Title of article
The future of U.S. natural gas production, use, and trade
Author/Authors
Sergey Paltsev، نويسنده , , Henry D. Jacoby، نويسنده , , John M. Reilly، نويسنده , , Qudsia J. Ejaz، نويسنده , , Jennifer Morris، نويسنده , , Francis O’Sullivan، نويسنده , , Sebastian Rausch، نويسنده , , Niven Winchester، نويسنده , , Oghenerume Kragha، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
13
From page
5309
To page
5321
Abstract
Two computable general equilibrium models, one global and the other providing U.S. regional detail, are applied to analysis of the future of U.S. natural gas. The focus is on uncertainties including the scale and cost of gas resources, the costs of competing technologies, the pattern of greenhouse gas mitigation, and the evolution of global natural gas markets. Results show that the outlook for gas over the next several decades is very favorable. In electric generation, given the unproven and relatively high cost of other low-carbon generation alternatives, gas is likely the preferred alternative to coal. A broad GHG pricing policy would increase gas use in generation but reduce use in other sectors, on balance increasing its role from present levels. The shale gas resource is a major contributor to this optimistic view of the future of gas. Gas can be an effective bridge to a lower emissions future, but investment in the development of still lower CO2 technologies remains an important priority. International gas resources may well prove to be less costly than those in the U.S., except for the lowest-cost domestic shale resources, and the emergence of an integrated global gas market could result in significant U.S. gas imports.
Keywords
Natural gas , Climate policy , International gas trade
Journal title
Energy Policy
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Energy Policy
Record number
973259
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