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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 53, No. 06, February 23, 2011. Pages 30 and 35.

Abstract: Natural Gas Future

Prof. Michael J. Economides
University of Houston Houston, TX

About two years ago oil prices climbed to almost $150 per barrel and then unexpectedly and suddenly dropped to around $40. This drop was prompted by the “credit crisis” and compounded by economic recession. Oil then moved back to over $80. Unlike oil, natural gas whose international price zoomed to as high as $25 per Mscf (in parity with oil in Japan) has remained low. There are many reasons for the low natural gas price including considerable demand destruction in Russia, large new capacity of LNG in Qatar and, of course, the inertia of the success in shale formation activities in the United States, arguably one of the most important developments in the petroleum industry in decades.

These price gyrations affect all aspects of the natural gas world, including the import of LNG, the desirability of arctic pipelines or the lack thereof, conventional and especially unconventional gas production.

Internationally, Previous HitenergyNext Hit militant nations such as Iran, and Russia over the last few years, hold considerable sway over the Previous HitenergyNext Hit trade, pushing periodically for a gas cartel, among other issues. Russia’s Previous HitenergyNext Hit ascendancy over the past decade has been an important and devastating influence in Europe, which threatens to spread further.

One obvious bright spot for the future is that Previous HitenergyNext Hit consumption in the generation of wealth and the forms of primary Previous HitenergyNext Hit sources have not been constant throughout the last two centuries. Of considerable significance is the change of fuels from wood to coal to oil and now to natural gas, and eventually hydrogen will play a role. Wide use of compressed natural gas (CNG) and electricity in transportation is the only obvious long-term future, although perhaps decades away. However, this expected sea change may be retarded in the traditional developed world of the United States and Europe, burdened by huge existing infrastructure; China and India will likely lead the way.

Distorting the economically sane path to the future is the confusion derived from the current lack of overlap between primary Previous HitenergyNext Hit sources such as oil and natural gas and the improbable ideas being pushed for alternative Previous HitenergyNext Hit sources, such as the practically Previous HitenergyNext Hit-negative bio-fuels, headed by ethanol, or even more impractical alternatives, such as Previous HitsolarNext Hit electricity. Recent technological breakthroughs to produce ethanol from hydrocarbons such as coal and, especially in the United States, from natural gas are likely to further enhance the contribution of natural gas as a primary Previous HitenergyNext Hit source. Ethanol, whose use has been artificially boosted by government subsidies and produced from corn, has created an additional ready market for natural gas.

Natural gas, at prices significantly below BTU parity with oil for a long time to come, will certainly play a pivotal role in world Previous HitenergyTop supply and will move towards becoming the premier fuel of the world economy. A significant feature of future gas prices, similar to oil prices, is that they are likely to be technology-driven, rather than resource-driven. Shale production and widely available LNG facilities will unify the price of gas internationally and reduce its seasonality in the not too distant future.

Copyright © 2011 by Houston Geological Society. All rights reserved.