In The News: EIA Naturgal Gas Record
EIA reports Natural gas consumed by U.S. electric power sector sets a January 2022 record
EIA reports Natural gas consumed by U.S. electric power sector sets a January 2022 record
The U.S. is on track to see electricity prices rise this summer, with New England likely to see increases as much as 15% due to high natural gas costs.
EIA report: In 2021, the value of energy trade between the United States and Canada rose from 2020 lows. The details: https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=52338
DetailsNatural Gas: STORAGE WORRIES FOR NEXT WINTER CONTINUE TO INFLATE MARKET SOME RELIEF MAY BE ON THE WAY. Worries about Natural Gas Storage for Winter โ22-โ23 sent the market peaking above $9.00 last week, ever closer to a record high of $15.78 in December 2005 and the highest since 2008. The outlook does not look…
DetailsThe developer of a proposed utility-scale wind project in Ohio writes that the economic benefits of the proposal are getting lost in local debates over the project.
A Columbus, Ohio suburb grows the number of publicly available electric vehicle charging stations through a rebate program. https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/local/communities/westerville/2022/05/04/charged-up-city-provides-more-locations-ev-owners-plug/9645459002/
Detailshttps://www.rtoinsider.com/articles/30046-maryland-ghg-cuts-beat-2020-goal Maryland reduced its greenhouse gas emissions by 32% from 2006 to 2020, bounding past its goal of a 25% cut by that year.
DetailsThe Biden administration announces $3.1 billion in grants to help develop a domestic supply chain that can manufacture and recycle electric vehicles and energy storage batteries.https://www.ee news.net/articles/biden-admin-offers-3-1b-for-domestic-ev-batteries/
DetailsWeather: AVERAGE TEMPERATURES THROUGHOUT AS THE AVERAGE TEMP RISES. We can look forward to milder weather, with the last of the sub-freezing cold fronts hopefully past. Unfortunately, the late start to warmer temperatures has kept heating demand high, adding to our supply woes that are the worst since at least 2018. WHAT GOES UP MUST…
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