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Ben Jealous: Hope young people have been waiting for

Pipelines leading the LNG terminal and the LNG tanker. Adobe Stock Stock Photo (TriceEdneyWire.com)—James Hiatt lives in an area along the Mississippi River in Louisiana...

Allegheny County executive election puts environmental decisions up in the air

The Clairton Coke Works in January 2023. (Photo by Quinn Glabicki/PublicSource)   Whether to frack, what kind of hydrogen hub to pursue, how to handle big...

Are gas stoves bad for your health?

Federal regulators are examining the health effects of emissions from gas stoves. SolStock via Getty Images Here’s why the federal government is considering new safety...

Is your gas stove bad for your health?

by Jonathan Levy, Boston University Cooks love their gadgets, from countertop slow cookers to instant-read thermometers. Now, there’s increasing interest in magnetic induction cooktops –...

Wolf administration advances tougher gas drilling rules

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - A forthcoming proposal to toughen regulations for the Marcellus Shale natural gas drilling industry will target how it stores waste,...

Drilling under Pittsburgh-area park approved 9-5

PITTSBURGH (AP) - County officials in western Pennsylvania approved a plan Wednesday to drill for natural gas under a Pittsburgh-area park over the objections...

Severance tax benefits the powerful at citizen's expense

Washington County farmer Shawn Georgetti was living paycheck to paycheck before the Marcellus Shale boom. Thanks to a natural gas lease, he’s finally been...

Gulf Coast’s chemical industry bounces back with natural gas cracker plants, can western Pa. do the same?

The BASF petrochemical plant in Port Arthur, Texas, was recently renovated so it could use shale gas to make plastic. (Photo by Reid R. Fraiser/The Allegheny Front) by Reid R. Frazier Allegheny Front PORT ARTHUR, Texas -- Standing beneath a tangle of pipes, ductwork, and grated catwalks at BASF’s massive ethylene unit in this small refining city on the Gulf Coast, Andy Miller pointed to a large metal box a few feet above his head. Inside, a fire burning at 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit produced an industrial-scale whine. “If you look up into this little peephole, you’ll be able to see some of the firing,” Miller said. The orange glow is just one sign of an historic transformation occurring in the U.S. chemical industry and stretching from Western Pennsylvania to the Texas coast. The plant was recently modified to pipe ethane—a key component found in natural gas, especially in shale formations—through its furnaces. The plant can make more than two billion of pounds a year of ethylene, a key component of plastic that’s used in everything from diapers to antifreeze to plastic bags. This is where the building blocks for those products begin, said Miller, a manager for BASF. “It starts here.” Miller’s plant is one of several around the country that have expanded to take advantage of shale gas. In addition, six brand new “world-scale” crackers -- where ethane is ‘cracked’ to separate out the ethylene -- are slated for construction in Texas and Louisiana. Royal Dutch Shell has proposed building a cracker plant in Western Pennsylvania, in the heart of the ethane-rich Marcellus Shale. It would be the first ethane cracker of its size in the Appalachian region. The company has a land option for a property in Monaca, Pa., in Beaver County and has recently solicited bids for contracts from local ethane producers while it evaluates the site. The state has promised more than $1 billion in tax breaks over 25 years to the project, which Shell said could provide up to 10,000 jobs at the height of construction.

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