THE VOICE FOR THE ENERGY CONSUMER
CEA’s Mike Butler looks at how New York’s politicians are closing the door on providing families affordable energy as moratoriums on natural gas are announced due to constrained energy infrastructure..
CEA’s Kevin Doyle outlines how calls to ban offshore drilling may hurt Florida’s economy and households, already struggling to afford $2500 in energy bills annually. Advocating for an energy plan.
CEA’s Chris Ventura and West Virginia Oil & Natural Gas Association’s Anne Blankenship discuss how developing West Virginia’s natural resources has had a positive economic impact on the region and.
With more oil and natural gas being produced in the United States, increased investment in additional pipeline infrastructure is necessary to safely deliver this to American energy consumers. A pipeline.
Mike Butler, CEA Mid-Atlantic Executive Director, reviews the benefits shale gas has brought to residents across Pennsylvania. Any suggestion that the shale gas industry is under-taxed is false. According to.
Last year, CEA released a report entitled, “Pipelines and their Benefits to New York,” which found New Yorkers were subjected to spot market prices for natural gas that were $137.
As New England prepares for another polar vortex, politically expedient policies that focus more on the wishes of extreme activists and not on the needs of families has continued to.
CEA’s Brydon Ross commented on the importance of the recently introduced bill in the Kentucky Senate designed to support the expansion of solar energy without shifting costs on those unable.
With increasing support for an Appalachian Basin Storage Hub taking root, extreme activists are working to discredit the need for plastics, choosing to ignore the fact our advances in environmental.
CEA’s Makayla Buchanan discusses how some lawmakers stance against seismic testing is shortsighted, harming families and businesses across Georgia. Tax revenue generated by offshore production could also help fund beatification.