Natural gas is the future. It is here.

I have a lot of natural gas on my properties.

Natural gas is great for America in so many ways.

Natural gas is a dirty fossil fuel like the rest of them.

The cheapest natural gas in the world is in the United States.

Natural gas is a feedstock in basically every industrial process.

Hydraulic fracking is very much a necessary part of the future of natural gas.

Neither solar nor wind are actually substitutes for coal or natural gas or oil.

In my judgment, the president should reject Keystone and step up natural gas exports.

Look, natural gas, just like oil, is going to eventually go away. It's not renewable.

What we are investing in, from a generation standpoint, are renewables and natural gas.

The Russian economy is a one-trick pony. They're totally focused on natural gas and oil.

Some studies have shown that natural gas could, in fact, be worse for the climate than coal.

Electricity is derived from many non-renewable energy sources like oil, natural gas and coal.

The last thing we need to do when natural gas has been such a blessing is raise the severance tax.

We see natural gas as an important part of the electricity generation mix for many decades to come.

Modern life would not be possible if it were not for chemicals, nor would modern natural gas production.

We access virtually every producing basin, whether for natural gas or crude oil, in the U.S. and Canada.

Our nation's power plant fleet must include a mix of solar, wind, hydro, natural gas and nuclear plants.

I don't care whether you use natural gas, ethanol, the battery. You can use anything, just so it's American.

States with tremendous oil and natural gas reserves have the most to gain economically from proper regulation.

The natural gas industry has worked long and hard to smear Josh Fox, the director of 'Gasland,' and has failed.

Cheap natural gas is a big stimulus to petrochemical production and a meaningful one for all U.S. manufacturing.

Many coal-fired power plants are being decommissioned or switched over to natural gas, but that takes a long time.

It's hard to store natural gas. And it does require big storage tanks. So it doesn't work very well on passenger cars.

Natural gas is an important part of delivering energy, whether you're producing power or other solutions for customers.

The idea that we're going to replace oil and natural gas with solar and wind, and nothing else, is a hallucinatory delusion.

Natural gas is hemispheric. I like to call it hemispheric in nature because it is a product that we can find in our neighborhoods.

We need fuel diversity as far as the generation of electricity because you can only get so much natural gas through the pipelines.

Natural gas is a better transportation fuel than gasoline, so if that's the case, it's cheaper, it's cleaner and it's a domestic resource.

Natural gas is better distributed than any other fuel in the United States. It's down every street and up every alley. There's a pipeline.

I was very bearish on natural gas for many years, pretty much from 2006 on. There was a tremendous natural gas bubble in the United States.

Countries around the world are celebrating new oil and natural gas discoveries that hold the promise of greater prosperity for their citizens.

We have for too long put vast oil and natural gas reserves off limits to exploration and production, as The Washington Post editorial stated this week.

If we don't continue to pursue alternative, emissions-free energy sources like nuclear fuel, we are at risk of increasing our dependence on costly natural gas.

Natural gas is the one fuel that we have that's affordable, it's scaleable, it can replace coal over time, it can replace imported oil, can create American jobs.

Turkey's energy bill due to imports will fall with the increase in use of renewable energy sources. We have no control over the prices of petroleum and natural gas.

Mr. Speaker, high natural gas prices and the summer spike in gasoline prices serve as a stark reminder that the path to energy independence is a long and arduous one.

In my almost ten years in the House of Representatives, I have voted consistently to allow companies to drill for oil and natural gas in environmentally friendly ways.

Finally, we should help developing nations like China and India curb their exponentially increasing consumption of oil and natural gas, which is driving world prices higher.

Offshore drilling is not the solution to U.S. energy independence, and I am against opening parts of the Arctic, Pacific and Atlantic oceans to oil and natural gas production.

Natural gas is here, it's not going anywhere - we know that. And what we want to try to do is favor those workers who can help us make it even safer and better for the environment.

The total amount of energy we use every year - from coal, oil, natural gas, hydro, nuclear, and everything else - is dwarfed by the amount of solar energy hitting the planet each year.

Natural gas is the best transportation fuel. It's better than gasoline or diesel. It's cleaner, it's cheaper, and it's domestic. Natural gas is 97 percent domestic fuel, North America.

You know that Mexico has enormous natural gas reservoirs that have yet to be tapped and the technology for tapping these alternative reservoirs continually needs to get better and better.

In conventional oil and natural gas production, you always produce a lot of formation water, and it's crummy water. It's real salty. It's got heavy metals in it. It's got bad stuff in it.

Because America is the Saudi Arabia of natural gas. We have the world's largest reserves of natural gas, and the world's most sophisticated production and storage facilities, by a wide margin.

When I left university I got a job with Shell on their graduate scheme. One of my roles was as a commercial manager for liquid natural gas shipping, project economics and contract negotiation.

We have to slow down the emissions of carbon dioxide and methane from coal burning, oil and eventually natural gas... And the best ways to do that are energy efficiency and a switch to renewables.

Coal, oil and natural gas have lit homes and powered machinery for centuries, driving civilization forward. But as human development accelerated, the unsustainability of such energy became apparent.

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