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Stanford launches major new natural gas research initiative

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Stanford University has launched a new research initiative to study comprehensively the development and use of natural gas. The new program will expand Stanford’s research on energy and the environment by focusing additional resources on the growing importance of natural gas.

US production has risen almost 50% in the past 10 years, and global demand for gas is anticipated to outpace all other fossil fuels. More than 35 professors and research staff from a dozen Stanford academic departments have already affiliated with the Natural Gas Initiative.

If developed in a responsible manner, natural gas can be the critical transition fuel that reduces the environmental impacts of fossil fuels and keeps us on a path toward a decarbonized energy future.

—Mark Zoback, a professor of geophysics and NGI’s director

US emissions of CO2 have declined to the level of the mid-1990s. Compared with burning coal, natural gas emits about half the carbon dioxide and substantially less soot, mercury and sulfur. Natural gas has also revitalized several domestic industries and reduced the US trade imbalance. Idle natural gas import terminals are being retooled to export liquefied natural gas to Asia and Europe, which is looking to lessen its dependence on Russia for natural gas.

However, the technologies that have released the new supplies—hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling—have also unleashed anxieties about contaminated drinking water, induced earthquakes and lenient regulation. At times directly affecting residential neighborhoods, the large-scale industrial process has strained many US communities. The increased use of natural gas has angered opponents of fossil fuels and heightened concerns about methane leaks throughout the US natural gas production and pipeline system.

Natural gas must be developed with safeguards to reduce impacts on water, air quality, land, nearby communities and ecosystems. While we have to meet both short-term energy and economic needs, we also need to meet society's long-term environmental goals.

—Mark Zoback

The Natural Gas Initiative has begun funding early stage, exploratory research, following a “seed grant” model used by Stanford’s Precourt Institute for Energy, one of NGI’s hosting organizations. The program will fund interdisciplinary research in six key areas: resource development; uses; environmental impacts and climate change; global markets and finance; policy and regulatory reform; and geopolitical impacts.

In one of the first research projects NGI is funding, Robert Jackson, professor of environmental Earth system science, and Adam Brandt, assistant professor of energy resources engineering, are starting to develop a more accurate, faster and less expensive method for detecting leaks of methane at well pads and gas processing stations.

At a natural gas field in Utah thought to have particularly high methane leakage, the investigators will couple helicopter-based infrared imaging with aircraft and ground-based estimates of methane leaks to develop software to recognize plumes.

Jackson, a member of the Earth System Science Department, has mapped thousands of natural gas leaks across city streets in Boston and Washington, DC, and published the first studies of hydraulic fracturing’s impact on drinking water. Brandt, in Energy Resources Engineering, led a national study last year on methane leaks in the US natural gas system. (Earlier post.)

NGI’s other four inaugural research projects are:

  • To aid government decision-making, John Weyant and Hillard Huntington of the Management Science & Engineering Department and Michael Wara of Stanford Law School are designing a robust structure for evaluating the opportunities, economics and environmental impacts of exporting US natural gas to Europe and Asia.

  • Chemical Engineering’s Thomas Jaramillo is experimenting with electrochemically converting natural gas into higher-value products, like methanol. Such fuels could lower greenhouse gas emissions from transportation compared with gasoline and diesel fuel.

  • Eric Shaqfeh of the Chemical Engineering and Mechanical Engineering departments and Gianluca Iaccarino of Mechanical Engineering are making a computational tool for inventing new, benign fluids for use in hydraulic fracturing.

  • Eric Dunham of the Geophysics Department is developing methods for three-dimensional imaging of complex fracture networks in order to identify the location of constrictions or regions of partial closure.

Bradley Ritts will be NGI’s managing director. Ritts, most recently with Chevron Asia Pacific Exploration & Production Co., earned a doctorate in geological and environmental sciences at Stanford. Previously the Robert R. Shrock Professor of Sedimentary Geology at Indiana University, Ritts is a National Science Foundation CAREER grant recipient, and an expert on oil and gas exploration.

Tisha Schuller, who earned a bachelor’s degree in Earth systems from Stanford, will be a strategic advisor. Schuller was president of the Colorado Oil & Gas Association when that state’s energy companies and the Environmental Defense Fund worked with state regulators to enact the first rules in the United States to reduce methane emissions and volatile gases.

Initial funding for NGI was provided by Stanford’s School of Earth, Energy & Environmental Sciences; the Precourt Institute for Energy; the Office of the Dean of Research; and the President’s Office. Zoback, Ritts and Schuller are in the process of building out NGI’s corporate affiliates program. Support will also come from individual donors, non-governmental organizations and foundations.

Comments

TeslaRedux.co

Will they address Fracking?

Stanford is also a ruthless business school with no morals there, remember that :/

Engineer-Poet

And your first impression is right.  It turns out that the Natural Gas Initiative is financed by fossil fuel money, including a large grant from the Precourt Institute.

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