Natural gas is mainly methane (CH4),
with trace elements of heavier hydrocarbons like ethane (C2H6),
propane (C3H8), butane & isobutane (C4H10) and natural gasoline (C5+).
It is naturally odourless and colourless (but we add mecaptans to it to make
it smell like rotten eggs, so we can detect leaks). It can be found in, or
with, oil (called associated, or casinghead gas), or in its own
gas reservoir (called non-associated gas).
1999 Estimated |
United States
|
Canada
|
Mexico
|
Natural Gas Reserves
(trillion cubic feet - Tcf) |
164
|
63.9
|
30.1
|
Dry Natural Gas
Production (Tcf) |
18.7
|
6.0
|
1.27
|
Natural Gas Consumption
(Tcf) |
21.4
|
3.0
|
1.28
|
Net Natural Gas
Imports (Tcf) |
3.4 (3.3 Tcf from Canada)
|
-3.3
|
0.1 (from the US)
|
Value of Natural
Gas Imports |
$6.0 billion
|
|
|
Natural Gas Wells
Drilled |
10,513
|
|
|
Overall, the United States
depends on natural gas for about 23% of its total primary energy requirements
(oil accounts for 41% and coal for 24%). Sharply higher oil prices this summer
should engender switching from oil to natural gas (and coal) in the utility
sector, an expectation that has helped support above normal summer gas forward
prices this year.
From 1990 through 1999, natural
gas consumption in the United States increased by about 15%. Greater use of
natural gas as an industrial and electricity generating fuel can be attributed,
in part, to its relatively clean-burning qualities in comparison with other
fossil fuels. Lower costs resulting from greater competition and deregulation
in the gas industry and an expanding transmission and distribution network
have also helped expand its acceptance and use. In 1999, natural gas consumption
increased slightly, after falling in 1998, marking the eighth year of gas
consumption increases during the 1990s. During 1999, gas consumption by electric
utilities fell to 3,125 Bcf, down 133 Bcf from 1998. Gas is consumed in the
United States mainly in the industrial (40%), residential (22%), commercial
(14%), and electric generation (15%) sectors.
Gas demand is expected to increase
by about 3.5%, to 22.2 Tcf, in 2000. This follows less than 1% growth in 1999,
when oil prices remained reasonably competitive with gas in electric power
and industrial production, and when strong nuclear power and hydroelectric
power increases backed out gas use in electric power output. Increased natural
gas demand is expected across all sectors in both 2000 and 2001. This is based
on assumptions of continued economic growth, normal weather, and a relatively
lower price for gas compared to oil, which should encourage fuel switching
to gas by the utility sector. Also, a falloff from recent highs in nuclear
power and hydroelectric output is expected to lead to increased gas use for
power generation in 2000 and 2001.
U.S. natural gas consumption and
imports, largely from Canada (and to a far lesser extent from LNG), are expected
to expand substantially through 2020, with the fastest volumetric growth resulting
from additional gas-fired electric power plants. In particular, new combined-cycle
facilities furnished with more efficient gas turbines will help lower the
cost of gas-generated electricity to levels competitive with coal-fired plants.
Increased consumption of natural gas in the United States will require expansion
of gas pipeline and storage capacity. By 2020, U.S. gas consumption is expected
to reach 31.5 Tcf, up from 21.4 Tcf in 1998. This will require significant
investments in new pipelines and other gas infrastructure -- $1.5 trillion
over the next 15 years according to the National Petroleum Council.
(from the Energy
Information Administration)
Lets move onto Oil/Petroleum. |