The United States Department of Energy National Laboratories and Technology Centers are a system of facilities and laboratories overseen by the United States Department of Energy (DOE) for scientific and technological research.  Sixteen of the seventeen DOE national laboratories are federally funded research and development centers administered, managed, operated and staffed by private-sector organizations under management and operating (M&O) contract with the DOE.  The National Energy Technology Laboratory is the exception.   


 
17 Results Returned
Essential Listings
Argonne National Laboratory
Lemont, Illinois United States     Distance: 6116.26 KM

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Sandia National Laboratory
Albuquerque, New Mexico United States     Distance: 7154.7 KM

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Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
Batavia, Illinois United States     Distance: 6135.75 KM

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Los Alamos National Laboratory
Los Alamos, New Mexico United States     Distance: 7132.31 KM

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Savannah River National Laboratory
Aiken, South Carolina United States     Distance: 5745.12 KM

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Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research
Frederick, Maryland United States     Distance: 5547.27 KM

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Brookhaven National Laboratory
Utica, New York United States     Distance: 5477.26 KM

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National Renewable Energy Laboratory
Golden, Colorado United States     Distance: 7024.93 KM

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Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Livermore, California United States     Distance: 7923.47 KM

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Idaho National Laboratory
Idaho Falls, Idaho United States     Distance: 7314.52 KM

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Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Laboratory
Newport News, Virginia United States     Distance: 5477.72 KM

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Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
Princeton, New Jersey United States     Distance: 5415.14 KM

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Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Oak Ridge, Tennessee United States     Distance: 5902.89 KM

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SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
Menlo Park, California United States     Distance: 7954.96 KM

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National Energy Technology Laboratory
Washington, D.C., District of Columbia United States     Distance: 5524.01 KM

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Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Berkeley, California United States     Distance: 7946.06 KM

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Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Richland, Washington United States     Distance: 7586.44 KM

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  • Working natural gas in storage in the Lower 48 United States ended the natural gas injection season at 3,776 billion cubic feet (Bcf), according to estimates based on data from our Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report released on November 16. The Lower 48 states will enter the winter heating season, which runs from November 1—March 30, with the most natural gas in storage since 2020. In addition, we now have 5% more natural gas in U.S. inventories entering the winter heating season than the previous five-year (2018—22) average, and 7% more than last October 31.
  • Production of associated-dissolved natural gas, or associated natural gas, which is natural gas produced from predominantly oil wells, has nearly tripled since 2018 in the three top-producing tight oil plays in the Permian region. Associated natural gas from the Wolfcamp, Spraberry, and Bone Spring plays averaged a combined 13.7 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) in the first seven months of 2023, up from an average of 4.7 Bcf/d in 2018, according to data from Enverus DrillingInfo. Associated natural gas production has grown due to increases in both crude oil production and the volume of natural gas per barrel of oil that a well produces, the gas-to-oil ratio (GOR), among the oil wells in these three plays.
  • Exporting countries in the Middle East and North Africa region (MENA) supplied nearly one-third (29%) of global liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports in 2022, according to data from the International Group of Liquefied Natural Gas Importers (GIIGNL). The share of global LNG exports coming from the region's exporters—Qatar, Oman, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Algeria, and Egypt—declined from 47% in 2013 to about 30% by 2020 because of growing LNG exports from Australia and the United States.
  • We project that global energy-related CO2 emissions from consumption of coal, liquid fuels, and natural gas will increase over the next 30 years across most of the cases we analyzed in our International Energy Outlook 2023 (IEO2023).
  • We project that global energy-related CO2 emissions from consumption of coal, liquid fuels, and natural gas will increase over the next 30 years across most of the cases we analyzed in our International Energy Outlook 2023 (IEO2023).