Tuesday, May 14, 2013

REPOST: The myth of energy independence

Bryan Walsh of CNN.com shares his conversation with Michael Lewis about the Canadian oil sands, the myth of energy independence, and the need for a peace settlement to end the energy wars.


Image Source: edition.cnn.com


(TIME) -- Michael Levi is my favorite energy wonk -- and not just because we both had to endure waiting for hours in the cold outside the 2009 United Nations climate-change conference in Copenhagen. (Though he got in first.)

Levi, the senior fellow for energy and the environment at the Council on Foreign Relations, is a smart, pragmatic observer of the energy wars -- and he's an excellent blogger. He knows how to cut through specious arguments on both sides of the energy-and-climate debate while keeping in target the bigger challenges facing the United States and the world.

Levi has a new book out on the energy debate called "The Power Surge: Energy, Opportunity and the Battle for America's Future." It's one of the best analyses of the amazing changes taking place in the energy sphere today, touching on everything from fracking to climate change to the Keystone XL pipeline debate.

I had a chance to talk with him about Canadian oil sands, the myth of energy independence and why we need a negotiated peace settlement to end the energy wars.

We've seen other energy revolutions go through a boom and bust cycle. What makes this moment different?

Two things make this moment special. The first is the diversity of changes that are happening. This isn't just one isolated area. Today you've got booming production of oil, natural gas. You have oil consumption, rapidly falling, rising renewable energy. It's not just one boom, it's several at the same time.

The other thing is that there are multiple forces driving the change. In oil it's not just fracking, it's expanded offshore drilling. In renewables, it's not just one technology. It's wind, it's solar, both centralized and distributed. On the car front, it is everything from better traditional engines to electric vehicles and natural gas for long-distance trucking. So when you have multiple trends and drivers, the transformation is more robust.

Your point is that the best future for America is to capitalize all the options: renewable, oil and gas, efficiency, reduced consumption. How can those things coexist?

Take expanded oil production and reduced oil consumption. To tackle climate and oil, what we really need to do is reduce oil consumption. That's where vulnerability stems from. You can reduce consumption and increase production the same time. You balance with lower imports. When someone says expanded U.S. production will lead to greatly increased global consumption and cause intolerable climate change, you have to ask what kind of increased global consumption do you need so that damage to the climate occurs.

To get people to use more oil, the oil has to be cheaper. If we don't believe that increasing U.S. oil production will do much to decrease oil prices, and I think that's still the consensus, we can't simultaneously believe it is disastrous for the climate.

We can also talk about the electricity world. Abundant natural gas makes the economics of renewables a bit more challenging. But fundamentally, that's not the big barrier to renewable-energy growth. It is still cost and the question of government policy. But there are ways for renewable energy and natural gas to work together. Renewable energy is delivered inconsistently, while natural gas can be turned on and off rapidly to fill in those gaps.

I don't want to suggest that you can have absolutely everything. There are conflicts. But we are better off when we focus on the real tensions between different sources instead of imagined tensions. There are enough real decisions we need to make that we don't need to spend our time focused on imagined ones.

What are the real tensions?

The first big place is on local environmental concerns and squaring them with national goals. Whether it is hydraulic fracturing (fracking) for natural gas or large solar arrays in the desert where people want to protect land, our local environmental desires run up against the developments that can benefit us nationally. We need an intelligent informed conversation about that. On oil production and consumption, in the near term reducing U.S. oil demand doesn't have a big impact on prices. You can square increased production with lower consumption. In the long run, if you want to tackle climate change, you will need lower oil consumption, and that will affect U.S. oil production. But that's a longer-term issue.

On the renewable-energy front, natural gas is displacing coal rather than renewable power. It cuts emissions but does pose a risk to renewable-energy growth and the development of that technology. If we don't guard against that, we could find ourselves in 10 to 15 years regretting we didn't develop renewables earlier.

We talk about energy independence, but you make the case that oil is sold on a global market. Is energy independence anything more than just a slogan?

It is rarely more than a slogan. People use the phrase energy independence as shorthand for producing as much oil as you consume. That's reasonable, but you need to be careful not to read into that something much bigger, that we will actually be independent of events overseas.

I have found it extraordinary to see analyst after analyst start taking about energy independence as if it's a real thing that insulates us from foreign events. That's not true. If in 1973 we could have produced as much oil as we consumed, the impact would have been enormous. We didn't have a free-flowing market for oil, or a petroleum reserve as we do now. But the world is different now, and what happens today is important and valuable but doesn't solve the problem that existed then.

Does that go for those in the renewable-energy community who make the same claim that we need to become energy independent?

If you don't use oil, you are considerably more energy independent than if you do. Oil prices can go up, and if you don't use oil, it doesn't hurt you directly. Those who say we can become more energy secure by reducing demand for oil have a stronger platform. But it takes a long time to reduce demand. You can increase oil production faster than you can cut oil use in cars and trucks because the typical car stays on the road for 15 years or longer. It takes a long time to turn the fleet over.

Where people are stuck in the 1970s is the idea that wind or solar can get us off foreign oil. In the 1970s we used a lot of oil in power plants. But today we don't, and renewable power does not get us off oil.

We often here about the national-security benefits of Canadian oil sands. Are those claims accurate? 

The security benefits of more Canadian oil production have been greatly overblown. They are not zero. In a military crisis it would be better to have more oil close to home, but I don't think we'll get into that kind of extended crisis. But when it comes to volatile global prices of oil, Canadian oil doesn't give us a special benefit. When Libya went haywire two years ago, Canadian oil went up more than Mideast oil did. But expanded Canadian production does help keep the price of oil down a little bit, and that helps the economy.

There are real climate damages from Canadian oil, but the climate damage and the economic and security benefits are small. It's trite to say this is more a symbolic debate than a meaningful one, but it is. The real impacts are local, where the oil is produced in Alberta, and those are issues that Canadians struggle with all the time. The U.S. has plenty of environmental challenges of its own without getting wrapped around Alberta's environmental issues.

So how do we get these two sides of the energy debate working together?

We're not going to have a world where the Sierra Club and Exxon sing "Kumbaya" together. But ultimately both sides can get more from an approach that capitalizes on developments across the board than in just trying to beat the other side down. That doesn't mean a grand national-energy plan. It means starting with small but real deals that allow the two sides to work together, as we did in [the energy legislation of] 2005 and 2007.

I'm drawn to things like reforming the way we do environmental permitting for energy development, whether it's oil and gas or renewables. People who want to transform the energy system should be able to do it. I like the president's Energy Security Trust, where you use some oil-and-gas revenues to fund renewable-energy research and development.

But it's frustrating because people who for decades talk of oil production being transformational now say, if you spend a couple hundred million a year of the revenues from that, it's not worth drilling. If oil production is as transformational as they claim, it should be worth it even if you just took that money and burnt it. And on the flip side, those who talk about the importance of innovation say the deal is not worth it because we can't take any more oil and gas development. People should focus on what they can gain rather than fixating on what they lose.

On the environmental side of things, there's a desire for elemental change in energy that stems from serious fear of climate change. How scared are you?

Before I started spending my time on energy and climate, I spent most of it working on national security issues. I wrote a book on nuclear terrorism. In that world you think about risks. When people give me the median projections of what will happen on climate change, some of them scare me, and some wouldn't push me to put climate change on top of the list.

What really worries me are the lower probability but higher-consequence outcomes. There are some people who say we can't focus on those events, but to me, that is the job of government. It is not to optimize society. It is to protect people against big risks that they can't handle themselves. And climate change is one of those big risks.

I'm not in the camp that if you don't follow my plan, we'll all die, but I do believe this is a top-tier issue. And not because of the certainties but because of the risks.

What are energy policies that to you seem effective and politically doable?

I try to stay away from specific policies. Too often we jump right to policies and fight over the details without stepping back and asking about what kind of future we want. The Keystone debate is an example -- we have all these fights over the details, but the question is really, 'Do we want more oil or less?'

But in the near term, I'd like to see money taken from oil and gas and put into clean energy. I'd like to see a better way to do permitting, including for new pipelines and power lines. And given the roadblocks in Congress on pricing of carbon, I'd like to see an effort to use the Clean Air Act to reduce emissions in the power sector.

But as we go further out, the big pieces that we need are to make people pay a penalty if they pollute, so the market can drive us toward lower emissions. We need to clamp down on excessive oil consumption, because we still use too much. And we should take steps to expand access but also improve regulations so we can sustainably grow oil-and-gas production without endangering people or creating a backlash.

Is cap and trade still an option for you? We've seen a lot of problems with the Emissions Trading Scheme in the European Union.

I think people have misread what happened in Europe. People don't want stricter standards for greenhouse gas emissions. Because of that, carbon prices are low. Too many observers have said this is because cap and trade is flawed. The problem isn't the machine, the problem is the political willingness to take action.

People focus on the policy machinery and not on whether people actually want to do things. Transparent and flexible policies are essential to making big cuts in emissions. You are talking about big economic transitions when you get serious about climate change, and we aren't smart enough to know how that should proceed. That means you do need to eventually use tools that allow the market to do a lot of it, and whether that is cap and trade or a carbon tax or something else is secondary, as long as you have something flexible.

Each side in energy debate seems to be able to stop each other more than they can promote their own agenda. Will that ever change?

Hope springs eternal. But what scares me is that this isn't just a pattern from the last few years, but from the last 40 years. In the 1980s, opponents of drilling were very good at getting offshore drilling constrained, and opponents of clean energy were good at shutting down programs for renewable power.

But that didn't do great things for us as a country. If we get back to a point in American politics where people are willing to agree on things, I hope people who care about energy and climate have answers for them that they can embrace. If you don't have a good idea about what you actually want to ask for on energy, you can have all the bipartisan enthusiasm you can get, but you won't make real progress.

Dr. Ali Ghalambor is noted for authoring and publishing several textbooks such as "Natural Gas Engineering Handbook" and "Petroleum Production Engineering." Visit this Facebook page for more information.

Monday, May 13, 2013

Natural gas: Mother Earth's gift to society



Natural resources and fossil fuels, like natural gas, are a gift to mankind. The abundance of these fuels has resulted into today’s prosperous and modern society. The discovery of the ways to produce these fossil fuels has given the society a favor by elevating mankind from the abyss of stagnation, where people relied on primitive ways of living.


Image Source: cdiver.net


Meanwhile, as the world hastens the road to progress, the use of technologies, like modern turbines, solar panels, and nuclear plants, is vital. With this progress comes the burning of fossil fuels, which is crucial in providing power to these technological advancements.

Thankfully, the introduction of hydraulic fracturing, combined with horizontal drilling, helps in this respect. This method produces natural gas from shale rock formations.


Image Source: onpoint.wbur.org


Benefits of natural gas use in generating power

Because of the increased use of natural gas in the power generation sector, US has reduced its greenhouse gas emissions to 1994 levels.

Other good reasons for using natural gas include the impact it has on homes. With natural gas-powered appliances and amenities, a home will be a safe and comfortable environment to live in. Natural gas beats electricity on performance and cost. Being the cleanest source of energy from fossil fuels, natural gas promotes a green home without the harmful emissions to the air.


Image Source: news.nationalgeographic.com


Drs. Ali Ghalambor and Boyun Guo’s The Natural Gas Engineering Handbook offers a comprehensive discussion about natural gas production. More information on this topic can be accessed on this Twitter page.

Friday, May 10, 2013

REPOST: Energy plan can 'break the cycle' of oil dependence, Obama says

This CNN.com article reports the stand of President Barack Obama regarding the funding of the alternative energy research.


Image Source: politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com


Washington (CNN) – Using revenue collected from drilling on public lands to fund alternative energy research will help Americans break their dependence on oil, President Barack Obama predicted in his weekly address on Saturday.

He was speaking in Lemont, Illinois, where on Friday he laid out his plan at a laboratory conducting green energy research.

"After years of talking about it, we're finally poised to take control of our energy future," Obama said in his address, pointing to increased oil production in the United States and the higher percentage of energy that now comes from renewable sources.

Despite the progress, Obama noted the recent spike in gas prices, calling it a "serious blow" to family budgets.

"The only way we're going to break this cycle of spiking gas prices for good is to shift our cars and trucks off of oil for good," Obama said.

His plan pledges to put money earned through increased royalties from oil and gas drilling on federal land to fund alternative fuel research.

"We can support scientists who are designing new engines that are more energy efficient; developing cheaper batteries that go farther on a single charge; and devising new ways to fuel our cars and trucks with new sources of clean energy – like advanced biofuels and natural gas – so drivers can one day go coast-to-coast without using a drop of oil," Obama said.

In his address, the president advocated producing more oil and gas domestically as well as biofuels, solar power and wind power.

Obama has faced criticism from Republicans who say he's dragging his feet in approving the controversial Keystone XL pipeline, which would transport oil from Canada to Texas.

In 2012, Obama delayed approval of the pipeline until after the election. He's expected to make a final decision sometime this summer. A recent State Department report found that the project would not adversely impact the environment.

On Friday, a White House spokesman said the plan Obama laid out in Illinois would have a far greater impact on securing America's energy independence than the Keystone pipeline.

"There have been thousands of miles of pipelines that have been built while President Obama has been in office, and I think the point is, is that it hasn't necessarily had a significant impact one way or the other on addressing climate change," White House Deputy Press Secretary Josh Earnest said.

 

Readers who want to know more about oil and gas production can browse this Dr. Ali Ghalambor Facebook page for updates about the industry.

Thursday, May 9, 2013

How commodity trading is driving oil prices higher



Aside from the basic law of supply and demand, oil prices can also be influenced by commodity trading, and to understand better how this can potentially affect oil prices, it is very important to understand what the term “commodity trading,” in general, means.



Image Source: vigyanprasar.com


Commodity trading, which is also known as futures trading, means agreeing to purchase a specific commodity today, which will be delivered at a specific date in the future by means of a commodity or futures exchange broker. There are two types of oil commodity traders: those who actually purchase oil at a fixed price for delivery on a future date and those who are only interested in profit based on the price movement of oil and will sell the oil contract or commodity before the specified delivery date.

Here are some examples of how traders can actually influence the price of oil around the world:

• If traders believe that demand will outstrip supply and production, they will bid the price up, which also effectively increases oil prices.



Image Source: commoditymkts.wordpress.com


• If they believe that supply will outweigh the demand, traders would be willing to pay for oil, and the prices fall.

• If they believe that crises, such as armed conflicts and disasters, which occurred in oil-producing countries will affect the supply of oil, then prices increase. This was seen during the Arab Spring revolts when oil prices first rose and then fell when it was clear that the revolt will not disrupt oil production.



Image Source: .thegrant-group.com


Knowing how commodity trading affects oil prices will help companies and consumers prepare for the rise and decline of prices, so that they can plan for those eventualities financially.

Follow this Twitter account for Dr. Ali Ghalambor to access more industry-related news.

REPOST: Don't let America get 'fracked'

According to some analysts, natural gas burns less carbon but emits methane and pollutes water resources. Do some  fossil fuel companies need to reevaluate the use of natural gas? This CNN.com article discusses the issue. 


Image Source: edition.cnn.com

(CNN) -- Even the heads of fossil fuel companies read the polls. They know the majority of Americans see global warming as an imminent threat and a clear sign that the way we use energy must change. But instead of offering the solar and wind choices America wants, fossil fuel companies like Shell, Exxon and Duke are offering what might be their most disastrous bait and switch yet: natural gas.

The bait? Burning natural gas is "clean" because it produces less carbon pollution than burning oil and coal. The switch? The catastrophic pollution caused when companies like Exxon fracture the earth -- commonly called fracking -- to get natural gas out of the ground.

These corporations know America is ready for change. They see motivated, forward-thinking companies like Apple, Google and Facebook committing to a clean energy future that threatens to leave dirty energy out in the cold, so they've done what they do best: come up with a slogan instead of a solution.

The industry, its investors and its apologists are insisting that the only way we can go from dirty to clean, oil and coal to solar and wind, is through its "bridge fuel," natural gas.

The Bridge Fuel Club holds fast to the idea that the U.S. isn't ready to transition to renewable energy. Despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, the Bridge Fuel Club insists that the only way to get our carbon footprint to a manageable size in the long term is to go all-in on its next, best fossil fuel, one that happens to light faucets on fire and leak methane into the atmosphere at astonishing rates. It's not a real crisis, they say, it's simply time for rebranding, from drilling to hydraulic fracturing.

In fracking, long horizontal wells are drilled in shale rocks sometimes a mile deep. Huge amounts of water, sand and chemicals are pumped into the wells at high pressure, which breaks open the shale so the trapped gas escapes to the surface.

If we listen to the Bridge Fuel Club, we'll go from "spill, baby, spill" to "fracked" in no time -- and put our long-term chances to solve the climate crisis in serious jeopardy.]

Swapping coal pollution for natural gas pollution is not a global warming solution. But companies like Exxon, Shell, and Duke want to use the urgency around climate emergencies like Hurricane Sandy and widespread drought to get us hooked on natural gas. Just like they've done for generations with their other fossil fuels, they want to privatize the profits while making us pay the costs of their work.

Unfortunately for the industry, the long-term science has started rolling in, and it shows natural gas to be big trouble. Although burning natural gas has less impact on the climate than other fossil fuels, once you take into account the damage done from extraction, it's clear natural gas is a lose-lose. In fact, methane pollution from natural gas has the potential to be an even more severe driver of global warming than carbon pollution from oil and coal. That means it's a bridge fuel to nowhere.

The Environmental Protection Agency says natural gas is 21 times worse than carbon dioxide, but that alarming rate may in itself be a gross underestimate. Studies continue to show methane's long-term climate impact may be far worse than initially predicted because of the intensity of methane's interaction with aerosol in the atmosphere.

In addition, a recent study led by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association showed that natural gas production sites in places like Utah and Colorado are leaking methane at "eye-popping" rates, far greater than what the industry reports.

But where the fossil fuel industry wants us to delay any work on clean energy while there is some fabricated doubt about climate change, it wants to go full frack ahead on natural gas -- despite clear evidence against natural gas from the scientific community. Of course, for the industry, natural gas isn't as much of an energy transition as a slight modification to its current business models, one that keeps all the subsidies and lobbyists right where they are.

For them, it seems like a slam dunk -- except committed communities across the U.S. aren't buying it.

"If we listen to the Bridge Fuel Club, we'll go from 'spill, baby, spill' to 'fracked' in no time"-Phil Radford and Mark Ruffalo

The industry is trying to bully the locals into giving up their land, pitting itself against New Yorkers, Ohioans, Illinoisians and Pennsylvanians. The movement's momentum clearly has the industry on its back foot, so they're trying new tactics like character assassination and slander. By claiming that people across the social spectrum don't like fracking simply because it's happening in their backyards, the industry and its apologists are showing contempt for democracy in its rawest form.

In New York state, the resistance to fracking is grounded in communities most threatened by it. Mark's family home is smack dab in the middle of what the fossil fuel industry wants to make the Gaslands of New York state. It's a treasure of watersheds, developing organic food sources, and unindustrialized open spaces.

A vibrant and diversified community of farmers, craftspeople, artists, entrepreneurs, restaurant owners, tourism operators, and homeowners live there, all of whom would be devastated by the natural gas industry. This engaged community is demanding that there be no natural gas extraction on their lands until the long-term risks and dangers are fully understood. These New Yorkers have seen other communities in neighboring states like Pennsylvania run over by an industry that promised them heaps of cash, but instead the communities report groundwater contamination, contaminated flow-back waste, road-ripping truck traffic and clouds of cancer-causing chemicals. As well as that, a recent report found that many of Pennsylvania's energy policymakers and regulators have come from the oil and gas industry.

Anti-fracking communities know that the barriers to clean energy are political, not practical. They want to see a better way. That's why they are joined by many national environmental groups and activists from coast to coast, and also why the Bridge Fuel Club is so scared of them. The more people who point out that natural gas is a bridge fuel to nowhere, the closer we get to a clean energy future.


Follow this Dr. Ali Ghalambor Twitter page for more updates on natural gas production.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

REPOST: How Obama's new budget targets oil and gas


This Forbes.com article reports the plans of President Obama for the petroleum industry.


Granted, President Obama’s newly submitted budget is likely dead-on-arrival in Washington, but it’s still well worth taking a look at it to get a sense of what he would do to the energy industry if he were king instead of just president.

The headline proposal is the president’s idea for an Energy Security Trust, “funded by royalty revenue from oil and gas leases to support initiatives to shift our cars and trucks off oil, cutting our Nation’s reliance on foreign oil.” The budget states that the Trust would be funded with $2 billion of royalty income over 10 years.

That’s a relatively small portion of the $9 billion in annual oil and gas royalties that the government collects from drillers, but as I’ve opined here recently, what do we need a dedicated trust for when congress can just fund research directly? Why complicate matters by creating a new level of bureaucracy, a new middleman?

Besides, according to the budget, the administration appears to be interested in reducing its oil and gas royalties. The president also hasn’t backed down from his desire to charge oil and gas drillers fees (on a per-acre basis!) if they lease federal lands then don’t develop them. This is foolish, simply because there are usually very sound economic reasons why a company might lease an exploration block then decide not to drill it (seismic tests don’t look promising; commodity prices may shift; other opportunities elsewhere offer better returns, etc).

What’s more, the administration would also eliminate in-kind royalty payments, where companies pay their royalties by giving the government oil instead of cash — something that companies often prefer to do in order to conserve cash. Further, Obama would eliminate interest accruals on overpayments of royalties. The budget states that these collective reforms will generate “roughly $2.5 billion” for the Treasury over 10 years. In fact they are more likely to make companies think twice before they lease federal lands (reducing royalties to the feds over the long term), or to be more careful when paying royalties so as not to lend Uncle Sam money for free. The budget also proposes adding new inspection fees that drillers on federal lands must pay to regulators. All this disincentivizes drilling on federal lands and is thus likely to reduce federal royalty income.

The biggest impact on oil and gas drillers from the Obama budget would be in the abolition of some $44 billion in “fossil fuel tax preferences.” The president would eliminate the expensing of intangible drilling costs, which according to the administration’s calculations would reduce the federal deficit by nearly $11 billion between now and 2023. Repealing percentage depletion for oil and gas wells would also bring in $11 billion over the same time period. Repealing the domestic manufacturing tax deduction for oil and gas production would also cut the deficit by nearly $17 billion.

To balance out removing those oil and gas “subsidies,” the administration proposes creating “$23 billion of incentives for renewable energy production” over the next decade, including the permanent enactment of a tax credit for the production of electricity from renewable sources, much needed by the wind power industry.

When it comes to further reducing America’s reliance on petroleum, the president has backed off of his crazy goal, presented in his 2013 budget, of getting 1 million electric vehicles on U.S. roads by 2015. The lackluster sales of G.M. Volt and Nissan’s Leaf have shown that won’t happen. The budget, however, still would direct $575 million in “cutting-edge vehicle technologies” and $282 million “in the next generation of advanced biofuels.” That’s in addition to the $2 billion Energy Security Trust.

Oil and gas fracking gets a mention in the budget as well. The president proposes $12 million to help fund “a multi-agency research initiative aimed at advancing technology and methods to safely and responsibly develop America’s natural gas resources. Specifically, DOE, in collaboration with the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of the Interior, will focus on minimizing the health, safety, and environmental effects of natural gas and oil production from hydraulic fracturing in shale and other geologic formations.”

And to promote less climate impact from the burning of that natural gas, the budget proposes $266 million for the study of ways to capture and store carbon dioxide emissions, including a $25 million prize for the first “natural gas combined cycle power plant to integrate large-scale carbon capture and storage.”

A last item that stood out for me was President Obama’s goals on reducing America’s emissions of greenhouse gases. Last year, in the 2013 budget, the goal was to get emissions down “17 percent below 2005 levels by 2020, and 83 percent by 2050.” This year 2020 goal remains in place, but the 2050 goal is gone. No word yet on outrage from the environmentalist lobby.


Dr. Ali Ghalambor has co-authored several textbooks, including Petroleum Production Engineering, to help students get accurate information about natural gas. Visit this Facebook page for more updates.

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

REPOST: U.S. transportation remains almost entirely reliant on oil (VIDEO)

This Huffington Post article reports the dependence of U.S. transportation system on petroleum. 



 
Video Source: huffingtonpost.com


From Face the Facts USA:

93 percent of U.S. transport remains reliant on oil.

As Earth Week 2013 continues we turn to one of the root causes of a central environmental issue, carbon dioxide emissions, and the biggest factor in boosting them -- transportation.

America’s planes, trains and motor vehicles consume 13.6 million barrels of oil each day. Despite rising interest in alternative fuels, 93 percent of American transport still depends on petroleum. In fact, transportation is more oil-reliant than any other U.S. economic sector; 71 percent of our oil supply powers various types of transport.

What does this mean for our C02 emission levels?

Follow this  Twitter page and Facebook page for Dr. Ali Ghalambor for more on the latest developments on the shale gas industry.