1.
Benefits of Natural Gas
The inherent cleanliness of natural gas when compared with those other fuels, coupled with the high efficiency of natural gas equipment, ... electricity generation so attractive (see "Gas Puts Electricity on the Doorstep," page 25). ...
2.
Electric Generation
Higher efficiency means lower fuel bills and less pollution. For example, replacing a coal generating unit with a gas-fired combined-cycle plant could ...
3.
Electric Generation
In the 1990s, there was a dramatic shift to natural gas for the generation of electricity. Large coal and nuclear generating plants were the clear choice of ...
4.
Electric Generation
Currently, coal provides 56 percent of the electricity generated in the United States, and this percentage remains essentially constant throughout the ...
5.
Electric Generation
Because of its many economic and environmental benefits, natural gas has become the fuel of choice for electricity generation. ...
6.
Natural Gas Vehicles
Most NGVs are fueled at some 1225 compressed natural gas stations throughout the ... Currently, the natural gas fueling infrastructure also is limited, ...
7.
Electric Generation
Currently, coal provides 56 percent of the electricity generated in the United States, and this percentage remains essentially constant throughout the ...
8.
Electric Generation
Currently, coal provides 56 percent of the electricity generated in the United States, and this percentage remains ... Electricity generation will begin to shift from central-station facilities to distributed-generation facilities. ...
9.
Electric Generation
Compared with electricity generation at central-station power plants, distributed electricity generation produces fewer pollutants, is more energy-efficient ...
10.
Electric Generation
"Distributed generation" refers to the placement of small-scale power-generation units at or near the site where the electricity will be used. ...