The history of the United States of America is also the history of the energy sector. Natural gas provides the fuel that allows us to heat our homes in winter and cool them in summer with the touch of a button or turn of a dial—when the industry runs smoothly. From the oil crisis of the 1970s to the fall of Enron and the California electricity crisis at the turn of the century to contemporary issues of hydraulic fracking, poorly conceived government policies have sometimes left us shivering, stranded, or with significantly lighter wallets. In this expansive narrative, Charles Blanchard traces the rise of natural gas and the regulatory missteps that nearly ruined the market. Beginning in the 1880s, The Extraction State explains how the New Deal regulatory compact came together in the 1920s, even before the Great Depression, and how it fell apart in the 1970s. From there, the book dissects the policies that affect us today, and explores where we might be headed in the near future.
Author(s): Charles Blanchard
Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Press
Year: 2021
Language: English
Pages: 405
City: Pittsburgh
Contents
Part I: Making Use of a Useless Byproduct, 1878–1954
Chapter 1: The Smoky City
Chapter 2: Going Back to Smoke
Chapter 3: The Rise of the Power Trust
Chapter 4: Regulation and Rejuvenation
Chapter 5: Wartime Pipes and the Postwar Boom
Part II: A Manufactured Shortage of Natural Gas, 1954–1992
Chapter 6: Regulation and Ruin
Chapter 7: Stopping a Freight Train
Chapter 8: The End of Abundance
Chapter 9: From Scarcity to Surplus
Chapter 10: The Gas Bubble and the End of Merchant Service
Part III: A (Mostly) Free Market and Its Discontents, 1992–2020
Chapter 11: Gas Becomes a Commodity
Chapter 12: The Dash for Gas
Chapter 13: Speculation on a Galactic Scale
Chapter 14: Shale
Chapter 15: Aftermath
Notes
Bibliography
Index