THE VOICE FOR THE ENERGY CONSUMER
Washington, D.C. – In a new report released today by Consumer Energy Alliance (CEA), the organization warns policymakers that recent geopolitical turmoil and global oil price instability could negatively affect.
Lower energy prices are finally coming to areas along the Atlantic seaboard which have been facing delivery constraints of natural gas due to a lack of pipeline infrastructure. Natural gas.
As previously noted, a lack of pipeline capacity has been causing bottlenecks in American energy production which could have helped alleviate rising gas a jet fuel prices. Plains All American.
CEA’s Tim Page talks about the importance reliable supplies of natural gas are to North Carolina, and the irony of protesters benefiting daily from the products they are protesting. Small.
COLUMBUS, O.H. — Thanks to increased production and new technologies, which have decreased the price of natural gas, Ohio energy consumers saved more than $40.2 billion between 2006 and 2016,.
CEA’s research on the high cost denying new and modernized energy infrastructure has had on families across New York was recently cited as a result of the Cuomo Administration’s continued.
CEA’s Chris Ventura was joined by LiUNA’s Joel Archibald in discussing training a workforce to build, maintain, and modernize energy infrastructure and why it is necessary to have an honest.
Modernizing Minnesota’s critical energy infrastructure is set to bring economic benefits across the state. That’s expected to provide a significant boost to the local and regional economy, according to Stephanie.
As America produces record-breaking amounts of energy, keeping prices affordable for families across the country, pipeline infrastructure constraints are now preventing additional supplies of oil and natural gas from reaching.
Investing in pipeline infrastructure brings more than just jobs and energy security to communities. Investment also brings new revenue for school districts, like those in Ohio, to improve and expand.