Posted on 04/09/2014 8:28:32 AM PDT by thackney
A natural gas pipeline stretching 435 miles across Mexicos Yucatan Peninsula is just one piece of General Electrics multibillion-dollar bid to shore up energy infrastructure in North America, where an oil and gas boom has drawn a wave of investments to new pipelines.
GEs energy investing arm has more than $3 billion tied up in 43,500 miles of pipeline, the largest U.S. liquefied natural gas export facility and other energy transportation and storage ventures. But it has started to shift its attention to early-stage ventures as U.S. and Canadian pipeline operators collect billions for new projects that link remote shale plays to U.S. markets.
Theres a lot of need for expansion capital, new pipeline in the ground to tap into and fully exploit the various shale regions, Jim Burgoyne, managing director of GEs natural resources group, said in a recent interview with FuelFix. Its fertile ground because there is so much development going on.
Pipeline boom
Equity investments are playing a bigger role in Mexico, as well, where GE expects demand for energy to rise as the country overhauls its energy policy, which has long kept a closed door to outside companies. The move is expected to stimulate a need for infrastructure and power plants and supply from foreign investors. Overall, he said, the midstream sector, which includes pipeline and energy storage, has grown tenfold over the past few years.
U.S. pipeline operators like Houston-based Kinder Morgan have boosted their capital spending from about $7 billion in 2006 to $26 billion last year, and their combined market capitalization has tripled its share of the value within the U.S. oil and gas industry. They are expected to spend $200 billion on new North American infrastructure by 2035, according to Deloitte.
Age of gas
GE as a company is very focused on what we call the age of gas, the need to build out gas networks, Burgoyne said. But the age of gas will require more than just pipelines, he said.
Fairfield, Conn.-based GE is also trying to expand the role of natural gas in the nations economy by investing in gas-powered locomotives, drilling rigs, trucks, mining operations and marine equipment. Natural gas-powered drilling rigs, to take one example, offer energy companies sizable cost savings through their portable and more environmentally friendly generators, he said.
We think thats a very interesting area thats going to open up a whole new area in midstream investing, Burgoyne said.
NatGas is the future.
Pray America wakes up
Fueling the future
http://site.ge-energy.com/businesses/ge_oilandgas/en/corp_overview/fueling-the-future.html
From extraction to end use, our {GE’s} cutting-edge technology and services solutions transform oil and gas into the energy that powers the world.
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They have gotten into a lot of sections of the oil/gas business.
GE Wind Energy is the leading supplier to North American utility-scale wind generation as well, manufacturing wind turbines and components with US labor. After all, it’s just another way of spinning the generator. Ironically, GE got into the wind business by buying up the remnants of Enron’s wind energy business after its bankruptcy.
1 natural gas turbine, steam generator setup is equal to approximately 100 wind turbines.
And is three times more available than wind.
And is three times less visually intrusive than 100 of these ugly rotating white storks that blight otherwise pristine landscapes.
And Enron bought those assets from Zond Corp in 1997. After that, it took Enron only two years(1999) to get Texas to set their first renewable energy standards.
Very true. A 2 turbine intobone steam can be set up on less than 30 acres. I’ve seen smaller plants use methane from waste dumps as fuel. These are usually peaker units, but very efficient.
Natural gas is constant, unlike wind. Wind power is only being explored because we the people are funding it.
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