Natural Gas Pipelines to Bolster Bi-Directional Capacity in Northeast up to 32%, EIA Data Shows
By Brian Heslin | Moore & Van Allen PLLC
By
2017, natural gas pipelines are projected to convert up to 32% of their
pipeline capacity into the Northeast to support the bi-directional flow
of natural gas out of the region to the South and West, according to a
U.S. Energy Information Administration (“EIA”) December 2, 2014 report.
It is well known that the increased production of natural gas in the
shale plays of the Northeast have had a marked impact on the energy
industry in the U.S. This EIA data shows us in hard numbers how drastic
of an impact the shale boom has had on pipelines that historically
transported natural gas into the Northeast: six pipelines transported
60% of natural gas into the Northeast in 2013, and 2013 volumes of gas
transported into the Northeast on these six pipelines were 21%-84% lower
than the volumes of gas they transported into the region just five
years earlier. Several of these pipelines initiated the transition to
handle bi-directional flows in 2013 and earlier this year.http://breakingenergy.com/2014/12/17/natural-gas-pipelines-to-bolster-bi-directional-capacity-in-northeast-up-to-32-eia-data-shows/?utm_source=Breaking+Energy&utm_campaign=773837895c-RSS_EMAIL_CAMPAIGN&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_f852427a4b-773837895c-407304281
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