by Jack » Sat 29 Jan 2005, 22:54:24
It depends on how you look at it. If you look at Natural Gas in North America, we may well be running out. I suspect we are.
But there is a lot of gas in remote locations. Getting the gas from there to here requires either a pipeline, or conversion to LNG, followed by shipment in special cryogenic tankers, and regassification. Creating pipelines and LNG "supply trains" is expensive and takes a long time.
So, from a global perspective, there is some supply still out there. From a U.S. perspective, things may start to get tight soon.
Does that help?