THE VOICE FOR THE ENERGY CONSUMER
CEA’s David Holt recently discussed how the regulatory process for infrastructure construction, when used to achieve political ends, harms families and energy consumers across the country. Bureaucrats in states like.
Earlier this year, it was reported North Dakota may have been experiencing an oil boomlet as a result of the completion of the Dakota Access Pipeline. Fast forward, and North.
North Dakota’s families and farmers are ending the year on a high note. The reported oil boomlet from earlier this year is in fact happening. New pipelines have made North.
We know that pipelines pave the way for family-sustaining jobs as a result of construction and manufacturers because of the affordable, reliable supplies of fuel pipelines bring. Writing in the.
CEA’s James Voyles talks about the need for modernizing pipelines and our energy grid with the News Tribune. New materials have strengthened pipelines to operate more efficiently and with longer.
The American Association of Petroleum Geologists sat down with David Holt to discuss CEA’s latest report “Families, Communities and Finances: The Consequences of Denying Critical Pipeline Infrastructure,” and the necessity.
CEA Midwest’s Chris Ventura discusses the negative implications rejecting the maintenance and construction of energy infrastructure has on Michigan’s families. A lack of adequate pipelines and infrastructure act as a.
With environmental extremists becoming increasingly violent and reckless in their actions, including their sabotage of critical energy infrastructure, the U.S. Department of Justice is taking action. On Friday, the U.S..
With over 15,000 workers on a $4.2 billion project, another state-of-the-art pipeline is nearing completion. Experts are predicting this enhanced capacity will set the stage for new gas projects which.
The new Line 3 would be one of the state’s largest construction projects in recent history. And it is expected to take at least a year to build the Minnesota.