUnite Forums (http://shareholdersunite.com/mybb) +-- Forum: Miscellaneous (http://shareholdersunite.com/mybb/forumdisplay.php?fid=9) +--- Forum: Energy (http://shareholdersunite.com/mybb/forumdisplay.php?fid=24) +--- Thread: Exporting US natural gas? (/showthread.php?tid=2261) |
Exporting US natural gas? - admin - 12-08-2012 But if the Obama administration approves exports, it might hurt manufacturing and chemical production in the U.S. The U.S. Department of Energy released a long awaited report that estimates the economic impact of allowing natural gas exports. It concluded that while exporting natural gas could marginally increase electricity prices and lead to lower wages, in total the economic benefit of selling natural gas to other countries would outweigh these problems. Still, some are concerned that exporting natural gas, since it could lead to an increase in natural gas prices in the United States, might hurt companies that have been counting on low natural gas prices. Dow, for example, is investing heavily in chemical plants in the U.S. that will use natural gas as a feedstock. From the Wall Street Journal:
Beyond chemical production, natural gas prices could affect the deployment of renewable energy. Low gas prices have led to lower electricity prices, making it harder for wind and solar to compete, even with subsidies (see “King Natural Gas &rdquo
RE: Exporting US natural gas? - ArtM72 - 12-08-2012 Combine political support for the export of LNG from the US with the potential for Bill Powers' book on the overstatement of actual NG reserves to be correct, the best source of long term energy is once again conservation. I suspect Dow is doing what other large consumers of natural gas like NUCOR are doing, and that is buying into gas fields. |