Shale Gas
Featured
Public Affairs & Information Committee (PAIC)
To help AIChE members better understand and better communicate about shale gas, the Public Affairs & Information Committee has helped curate valuable shale gas resources. These resources offer technically sound information drawn from AIChE publications, web forums and webinars, conference proceedings and Congressional briefings.
Shale Gas and Chemical Engineering
Member talks about shale gas and its importance as it relates to chemical engineering.
Safety in the LNG Value Chain
In this webinar, presenters describe and examine potential LNG (liquefied natural gas) hazards and risk-reduction methods for the LNG value chain ― production and consumption.
Marcellus Shale Gas Wastewater Reuse and Recycle
This webinar provides background on how water is used for drilling and hydraulic fracturing and includes a review of hydraulic fracturing fluid composition and flowback and produced water quantity and composition.
Shale Development: Air Quality Permitting Challenges and Compliance Strategies
Though hydraulic fracturing is far from new technology, shale gas development utilizing fracking currently faces mounting regulatory scrutiny at federal and state levels.
Future Fuels and Chemicals: Grand Challenges and Opportunities
Impact of Shale Gas Development on NGL Supplies and Petrochemical Feedstocks
Development of shale gas and oil resources in the United States has resulted in significant byproduct production of natural gas liquids, which has reversed the declining trend in US NGL production experienced at the turn of the century.
Fracking: The Hydraulic Fracturing of Shale
Led by experts from academia, government and industry, this interactive Web Forum presents an overview of the history, the current state of development and a look into the future of natural gas shale and its extraction, along with implications of
Natural Gas Future
Natural gas, at prices significantly below BTU parity with oil for a long time to come, will certainly play a pivotal role in world energy supply and will move towards becoming the premier fuel of the world economy. A significant feature of future gas prices is that they are likely to be technology driven, similar to oil prices, rather than resources driven.
The Impacts of Tight Gas and Shale to Global LNG Market and Gas
What Are We Going to Do with All This Natural Gas?” –
The Water-Energy Nexus: Emerging Issues and Challenges
This webinar provides an overview of water and energy interdependencies, as well as examples of emerging US and international water and energy related challenges, and discusses the potential local and regional conflicts that could emerge.


