The case for US LNG exports

The recent natural gas ‘revolution’ in the United States has encouraged a nationwide shift in its energy consumption patterns. An abundance of unconventional natural gas (with help from a patchy economic recovery) has allowed for sustained low natural gas prices. With prices currently hovering just...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ebinger, C, Avasarala, G
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Oxford Institute for Energy Studies 2013
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author Ebinger, C
Avasarala, G
author_facet Ebinger, C
Avasarala, G
author_sort Ebinger, C
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description The recent natural gas ‘revolution’ in the United States has encouraged a nationwide shift in its energy consumption patterns. An abundance of unconventional natural gas (with help from a patchy economic recovery) has allowed for sustained low natural gas prices. With prices currently hovering just over $3/mmBtu, many energy consumers – most notably power generators, manufacturing and petrochemical producers, and potential consumers of natural gas for transportation – are turning their attention to natural gas. But one natural gas consumer is generating the most controversy for its demand for the new bounty: natural gas exporters.
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spelling oxford-uuid:e4d5a317-f9c5-4016-9811-099e7083dfd92022-03-27T10:19:24ZThe case for US LNG exportsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:e4d5a317-f9c5-4016-9811-099e7083dfd9EnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetOxford Institute for Energy Studies2013Ebinger, CAvasarala, GThe recent natural gas ‘revolution’ in the United States has encouraged a nationwide shift in its energy consumption patterns. An abundance of unconventional natural gas (with help from a patchy economic recovery) has allowed for sustained low natural gas prices. With prices currently hovering just over $3/mmBtu, many energy consumers – most notably power generators, manufacturing and petrochemical producers, and potential consumers of natural gas for transportation – are turning their attention to natural gas. But one natural gas consumer is generating the most controversy for its demand for the new bounty: natural gas exporters.
spellingShingle Ebinger, C
Avasarala, G
The case for US LNG exports
title The case for US LNG exports
title_full The case for US LNG exports
title_fullStr The case for US LNG exports
title_full_unstemmed The case for US LNG exports
title_short The case for US LNG exports
title_sort case for us lng exports
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