Skip navigation

Site plan approved for ND natural gas processor

An energy company has received approval to start construction of a new natural gas processing plant in northwestern North Dakota. Full story

Moniz: LNG exports on hold until data reviewed

Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz said Tuesday he will delay final decisions on about 20 applications to export liquefied natural gas until he reviews studies by the Energy Department and others on what impact the exports would have on domestic natural gas supplies and prices. Full story

Potential Upside For Nat Gas Producer: Pro

   Natural gas is the top performing commodity after President Obama approved a $10 billion natural gas export facility last week. Andrew Lipow, Lipow Oil Associates, shares his outlook for the commodity.

Energy Dept. backs Texas LNG export plan

The Energy Department on Friday conditionally approved a Texas company's proposal to export liquefied natural gas, only the second such project allowed to move forward amid a production boom that has led to glut of domestic natural gas. Full story

Plans to export US natural gas stir debate

A domestic natural gas boom already has lowered U.S. energy prices while stoking fears of environmental disaster. Now U.S. producers are poised to ship vast quantities of gas overseas as energy companies seek permits for proposed export projects that could set off a renewed frenzy of fracking. Full story

Ahead of the Bell: Natural gas inventories

The Energy Department is expected to report on Thursday that the nation's natural gas supplies grew by 86 billion to 90 billion cubic feet in the week ended May 3, according to a survey of analysts by Platts, the energy information arm of McGraw-Hill Cos. Full story

Sponsored Links

Articles

Dynegy 1Q loss narrows to $142M

Chesapeake Energy has quarterly profit vs. year-earlier loss

Southwestern Energy rise on land acquisition deal

UPS to expand natural-gas truck fleet

Analysis: On the road, propane stakes claim as cheap, clean fuel

Chesapeake's McClendon to get $11.7 million in cash compensation

Fracking is transforming our energy economy–but it’s also causing earthquakes

U.S. study says the more liquefied natural gas exported the better

The Real Reason CO2 Emissions in US Plummeted

Coal producers find themselves in a hard place

Video

  'What if we never run out of oil?," The Atlantic asks in new issue

The Atlantic's James Bennet joins Morning Joe to discuss how new technologies may help prove that fossil fuel may not be finite.

  Futures Now: Natural Gas

The Futures Now team discusses whether the nat gas rally can continue.

  Chanos' Natural Gas Play on Drillers & Leases

CNBC's Josh Lipton tracks today's top moving stocks. And, Kynikos Associates' Jim Chanos, shares his views on natural gas and coal.

  Bloomberg Businessweek releases ‘how-to’ issue

Joshua Green joins Morning Joe to discuss the latest issue and shares some tips from the pros.

  Energy Opportunities of the Future

Gale Klappa, CEO of Wisconsin Energy Corp., discusses the country's energy needs and where we should be focused on development. We're paying too much attention to natural gas, he says, because there is no perfect fuel source. Klappa is a big believer i...

advertisement | ad info

Related Photos

Edrick Smith works at Marlin Steel Wire in Baltimore.
Edrick Smith works at Marlin Steel Wire in Baltimore.

Thursday, Jan. 31, 2013, in Baltimore, MD New employee Edrick Smith works on a wire bending machine. Drew Greenblatt , CEO of Marlin Steel Wire , says he'sseeing a pickup in business for industrial wire baskets as hiscustomers benefit from falling energy costs when bidding againstlow-c

Edrick Smith works at Marlin Steel Wire in Baltimore. (© John Makely / NBC News)
Edrick Smith works at Marlin Steel Wire in Baltimore. (© John Makely / NBC News)

Thursday, Jan. 31, 2013, in Baltimore, MD New employee Edrick Smith works on a wire bending machine. Drew Greenblatt , CEO of Marlin Steel Wire , says he's seeing a pickup in business for industrial wire baskets as his customers benefit from falling energy costs when bidding against low-cost overse

The company logo of Russian natural gas producer Gazprom is seen on an advertisement in front of the White House in Moscow
The company logo of Russian natural gas producer Gazprom is seen on an advertisement in front of the White House in Moscow

The company logo of Russian natural gas producer Gazprom is seen on an advertisement in front of the White House in Moscow February 8, 2013. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov

Thursday, Jan. 31, 2013, in Baltimore, MD Drew Greenblatt , CEO of Marlin Steel Wire , says he'sseeing a pickup in business for industrial wire baskets as hiscustomers benefit from falling energy costs when bidding againstlow-cost overseas competitors. The increased production of oil andnatur