Natural Gas Is Used In Virtually Everything We Consume

Natural Gas

Posted on: Monday, July 14, 2008

Given rising gas prices and growing instability in key oil-producing regions of the world, it is increasingly obvious that the United States must aggressively promote the use of alternative energy sources while expanding the production of oil and natural gas at home.

Here’s why: Over the past two decades, the growing demand for energy in the U.S. has exceeded domestic supplies of crude oil and natural gas. Currently, alternative energy sources such as solar and wind power are not producing at a high enough capacity to make up the difference.

Moreover, as the nation moves toward a more conservation-minded future, natural gas will be indispensable for the large-scale viability of such new green technologies as electric cars (more on this below).

Natural gas is a key ingredient in the production of some of the most basic, everyday items we depend upon for our existence. For natural gas to be economical for these many uses, it must be produced domestically.

Consider this: Virtually everything that we use on a daily basis contains a component that uses natural gas or oil in its manufacture, either as a fuel or as a "feedstock." A feedstock is defined as the raw material used in an industrial process to manufacture something else. There are no alternatives for these petrochemical feedstocks. Without them, we go back to making everything out of wood and stone.

Using oil and natural gas, the petrochemical industry manufactures chemicals that serve as building blocks in making everything from plastics and clothing to medicine and computers. They contribute essential materials for making food and beverage containers, surgical gloves and gowns, fertilizer, blankets, cold-weather and rain gear, sneakers, computers, insulation, cameras, medicines, artificial joints, auto and aircraft parts, disposable diapers, CDs, and many more key consumer products.

Propane, used to heat homes and fire up our backyard barbecue grills, comes from natural gas. Propane is used in literally hundreds of residential, commercial, industrial and agricultural processes, such as forklift operations, metal galvanizing, grain dryers and ink drying.

Hydrogen is being touted as a clean transportation fuel — hydrogen-powered cars have been a dream of many environmentalists for years. Did you know natural gas is being used to generate hydrogen for such purposes? Ongoing research sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy is exploring the conversion of natural gas into "ultra-clean" fuels for other uses, as well.

Natural gas is important to our domestic food supply. The vast majority of fertilizer used in agriculture is ammonia-based, and you need natural gas to manufacture ammonia. Ethylene, which comes from natural gas, is used to accelerate the ripening of bananas and to mature the color of citrus fruits. It is also used to increase the growth rate of seedlings, vegetables and fruit trees.

Without sufficient supplies of natural gas, our food supply will be adversely affected.

The list goes on. Ethylene glycol, which comes from natural gas, is a key element in the plastics industry for the manufacture of polyester fibers and resins, including the primary component of plastic bottles for water and soft drinks. Ethylene glycol’s antifreeze capabilities make it an important component in the low-temperature preservation of biological tissues and organs to be used for transplantation to save lives.

More obvious is that natural gas is a very important source of energy consumption in general. Approximately 22 percent of the energy consumption of the U.S. comes from natural gas. More than half of all U.S. homes use natural gas as the main heating fuel.

The biggest use of natural gas in North Texas is electric generation. Luminant, the wholesale power unit of the former TXU Corp., generates a considerable portion of its electricity with natural gas, while also relying on coal, nuclear and renewable energy such as wind power.

Where are we going to get all that electricity to charge up those electric cars of the future? Most likely from natural-gas-fired electric-generating plants because it is readily available and cleaner than coal, and nuclear plants currently take more than 10 years to clear the permitting process.

We import about 10 percent of our natural gas, and that percentage could decline as domestic production increases.

Because the conventional sources of natural gas in the United States are just about tapped out, it is fortunate for our economy that technological advances in drilling are enabling us to produce natural gas from such "unconventional" sources as the Barnett Shale and other shales around the country. At 4.5 percent and growing, natural gas production from the Barnett Shale is increasingly important to the national supply of natural gas.

Exploration and drilling for natural gas in the United States must continue — whether in Fort Worth, north Arkansas in the Fayetteville Shale, or in Pennsylvania and neighboring states where the vast Marcellus Shale awaits exploration. These shales are the future of America’s natural gas supply.

 

c. 2008 Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Reprinted by permission

Topic: