by theluckycountry » Thu 11 Sep 2025, 20:01:08
Natural Gas Is Not A Bridge To Tomorrow. It's The Superhighway Of The Future
The headline says it all, and the situation is not unlike "the hybrid car is the transition to the future" meme the dumbass public was sold back in the early 00's. It was not part of a transition to something better, and now it outsells Battcars 20:1, but only because the dumbass public believe these Half-breeds are a cleaner alternative to Full-Blood Gasoline cars. They are certainly not in the manufacturing process.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')ver the years as it grew more powerful, the climate cult’s assault on fossil fuels typically left no room for compromise. Ending all reliance on anything but so-called renewables was the position that the energy industry and the government were expected to embrace, with various just-around-the-corner end dates arbitrarily set to bury the fossil fuel industry once and for all.
But for the climate change zealots, one pesky fly in the ointment made such goals clearly unreasonable – natural gas. Instead of slowly and cooperatively dimming its flame until it was extinguished, natural gas by necessity has continued to flourish.
...Predictions of the demise of natural gas join a long list of inaccurate energy forecasts from a decade or more ago. As we now know, natural gas has become even more important as the demand for affordable and reliable electricity grows. In Texas, for instance, the coming expansion of AI data centers has led to plans to develop private, dedicated gas plants to bypass existing grids and make sure electricity generation is reliable and uninterrupted...
Burning natural gas does indeed contribute to some pollution. But as even the Yale Climate Connections article conceded nine years ago, “it’s relatively clean compared to other fossil fuels,” and, crucially, there is “enough on tap to last the rest of this century,” an estimate generally accepted by more recent analysis.
What’s becoming clear to everyone except the blindest ideologue is that natural gas is not a bridge to tomorrow. It’s the superhighway of the future. Natural gas will continue to lead the power surge of the 21st century, and, for at least the next few decades, “renewables” will at best augment natural gas or at times serve as a backup.
https://realclearwire.com/articles/2025 ... 33527.htmlIt's a lengthy article, and most of what's stated was obvious years ago, to anyone with a modicum of intelligence that is. I had squabbles here myself with the likes of kub, who slavishly adhered to the rebuildable energy dreams. Broken Dreams now. But this is a much bigger story because as I posted above, the BRICS Block have the Lion's share of this and they are increasingly keeping it to themselves. Just like China's mandates on its Rare Earths, you have to come hat in hand and only use it in-country.
Frac-gas is expensive low EROEI gas, good luck powering an advanced economy through the 21st century on those promises. As we see exemplified in the good ol USA, which can't even repave its roads and replace it's bridges in a timely manner. If you want to look for the reasons for all the political and social unrest over there look no further than their decline in available cheap energy. It's pushed millions out of work, tens of millions into poverty, and the mass murders and mass rioting that has escalated over the past decade is a direct result.
All great nations turn inward and cannibalize themselves when their available energy streams begin to falter. In past eras these were slaves and gold and spices looted from other nations. Food played a big role in their downfall too, sometimes the loss of food that was being bought cheap from conquered nations, like in Rome's case, sometimes because irrigation poisoned domestic farming lands by salt leaching up. Either way in the end the people's grew poorer and turned on themselves. Instead of admitting all this, governments spin Lies and blame the decline on "the other party" or on "Those evil people in that other nation" It doesn't change the basic facts though, they still decline and take their place in the History books as another fallen Empire.
We're 17 years past the peak now and the 3rd World is going hungry and dark. We'll be next, we're well on the way in fact.