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Keywords:Natural gas 

Journal Article
Natural gas from shale: Texas revolution goes global

The Texas experiment in extracting natural gas from the Barnett Shale proved the technical feasibility of shale gas development and brought costs within bounds that promise to give shale gas an important role in global energy supplies for decades to come. ; Shale gas cost estimates vary widely, partly because of limited experience in a few basins and partly because the technology is evolving. Prices of competing energy sources at levels seen today will likely stimulate continued rapid development of natural gas from shale. However, additional regulations to protect or conserve groundwater ...
Southwest Economy , Issue Q3 , Pages 10-13

Journal Article
Economic impact of rising natural gas prices

FRBSF Economic Letter

Journal Article
Houston after the hurricanes

Houston Business , Issue Oct

Working Paper
Deliverability and regional pricing in U.S. natural gas markets

During the 1980s and early '90s, interstate natural gas markets in the United States made a transition away from the regulation that characterized the previous three decades. With abundant supplies and plentiful pipeline capacity, a new order emerged in which freer markets and arbitrage closely linked natural gas price movements throughout the country. After the mid-1990s, however, U.S. natural gas markets tightened and some pipelines were pushed to capacity. We look for the pricing effects of limited arbitrage through causality testing between prices at nodes on the U.S. natural gas ...
Working Papers , Paper 0802

Journal Article
The next gold rush, or gold bust?

Fedgazette , Volume 15 , Issue Jan , Pages 8-11

Journal Article
Pricey oil, cheap natural gas, and energy costs

Historically, oil and natural gas prices have moved hand in hand. However, in the past few years, while oil prices climbed to near record peaks, natural gas prices fell to levels not seen since the mid-1970s as a result of new hydraulic fracturing technology. U.S. consumer energy expenditures are still mainly driven by oil prices, so household energy bills got little relief as natural gas prices fell. Moreover, even though the United States has trimmed crude oil imports, they still equal a substantial share of gross domestic product.
FRBSF Economic Letter

Journal Article
Bernanke: Fed will monitor energy's inflation pressure

Financial Update , Volume 19 , Issue Q 3

Journal Article
Noteworthy: energy: new Texas LNG terminals put on hold

Southwest Economy , Issue May , Pages 14

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