Why include coal if Obama promised that he would make companies that use coal 
go bankrupt via unattainable EPA clean-air regulations?

David
  
On Oct 6, 2013, at 12:24 AM, "Chris Hahn" <[email protected]> wrote:

> Obama or not, that is an interesting article.  It would have been better if 
> they would have included coal.
> Chris
>  
> From: [email protected] 
> [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of David Block
> Sent: Saturday, October 05, 2013 7:32 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [RC] USA now #1 in the world in energy production
>  
> Obama will fix that, don't worry about it…
>  
> David 
>  
> On Oct 5, 2013, at 9:44 AM, [email protected] wrote:
> 
> 
>  
> Time
>  
> The U.S. Is an Energy Superpower
> 
> New technologies have enabled the U.S. to become the world's top producer of 
> oil and natural gas by energy content.
> 
> 
> 
> Read more: 
> http://science.time.com/2013/10/04/the-u-s-is-an-energy-superpower/#ixzz2grJS6V3F
>  
> By Bryan Walsh @bryanrwalsh  Oct. 04, 2013
> A new item by the Energy Information Administration (EIA) confirms what we’ve 
> been reporting for a while now: the U.S. is an energy superpower. The EIA 
> predicts that in 2013, the U.S. will be the world’s top producer of petroleum 
> and natural gas hydrocarbons, surpassing Russia and Saudi Arabia, as the 
> graph below shows:
> 
> 
> 
> (MORE: An Energy Boom That Could Last)
> 
> Not every hydrocarbon is equal—the U.S. produces about the same amount of 
> natural gas as it does petroleum, at least in terms of the BTUs of energy 
> those fuels can produce. Saudi Arabia, by contrast, produces nearly all 
> petroleum—and with oil running north of $100 a barrel and tradable around the 
> world, Saudi Arabia’s oil is more valuable than America’s gas, which can’t 
> easily be exported.
> 
> But there’s no denying how astounding—and how real—America’s energy 
> revolution has been, as the EIA indicates:
> 
> Since 2008, U.S. petroleum production has increased 7 quadrillion Btu, with 
> dramatic growth in Texas and North Dakota. Natural gas production has 
> increased by 3 quadrillion Btu over the same period, with much of this growth 
> coming from the eastern United States. Russia and Saudi Arabia each increased 
> their combined hydrocarbon output by about 1 quadrillion Btu over the past 
> five years.
> 
> The main drivers behind that increase—aside from high energy prices, which 
> always encourage more drilling—are better hydrofracking and directional 
> drilling technologies, which have allowed energy companies to exploit oil and 
> natural gas resources in shale rock that were long considered uneconomical. 
> Fracking remains controversial—a newstudy from researchers at Duke University 
> found elevated levels of radium in a stream in Pennsylvania where treated 
> fracking wastewater had been discharged. (Industry advocates noted that the 
> shale gas industry hadn’t taken wastewater to the treatment plant in question 
> since May 2011.)
> 
> But while environmentalists have managed to stop shale gas fracking in New 
> York, and may succeed in limiting it in California, there’s little evidence 
> that they’ll be able to halt the energy revolution altogether. During his 
> speech on climate change in June, Obama took time out to praise 
> “cleaner-burning natural gas” for reducing U.S. carbon emissions, and in 
> general his Administration hasn’t done much to slow the pace of shale gas and 
> oil development, at least on private land.........
> 
>  
> 
>  
> -- 
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