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8. Natural gas

Key data

(2018 provisional)

Domestic production: 861.9 bcm (715.9 Mtoe), +51% since 2008

Net exports: 20.3 bcm (exports 102.2 bcm, imports 81.8 bcm), became a net exporter in 2017 from 19.0 bcm net imports in 2016

Share of gas: 31.7% of TPES, 34.3% of electricity generation, 22.8% of TFC (2017)

Gas consumption by sector (2017): 769.8 bcm, transformation (power and heat generation) 36.9%, industry 23.2%, residential 16.2%, commercial 11.8%, transport 2.8%, energy 9.0%

Overview

The shale gas revolution has sharply increased the United States’ (US’) natural gas output and fundamentally recast the role of natural gas in the country’s energy profile. Since 2009, the United States has been the top natural gas producer in the world, and natural gas has significantly increased its share as the second-largest energy source in the country, accounting for 32% of total primary energy supply (TPES) in 2018, up from 24% in 2008. The country became a net exporter of natural gas in 2017. Over the last decade, natural gas was the only fossil fuel that registered demand growth, and has been a major energy fuel for all sectors, except for transport. In particular, an increasingly competitive gas price has accelerated coal-to-gas switching in power generation, which accounts for the largest share of natural gas consumption. The share of natural gas in power generation increased from about 21% in 2008 to 34% in 2018 (Figure 8.1).

The natural gas market in the United States is mature and dynamic, but questions remain how to optimise the use of abundant gas supply and adapt supply and export infrastructure to reflect the rapid change of the United States to one of the world’s largest gas exporters. In efforts to address bottlenecks for gas pipeline takeaway capacity and liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminals, the government has already worked to streamline administrative barriers, notably for small-scale LNG terminals. As more gas pipelines are commissioned, the potential of gas in accelerating the country’s low-carbon transition will materialise, while at the same time enhancing energy security.

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ENERGY SECURITY

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