Natural
Gas Council Climate Change Analysis
March 11, 2008
Washington, DC - Experts from the natural gas industry are warning that
the use of natural gas could increase dramatically under climate change
legislation being considered on Capitol Hill. A summary of their findings
is being sent to Congress today.
Facing
the Hard Truths About Energy
July 18, 2007
In July of 2007, the National Petroleum Council in response to a request
from Secretary of Energy Samuel Bodman, published a report titled Facing
the Hard Truths About Energy, examined the future of energy security
to the year 2030. The National Petroleum Council (NPC), is a federally
chartered and privately funded advisory committee, established in 1946.
The NPC provides the perspectives of the oil and natural gas industries
in advising, informing, and making recommendations to the Secretary
of Energy with respect to any matter relating to oil and natural gas.
Testimony
of Daniel Yergin, Chairman, Cambridge Energy Research Associates (CERA)
before the Committee on Foreign Affairs, US House of Representatives
- "The Fundamentals of Energy Security"
March 22, 2007
CERA Chairman Daniel Yergin testified before the House Committee on
Foreign Affairs on March 22 at a hearing to discuss the past and current
global energy security system.
EPCA Phase II
Report
December 16, 2006
This report, titled Scientific Inventory of Onshore Federal Lands'
Oil and Gas Resources and the Extent and Nature of Restrictions or Impediments
to Their Development — Phase II Cumulative Inventory, supersedes
Phase I of the inventory.
Testimony
of Terry Boss, Senior Vice President, Environment, Safety and Operations,
Interstate Natural Gas Association of America (INGAA) before the Committee
on Commerce, Science and Transportation, United States Senate – November
16, 2006 (PDF)
Terry Boss, INGAA Senior Vice President, testified in support of the
reauthorization of the Pipeline Safety Act which expired September 30
2006. "The integrity management program mandated by the PSIA (Pipeline
Safety Improvement Act of 2002) is performing very well,” he said.
Statement
of Daniel Yergin, Chairman of Cambridge Energy Research Associates,
before the Committee on Energy and Commerce, U.S. House of Representatives
- May 4, 2006 (PDF)
Prize-winning author and oil consultant Daniel Yergin testified before
the House Energy and Commerce Committee on May 4 at a hearing to discuss
concerns around the rising price of oil. "If there is a single message,"
Yergin said, "it is that we cannot begin to understand what is happening
at the gasoline pump unless we see it in the global context-involving
both crude supply and refining worldwide."
American
Enterprise Institute (AEI), ”Energy Security, National Security,
and Natural Gas”
By Gary J. Schmitt
April 13, 2006
For the past four decades, discussions of energy security and the security
implications of energy supplies have focused on oil. But, increasingly,
this focus will appear to be too narrow. If current trends continue,
the United States
will face a similar set of problems with natural gas: growing demand,
costly supplies, and governments who will use their control over gas
reserves to enhance their geopolitical position in ways likely to complicate
U.S. foreign policy.
Foreign
Affairs, “Ensuring Energy Security”
March/April 2006
The institutions and policies that were set up after the 1973 Arab oil
embargo can no longer meet the needs of energy consumers or producers.
The definition of energy security needs to be expanded to cope with
the challenges of a globalized world.
Critical Issues in the Natural
Gas Market (PDF)
February 13, 2006
Commissioner Nora Brownell's testimony on the natural gas market before
the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
Recent Natural Gas Prices
(PDF)
February 13, 2006
OMOI Director Susan Court's testimony on the natural gas market before
the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
What is the Future of Natural
Gas? (
PDF)
A Congressional report concludes that additional exploration and production
of natural gas is needed to moderate sharp price increases and continued
job loss.
The
Federal Reserve Board, "Energy," Alan Greenspan Speech
October 17, 2005
"Even before the devastating hurricanes of August and September 2005,
world oil markets had been subject to a degree of strain not experienced
for a generation. Increased demand and lagging additions to productive
capacity had eliminated a significant amount of the slack in world oil
markets that had been essential in containing crude oil and product
prices between 1985 and 2000."
"Natural
Gas: Balancing Supply, Demand and the Environment" (
PDF)
May 24, 2005
Summary of forum sponsored by the American Gas Foundation, American
Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy and the National Environmental
Trust.
"Natural Gas Outlook to 2020" Study by American Gas Foundation
[more...]
API's policy suggestions
submitted to the Natural Gas Conference, Senate Energy and Natural Resources
Committee, chaired by Senator Pete Domenici (R-NM) (
PDF)
January 2005
America's natural gas policy has encouraged the use of this clean-burning
fuel while discouraging the development of new supplies. The result
is the current tight supply/ demand balance and the prospect of continual
future tightening if action is not taken. Natural gas markets have distributed
supplies efficiently, but prices have risen and markets have become
more volatile due to the tight supply/demand balance.
Between a Rock and a Hard
Place," Amy Zuckerman, Leadership for Manufacturers Magazine, (National
Association of Manufacturers) (
PDF)
Winter 2004
With fluctuating natural gas prices wreaking havoc for American industry,
experts hope to find political solutions that can gain national consensus.
Senate
Joint Economic Committee Hearing on "The Long Run Economics of Natural
Gas,", Testimony of Chairman Robert Bennett (R-UT)
October 7, 2004
"It is important that we address the problem of high natural gas prices
as soon as possible. The high prices act like a brake on the American
economy, impacting every business and household in America. ... We know
the proximate causes for the run up in the cost of natural gas. A few
years after prices were deregulated in the 1980s the Congress passed
laws that in effect encouraged its use to produce electricity, sharply
increasing demand. At the same time, the production from extant wells
began to decline and environmental restrictions made the exploration
and drilling of new wells more difficult. It doesn't take an economist
to see that policies that increase demand and decrease supply will sharply
increase prices."
Senate
Joint Economic Committee Hearing, Statement of Daniel Yergen (
PDF)
October 7, 2004
"The higher and volatile gas prices are not a failure of markets. Rather
they are the result of a disappointing geological experience over the
last several years, compounded by issues involving access to resources.
With upward pressure from demand, prices are performing their essential
function-signaling the change in conditions to both producers and consumers."
Senate Joint Economic Committee
Hearing on "The Pressures on Natural Gas Prices," Testimony of Chairman
Robert Bennett (R-UT) (
PDF)
October 6, 2004
The price of natural gas has increased sharply in recent years after
an extended period of relative stability. Higher prices are due to a
number of factors, such as the implementation of policies that have
encouraged consumption, the lack of infrastructure necessary to bring
more natural gas to the market, the declining productivity of existing
wells, and the inability to access natural gas field on federal lands.