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Discussione: USA: L'era del Gas

  1. #1
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    Predefinito USA: L'era del Gas

    Shale Fracking Makes U.S. Natural Gas Superpower. Now What?



    Asian demand for natural gas has risen so sharply in recent years that Alaska wants to build a $50 billion pipeline and export terminal to move its stranded supply offshore. Exxon Mobil Corp., BP Plc and ConocoPhillips will deliver plans for such a project to Alaska Governor Sean Parnell by the end of this month.
    Alaska has the only operating liquid natural gas (LNG) export plant in the United States. It’s an aging facility, capable of processing less than 10 percent of the volume of a new 3 billion cubic-feet-a-day terminal. The state’s hunger for revenues from its conventional gas is part of a larger unsolved question that the U.S. will have to tackle in the next few years: What will the nation do with its newfound abundance of natural gas, mostly from unconventional sources?
    The question lurks just under the surface of the national energy conversation, which vacillates between exuberance that shale gas exists at all and fear that the method of extracting it -- fracking -- is polluting people's water. The high-pitched debates around fracking largely obscure another player: the rest of the world. It wants less expensive natural gas.
    Gas is pricey in much of the world, particularly in energy-poor Japan and South Korea. This map shows why U.S. producers are so eager to construct U.S. export facilities. October prices, in dollars per million BTUs, could reach $13.50 in Argentina and $13.80 in Japan and South Korea -- but just $2.48 at the Lake Charles LNG import facility, in Louisiana. It's so inexpensive stateside because the U.S. supply is so great and because it's trapped in markets served by North America's pipeline network.
    There's a simple reason for that disparity, one that will require considerable investment to overcome -- if the U.S. decides it wants to. Unlike oil, which flows on and off tankers, and coal, which fills up capesize transport vessels, natural gas just wants to be free. It’s lighter than air and wants nothing so much as to disperse into the atmosphere. Natural gas must be contained before it can be shipped.
    It's a considerable undertaking.
    First, a country has to develop gas fields, which the U.S. has done, and build hundreds of miles of pipelines to bring the gas to a port.
    Second, it must build the massive port infrastructure to liquefy the gas, by lowering is temperature to about -260 degrees Fahrenheit. The Department of Energy has approved one new LNG export terminal, at Cheniere Energy Inc.'s existing import terminal in Cameron Parish, Louisiana. Nearly a dozen others are under DOE review. Just to give you a sense of how quickly this is all moving, less than 10 years ago the U.S. was expecting to build more import terminals.
    Third, a fleet of specialized tankers must be called into service to transport the gas by sea.
    Finally, the receiving side must re-gasify the fuel -- carefully! -- provided that it already has built the pipeline infrastructure to deliver it to customers.
    How much should the U.S. spend on gas export infrastructure? If it sells its gas overseas, how much, for example, might future U.S. prices -- for U.S. gas -- rise as future South Korean prices fall? "That's what the big discussion is right now," said Andres Rojas, market analyst at Waterborne Energy Inc., the company that provides the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission with the map data. We spoke by phone late last month.
    U.S. producers would like to sell gas in foreign ports, where they can ask a higher price. U.S. utilities, manufacturers, which use gas in an industrial feedstock, and residential and business consumers would like prices to stay low.
    Policymakers and business leaders are trying to better understand the relationship between potential U.S. exports and prices at home before they make commitments to build new outbound gas liquefaction terminals. The U.S. Energy Information Administration reported in January that, according to its simulations, more exports would mean higher prices (pdf) for gas and electricity, and some fuel-switching back to coal-fired electricity generation.
    A study (pdf) by Rice University's Baker Institute concluded in August that there's nothing to guarantee that the world market will always look as enticing for U.S. exports as it does now. Fluctuation in exchange rates, potential foreign gas discoveries and the global price effects from the U.S. increasing world supply could all change the picture in unpredictable ways, the report states, creating risk for exports.
    For several years now, the U.S. has both celebrated and fretted over this newly accessible energy source. As the controversy over fracking is gradually resolved, the next question about gas will be, should it stay or should it go?
    "As the story plays out," the Baker Institute study concludes, "the international gas market will evolve into something dramatically different from what it is today."

    Visit Sustainability: Energy, Natural Resources & Business - Bloomberg for the latest from Bloomberg News about energy, natural resources and global business.

    Shale Fracking Makes U.S. Natural Gas Superpower. Now What? - Bloomberg
    Globalizzazione..... si grazie.

  2. #2
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    Predefinito Re: USA: L'era del Gas

    E del Petrolio:


    U.S. Pumps Most Oil Since 1997 as Energy Independence Grows

    U.S. oil production surged last week to the highest level since January 1997, reducing the country’s dependence on imported fuels as new technology unlocks crude trapped in shale formations.
    Crude output rose by 3.7 percent to 6.509 million barrels a day in the week ended Sept. 21, the Energy Department reported today. America met 83 percent of its energy needs in the first six months of the year, department data show. If the trend continues through 2012, it will be the highest level of self- sufficiency since 1991. Imports have declined 3.2 percent from the same period a year earlier.

    A combination of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, has helped reduce America’s reliance on foreign oil. The same technology unleashed a boom in natural gas output from shale that pushed inventories to a record last year.
    “This has been driven by shale, and the two states leading the way are North Dakota and Texas,” said Andy Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates LLC, an energy consulting firm in Houston. “It appears that over the next five years, U.S. oil production could climb to well over 8 million barrels a day.”
    Oil fell $1.90 a barrel, or 2.1 percent, to $89.47 as of 12:22 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Futures have declined 9.6 percent since reaching a four-month high of $99 on Sept. 14.
    Crude prices are set to decline over the next six to nine months because of rising production from the U.S., David Martin, an analyst at JPMorgan Chase & Co., said at a Sept. 20 conference in London.

    To contact the reporter on this story: Asjylyn Loder in New York at aloder@bloomberg.net.

    To contact the editor responsible for this story: Dan Stets at dstets@bloomberg.net.

    U.S. Pumps Most Oil Since 1997 as Energy Independence Grows - Bloomberg
    Globalizzazione..... si grazie.

  3. #3
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    Predefinito Re: USA: L'era del Gas

    Citazione Originariamente Scritto da Amati75 Visualizza Messaggio
    Shale Fracking Makes U.S. Natural Gas Superpower. Now What?

    Shale Fracking Makes U.S. Natural Gas Superpower. Now What? - Bloomberg

    Marchionne cercherà di vendergli la PAnda a Metano!!!

  4. #4
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    Predefinito Re: USA: L'era del Gas

    Citazione Originariamente Scritto da EURIDICE Visualizza Messaggio
    Marchionne cercherà di vendergli la PAnda a Metano!!!
    Ci sono gia' progetti pilota per la costruzione di punti di rifornimento, daot che l contraio che da noi, i benzinaio che vendnao gas ve ne sono ben pochi, ma con i costi del gas che ci sono, e le riserve, sono una validissima alternativa.
    In Italia abbiamo una multiplia a Metano che va benissimo.

    Un articolo del WSJ:

    America, Start Your Natural-Gas Engines

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...047638416.html
    Ultima modifica di Amati75; 26-09-12 alle 21:41
    Globalizzazione..... si grazie.

  5. #5
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    Predefinito Re: USA: L'era del Gas

    Comunque davvero notevole, se guardo alla bolletta delle utilities il gas costa veramente poco!!

    Rispetto a 3-4 anni e' praticamente la meta!

  6. #6
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    Predefinito Re: USA: L'era del Gas

    Citazione Originariamente Scritto da paulhowe Visualizza Messaggio
    Comunque davvero notevole, se guardo alla bolletta delle utilities il gas costa veramente poco!!

    Rispetto a 3-4 anni e' praticamente la meta!
    Io il gas manco lo uso, tutto elettrico (anche i fornelli), la FPL qui in Florida ha ridotto l'utilizzo del petrolio del 90% in 10 anni, per una casa da 145 mq con aria condizionata centralizata (che a parte un mesetto in Gennaio e' pressoche semrpe on), due frigo, tv ecc ecc pago al mese una media di 140 dollari, tanto che sto pensando di prendre una cehvy volt a mia moglie visto che dobbiamo cambiare la sua minivan (Quest 2006) che consuma troppo.
    Globalizzazione..... si grazie.

  7. #7
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    Predefinito Re: USA: L'era del Gas

    Citazione Originariamente Scritto da Amati75 Visualizza Messaggio
    Io il gas manco lo uso, tutto elettrico (anche i fornelli), la FPL qui in Florida ha ridotto l'utilizzo del petrolio del 90% in 10 anni, per una casa da 145 mq con aria condizionata centralizata (che a parte un mesetto in Gennaio e' pressoche semrpe on), due frigo, tv ecc ecc pago al mese una media di 140 dollari, tanto che sto pensando di prendre una cehvy volt a mia moglie visto che dobbiamo cambiare la sua minivan (Quest 2006) che consuma troppo.

    CAPITALISTA!!!!

    SFRUTTATORE!!!!!

    SPECULATORE!!!!!



    ........mi "porto avanti" voglio anticipare gli interventi di Italicum e Nazionalistaeuropeo! :sofico:



    Non glielo dire che sta pure pensando di mettere la piscina!
    Ultima modifica di paulhowe; 26-09-12 alle 23:29

  8. #8
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    Predefinito Re: USA: L'era del Gas

    Ottimo esempio di come i soldi si fanno con l'innovazione e la produzione. (Non stampando moneta. )
    "Insomma se è in gamba, ti porta l'aereo così basso.. ehehehe...
    Lei dovrebbe vederlo, è uno spettacolo: un gigante come il B-52.... BHOOAAAMMM!!!!.. con i gas di scarico t'arrostisce le oche vive!!"

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