natural gas
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For an industry once fueled by the law of supply and demand, the new economic reality has brought new rules.
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In its May 2020 Short-Term Energy Outlook, the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) forecast US-marketed natural gas production to decrease by 5% in 2020. Production is expected to average 94.3 Bcf/D in 2020, down from 99.2 Bcf/D in 2019.
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The $20.7-billion agreement is the single-largest energy infrastructure investment in the region.
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Senior oil and gas professionals see hydrogen as a significant part of the global energy mix by 2030.
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The natural gas pipeline is co-financed by the EU, with work beginning immediately.
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Historically, natural gas contract prices were tied to the price of crude; now, volatility and growth in spot-market liquidity signal a shift from long-term linking toward a more integrated market.
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There are numerous views of what the future energy landscape will look like in the next decade and beyond. When thinking about sources of primary energy, it is not a question of either/or, it is a question of what can reach scale fast enough to meet continued demand growth.
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Not everybody suffers when US oil producers slash production. Among the beneficiaries could be US gas producers who will benefit because less oil production will mean a lot less gas on the US market.
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The drop in gas prices, although greater than forecast, will not be to the same extent as oil prices.
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Texas Railroad Commissioner releases state's first flaring report.