Join the Washington & Jefferson College Center for Energy Policy and Management on Oct. 7 at 11 am to learn about the National Energy Technology Laboratory’s (NETL) perspective on the region’s natural gas future.
Justin Adder, senior economist with the NETL Energy Markets Analysis Team in Pittsburgh, will be our speaker for “The Region’s Natural Gas Future: The NETL Perspective”. He has followed energy and financial markets in order to extend knowledge and offer insight on current and emerging trends within the fossil fuel extraction, delivery, and utilization sectors for NETL since 2009 with a specific focus on the natural gas, natural gas liquids, and oil industries.
Adder will explain the opportunities for growth in several natural gas sectors due to the region’s abundant supply from the Marcellus and Utica shales, and outline the recently released report “The Appalachian Energy and Petrochemical Renaissance: An Assessment of Economic Progress and Opportunities,” which was written by his team.
He will focus on a new NETL tool that will provide businesses with a visual representation of the regional value chain to help them identify opportunities in the manufacturing sector. He will also explain the NETL’s newly formed Natural Gas Utilization Center for Excellence and some of the research being done to provide new and better ways to use natural gas.
For further information, contact Linda Ritzer, CEPM program manager/policy analyst, at 412-997-3164. The webinar is part of the CEPM’s Shale Gas Knowledge Hub initiative.
The NETL is a U.S. Department of Energy national laboratory that produces technological solutions to America’s energy challenges and has campuses in Pittsburgh, Pa., Morgantown, W.Va., and Albany, N.Y. NETL’s mission is to discover, integrate, and mature technology solutions to enhance the nation’s energy foundation and protect the environment for future generations. As the only one of the Energy Department’s 17 national labs that is dedicated to fossil energy research and development, its team a sought-after national resource.