Low-Emission Shale Gas to Displace Carbon Tech, Chatham Says

http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aM.aPE9...

Excerpt (Emphasis added):

"Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Cheap, low-emission shale gas, with double the global reserves of conventional sources, will
discourage investment in nuclear reactors and carbon storage
that would fight climate change, a British study shows.


“In a world where there is the serious possibility of cheap, relatively clean gas, who will commit large sums of money to expensive pieces of equipment to lower carbon emissions?”
Paul Stevens, senior research fellow at Chatham House, a London-
based institute for the study of international affairs, wrote in
the report published today.


Global shale gas reserves are estimated to be 456 trillion cubic meters (16,110 trillion cubic feet) compared with 187 trillion cubic meters for conventional gas, the London-based
World Energy Council said in a 2010 report. More than 60 percent
of shale gas deposits, or plays, are in North America and
Russia.


Shale gas is considered unconventional because tapping it requires more wells, advanced horizontal drilling and chemicals that can pollute ground water.


A confluence of drilling history, tax credits, emission goals, technology, and incentives for landowners to allow wells has reduced U.S. shale gas production costs to less than half of
conventional gas in some places, Stevens wrote. That is shaking
investor confidence in conventional gas.


Cheaper Than Conventional

The cost of producing shale gas is $3 or less per million British thermal units in the Texas plays of Barnett and Haynesville, Stevens wrote. Conventional gas drilling is about
$10 per million Btu, said
Chris Rowland, executive director of a
research unit of
Ecofin Ltd., a London-based investment
management company.
"


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Cheap, low-emission shale gas, with double the global reserves of conventional sources, will
discourage investment in nuclear reactors and carbon storage
that would fight climate change, a British study shows.



If "low-emission" the goal, then maybe NG is the solution rather than the problem..
That is my thought as well.

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