natural gasShammy; i can't find the two articles i read the past several days that suggested ample supply.
https://www.eia.gov/naturalgas/weekly/
but reading the above link can be taken either way when looking at the Spot graph,
or the shale gas supply curves; i take the overall page to suggest we are not short of natural gas in north america.
And overseas, the Saudis might be thinking over the long term:
https://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2015-01-26/why-saudi-arabia-s-king-salman-is-holding-strong-on-oil-prices
"perhaps the most interesting surrounds the possible opening natural gas development to foreign companies. In 1998, Saudi Arabia launched a
“gas initiative” and welcomed some multinational firms to explore the country’s gas potential.
Yet the question of developing Saudi natural gas is again front and center, as the kingdom’s domestic energy consumption grows unabated and the country continues to burn oil -- which would be better exported -- to generate electricity. Getting some assistance to develop the hard-to-reach natural gas deposits not associated with oil production could be a good idea."
I just continue to hope that the Keystone pipeline gets approved soon, despite today's setback.