Port Arthur LNG Signs 20-Year Supply Deal With Poland
Sergio Chapa | Chron | December 19, 2018
Port Arthur LNG has signed a 20-year supply deal with Poland's state-owned natural gas company.
Read moreAnti-Pipeline Activism Isn't Generating More Investment in Renewable Energy
Steve Everley | Washington Examiner | December 19, 2018
For much of the past decade, oil and gas pipeline opponents have argued that we should not be investing in pipelines because it will “lock in” continued fossil fuel use for decades to come. Blocking the infrastructure, they argue, will force investment dollars into renewable technologies instead.
Read moreOil & Gas in 2018
2018 was a big year for oil and natural gas in United States. We had record production levels met with record exports. Here is a rewind of some of the most important things to happen this year.
Read moreWeek In Review: December 14, 2018
Texans For Natural Gas
Read our top news stories of the week and see what else we've been up to!
Read moreReport: U.S. LNG Export Capacity to More Than Double By End of 2019
Houston Chronicle | December 10, 2018
The United States will be able to export more than double the amount of liquefied natural gas by the end of next year, a new report from the Energy Information Administration shows.
Read moreExpanded Texas Shipping Lane Could Help Cut Trade Deficit By $50 Billion
Nicholas Sakelaris | UPI | December 7, 2018
"The U.S. is going from basically a zero exporter to being a bigger exporter than some OPEC countries," one analyst said of the project's potential.
Dec. 7 (UPI) -- After three decades of wrangling, Texas officials have approved funding to expand the Port of Corpus Christi, which will widen and deepen its shipping channel -- a project that will have national and international implications.
Week In Review: December 7, 2018
Texans For Natural Gas
Read our top news stories of the week and see what else we've been up to!
Read moreThe U.S. Pipeline Industry Is Booming
Vanand Meliksetian | Oil Price | December 5, 2018
Every once in a while, a new technological development shakes up a conservative sector. In the oil and gas industry, the shale revolution has changed the business in multiple ways. The U.S. has been transformed from one of the world’s leading oil importers into the world’s largest producer of oil and gas. Fracking in the Permian basin has created bottlenecks as the existing infrastructure cannot cope with rising production. Producers are not able to get all the oil and gas to customers, creating a price differential with the WTI benchmark. On average, shale oil producers in the Permian basin receive $10 to $13 dollars less for each barrel compared to WTI levels.
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