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1 by David McClanahan Chairman, American Gas Association President and CEO, CenterPoint Energy 2008 Natural Gas Outlook presented to the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners February 19, 2008
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2 Natural Gas Industry 2008 Priorities Conserve energy; use it more efficiently. 1 Numerous programs in place Continuing to seek innovative approaches
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3 LDC Energy Efficiency Programs 2007 AGA Energy Efficiency Survey 80 percent of surveyed companies had active or planned EE programs Programs include: 1. Residential Low-Income Weatherization 2. Energy Audits, Consumer Education 3. Equipment Replacement and Retrofit 4. Energy Efficiency Design Assistance 5. Financing for EE Applications
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4 Natural Gas Industry 2008 Priorities Promote direct use applications as the most efficient way to use natural gas. 2 Most efficient energy source Smaller carbon footprint
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5 Natural Gas: The Clean & Efficient Choice ElectricGas $294 $517 Over the average 9-year life of a water heater, you’d spend $2,000 more to use an electric water heater than a natural gas water heater. CO 2 Emissions from Residential Water Heaters Water Heaters Average Annual Operating Cost (2007) natural gas electric powered by gas combined cycle electric powered by coal-generated electricity 1.6 2.2 Tons of CO 2 Per Year 5.9 natural gas
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6 Natural Gas Industry 2008 Priorities Work with regulators to ensure alignment of industry and customers. 3 Moving away from volumetric based rates Increasing regulatory support for nontraditional rate designs and energy efficiency tariffs
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7 States with Non-Volumetric Rate Designs for Natural Gas Revenue Decoupling Other Non-Volumetric Rate Designs Rate Stabilization, Weather Normalization and/or Straight Fixed Variable
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8 Natural Gas Industry 2008 Priorities Ensure there are adequate supplies of natural gas to meet increasing needs. 4 High and volatile prices are the most pressing issues Significant growth from unconventional sources
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9 Natural Gas Supply Sources (January 1-December 31, 2007) Source: Bentek Energy LLC, Energy Market Fundamentals, December 31, 2007.
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10 World LNG Production May Double by 2016 Source: Schlesinger & Associates team – interim briefing to the American Gas Foundation, 1/2008, World Gas Trade Model. Excludes minor or zero volumes of LNG exported from Angola, Brunei, Chile, Iran, Libya, Norway, Papua New Guinea, Russia, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela.
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11 Existing and New North American Total LNG Import Capacity Bcfd Sources: FERC, US Coast Guard, LNG Express, WGI, LNG Observer * AEO 2006, EIA. Total Capacity: 16.1 Existing Existing Expansions Under Construction New Under Construction
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12 Natural Gas Industry 2008 Priorities Timely recovery of prudently incurred infrastructure investment. 5 Significant increases in capital investment have occurred, and are likely to continue.
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13 Growth in Capital Investment Gas Utility Construction Expenditures Increased from $8.5 Billion in 2000 to $10 Billion in 2005 8 9 10 20002005 $billion per year
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14 Natural Gas Industry 2008 Priorities Secure necessary funding for low-income home energy assistance programs. 6 Energy costs represent greater portion of a consumers budget Eligible households increased 78 percent
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15 by David McClanahan Chairman, American Gas Association President and CEO, CenterPoint Energy 2008 Natural Gas Outlook presented to the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners February 19, 2008
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