Energy Today – June 19, 2013

Free Enterprise Energizing Manufacturing

Current North American energy abundance is the result of innovation and private-sector investment, writes FE. “Government policies that restrict development or prevent the market from working effectively may reduce the benefits this energy competitive advantage offers to Americans and to our manufacturing industries.”

Project SyndicateFrack to the Future

Harvard professor and former Clinton administration economic advisor Jeffrey Frankel argues the environmental benefits of increased natural gas use, noting that “one can virtually prove that shale gas is the major factor behind the fall in US emissions.”

Forbes Energy Reality Check: Keystone XL Crude Won’t Be Exported

Contributor Loren Steffy debunks the myth that Keystone XL crud... more »

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Energy Today – June 18, 2013

Chicago TribuneIllinois Governor Signs Bill to Regulate Fracking

Illinois is one step closer to  hydraulic fracturing after bipartisan legislation regulating the process was signed into law by Gov. Pat Quinn. Lawmakers say they hope the new regulations will encourage the oil and natural gas industry to invest in Illinois, helping to create jobs.

Fuel Fix BlogColleges Plan Training for Gas Drilling Jobs

Two colleges in southern Illinois are getting a jumpstart on possible oil and natural gas development in the state. Southeastern Illinois College and Rend Lake College are planning to provide training programs focused on safety and other areas related to  energy development.

ExxonMobil Perspectives A Funny Idea of What “Back In Business” Means

Ken P. Cohen writes that oil... more »

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Embracing the Promise of Oil and Natural Gas

Great question during the U.S. Energy Information Administration’s annual energy conference this week – paraphrasing: Given the technologies, the innovation and risk-taking that mark today’s oil and natural gas industry, what‘s the ceiling for oil and gas development over the next few decades? The U.S. Geological Survey’s Donald Gautier took a crack at it:

“Every time I look at world oil or gas resources, I start adding things up, and I end up with enormous numbers. It just seems like an unavoidable fact, and the issue is about human activities and the contraptions they’re using for getting this out. There is certainly no shortage of molecules out there.”

In other words, oil and natural gas potential will be defined by us – through energy leadership, vision and policy. It will be... more »

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Energy Today – June 17, 2013

Washington PostWhy We Should Speed U.S. Gas Exports

In an op-ed for the Post, U.S. Sen. John Barrasso of Wyoming writes that the United States has a rare opportunity through natural gas exports to simultaneously create jobs, strengthen our foreign policy hand and help allies abroad. “Make no mistake: Our allies need energy to grow,” he writes. “If the United States does not supply that energy, someone else will.”

The TelegraphU.S. Having Real Energy Revolution with Oil Surge

“Despite disruptions to oil supply in Africa and parts of the Middle East, rising US output ensured that global oil production continued to grow,” writes Garry White.

Houston ChronicleFracFocus Becomes More User-Friendly

The hydraulic fracturing chemical registry has been updated to allow users to... more »

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E15 and Your Engine

In a blog post earlier this month Kristy Moore of the Renewable Fuels Association (RFA) took some shots at testing by the Coordinating Research Council (CRC) that showed higher levels of ethanol in fuel could damage the engines of millions of U.S. vehicles. A separate CRC study found that higher ethanol blends also could damage fuel pump systems, potentially leaving motorists stranded on the road and/or stuck with repair bills.

Obviously, both findings complicate RFA’s mission to increase ethanol use – which explains RFA’s cavalier dismissal of sound research and sound science, as well as its disingenuous defense of mandates in the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS), which is forcing more ethanol on the public than is safe.

Moore’s post, “A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words: CRC’s Engi... more »

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