Shale Gas Costing 2/3 Less Than OPEC Oil Converges With U.S.

Victoria Switzer stands in the living room of the home her and her husband are building in Dimock, Pennsylvania, U.S., on Wednesday, April 7, 2010. Companies are spending billions to dislodge natural gas from a band of shale-sedimentary rock called the Marcellus shale that underlies Pennsylvania, West Virginia and New York. The band of rock, so designated because it pokes through near a city of that name in northern New York, may contain 262 trillion cubic feet of recoverable gas, the U.S. Department of Energy estimates. Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Victoria Switzer stands in the living room of the home her and her husband are building in Dimock, Pennsylvania, U.S., on Wednesday, April 7, 2010. Companies are spending billions to dislodge natural gas from a band of shale-sedimentary rock called the Marcellus shale that underlies Pennsylvania, West Virginia and New York. The band of rock, so designated because it pokes through near a city of that name in northern New York, may contain 262 trillion cubic feet of recoverable gas, the U.S. Department of Energy estimates. Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Shale Gas Costing 2/3 Less Than OPEC Oil Converges With U.S.
PURCHASE A LICENSE
How can I use this image?
$575.00
CAD

DETAILS

Restrictions:
Contact your local office for all commercial or promotional uses.For editorial use only. Additional clearance required for commercial or promotional use, contact your local office for assistance. Any commercial or promotional use of Bloomberg content requires Bloomberg's prior written consent.
Credit:
Bloomberg / Contributor
Editorial #:
100485519
Collection:
Bloomberg
Date created:
April 07, 2010
Upload date:
License type:
Release info:
Not released. More information
Source:
Bloomberg
Object name:
SHALE GAS
Max file size:
3000 x 2000 px (10.00 x 6.67 in) - 300 dpi - 2 MB