EIA explores effects of not building future interstate natural gas pipelines

Higher natural gas prices that result from natural gas pipelines capacity constraints primarily affect natural gas consumption in the U.S. electric power sector.

In the scenario where there are no new US interstate natural gas pipelines built, electricity generation from renewables, coal, and nuclear sources increase. US Pipeline photo.

This article was published by the US Energy Information Administration on April 4, 2022.

By Stephen York

In our Annual Energy Outlook 2022 (AEO2022), Issues in Focus: Exploration of the No Interstate Natural Gas Pipeline Builds, we analyze the effects on the energy market if no additional U.S. natural gas pipeline capacity is built between 2024 and 2050.

In the No Interstate Natural Gas Pipeline Builds case, we project 5 per cent less natural gas production and 4 per cent less natural gas consumption in 2050 compared with the Reference case. We also project that the Henry Hub spot price in 2050 would be 11 per cent higher in that case than in the Reference case.

natural gas prices, production, and consumption in two AEO2022 cases

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Annual Energy Outlook 2022 (AEO2022)

Restricting U.S. interstate pipeline builds in our projection results in 7.4 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) less interregional capacity in 2050 than in the Reference case projection, which, for example, limits the amount of natural gas that can flow from the Appalachia production region to demand areas such as the Midwest.

The higher natural gas prices that result from capacity constraints primarily affect natural gas consumption in the U.S. electric power sector, which is more price-sensitive than the residential, commercial, and industrial sectors. In the No Interstate Natural Gas Pipeline Builds case, we project 11 per cent less natural gas-fired generation in the United States during 2050 than in the Reference case. Higher natural gas prices make natural gas less economical for electric power generation compared with alternative sources, such as coal or renewables.

We project that natural gas’s share of U.S. electricity generation would fall from 34 per cent in 2050 in the Reference Case to 31 per cent in the No Interstate Natural Gas Pipeline Builds case. To make up for less natural gas-fired generation in the No Interstate Natural Gas Pipeline Builds case, electricity generation from renewables, coal, and nuclear sources increase.

U.S. electricity generation in two AEO2022 cases

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Annual Energy Outlook 2022 (AEO2022)

We project that restricting interstate U.S. natural gas pipeline capacity would only slightly lower energy-related carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions in the United States relative to the Reference case. Total CO2 from all fuel sources in 2050 are 4 per cent lower in the No Interstate Natural Gas Pipeline Builds case than in the Reference case. The relatively small effect on CO2 emissions, despite the decline in natural gas consumption and growth in electric power generation from renewable sources, is due to our forecast of increased coal-fired power generation, which would be more carbon intensive than the natural gas-fired generation it displaces.

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