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You are here:  Educational Activities > Energy Lessons > Natural Gas-Introduction

An Energy Lesson

Natural Gas - Fueling the Blue Flame

Natural Gas:  It is colorless, shapeless, and in its pure form, odorless.

For many years, it was discarded as worthless. Even today, some countries (although not the United States) still get rid of it by burning it in giant flares, so large they can be seen from the Space Shuttle. Yet, it is one of the most valuable fuels we have.

Natural gas is made up mainly of a chemical called methane, a simple, compound that has a carbon atom surrounded by four hydrogen atoms. Methane is highly flammable and burns almost completely. There is no ash and very little air pollution.

Natural gas provides one-fifth of all the energy used in the United States. It is especially important in homes, where it supplies nearly half of all the energy used for cooking, heating, and for fueling other types of home appliances.

Because natural gas has no odor, gas companies add a chemical to it that smells a little like rotten eggs. The odor makes it easy to smell if there is a gas leak in your house.

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Where We Find Natural Gas

- Gas Basins in U.S./Canada
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These are the areas of the United States and Canada where natural gas formations are found.

The United States has a lot of natural gas, enough to last for at least another 60 years and probably a lot longer. Our neighbor to the north, Canada, also has a lot of gas, and some gas pipelines that begin in Canada run into the United States.

The United States is looking for more ways to use gas, largely because it is easy to pipe from one location to another and because it burns very cleanly. More and more, we are using gas in power plants to generate electricity. Factories are using more gas, both as a fuel and as an ingredient for a variety of chemicals.

While natural gas is plentiful, there is still some uncertainty about how much it will cost to get it out of the ground in the future. Like oil, there is "easy" gas that can be produced from underground formations, and there is gas that is not so easy. If we can find better and cheaper ways to find more of the "easy" gas and produce some of the more difficult gas, we can rely increasingly on natural gas in the future.

Before we explore ways to do that, let's look back briefly at the history of natural gas.

READ ON  FORWARD

Dr. H. Carbon asks:  How many homes in the United States are heated by natural gas?
ONE FOURTH

One fourth of them

ONE HALF

One half of them

ALMOST ALL

Almost all of them

Click on your choice

 

 Page owner:  Fossil Energy Office of Communications
Page updated on: December 19, 2005 

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