Natural Gas Consumption
Date posted: 08/04/2008
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Natural gas is an important fuel that is used for heating, cooking, and industrial applications. According to the Energy Information Administration, Colorado ranked 6th in the nation for natural gas production in 2006. In 2005, Colorado relied on natural gas for more than one-third of its energy requirements (2005 data is the most current available). The production, storage, and distribution of natural gas requires a complex infrastructure; click here for a list of some of the companies that produce, store, manage, and market natural gas in Colorado.
What this chart shows: Fort Collins Natural Gas Consumption

Data Source: City of Fort Collins Advanced Planning Department; Xcel Energy - see Table 6 on page 20 of this report
What these data tell us:
From 1997 to 2006, consumption of natural gas in Fort Collins increased by 158%, while the number of natural gas customers increased by 46%. Between 2004 and 2005, Fort Collins experienced a 167% increase in natural gas consumption.All Transfort buses run on either bio-diesel or Compressed Natural Gas. The Compressed Natural Gas Fast Fuel Facility was constructed in 2005 with grant assistance, which resulted in increased use of Transfort services. Transfort's total natural gas consumption was 8,357 gallons in 2007. As a result of utilizing compressed natural gas, the City of Fort Collins saved 12,267 gallons of petroleum in 2007. Transfort traveled 774,545 miles and provided 1.64 million trips in 2007.
What this chart shows: Colorado Natural Gas Consumption by Sector

Data Source: Energy Information Administration - Colorado Natural Gas Consumption
What these data tell us:
From 2002 to 2006, residential consumption of natural gas in Colorado declined by 7.4% (about 9.6 billion cubic feet). However, the number of residential customers increased by 5.4% (3,278,717 customers) during this time, indicating that residential customers decreased their use of natural gas, which further implies the use of energy efficiency measures by them. See Colorado Energy and Southwest Energy Efficiency Project for more information on energy efficiency in Colorado.The use of natural gas for the production of electric power increased by approximately 19% (about 14.8 billion cubic feet), while use for vehicle fuel decreased by 70% (about 417 million cubic feet) from 2002 to 2006. Natural gas consumption by the commercial sector decreased 10.6% (about 7.1 billion cubic feet). Industrial consumption of natural gas declined by 15.3% (about 20 billion cubic feet), during this time. Barring electric power, all other sectors registered a decline in their natural gas consumption from 2002 to 2006.
What this chart shows: Colorado Natural Gas Prices by Sector

Data Source: Energy Information Administration - Colorado Natural Gas Prices
What these data tell us:
Natural gas prices for all sectors increased from 2002 to 2006. Changes in the price of natural gas are caused by fluctuations in supply and demand, which are in turn affected by a variety of different factors. Cold winter temperatures and increased use can reduce reserves of natural gas and drive up prices. High prices and warmer winters result in reduced usage, increased supply, and lower prices. Economic and energy policy factors also have an effect on supply and demand, so it is not possible to assume a direct correlation between weather patterns and natural gas prices. (See Additional Information for definitions by Sector Price.)Apart from these, one important factor which has contributed to an increase in natural gas prices in Colorado over the past few years is the introduction of new transmission lines, which enable natural gas to be transported out-of-state more easily. In 2003, the Kern River pipeline, which runs from southwestern Wyoming (which is connected to pipelines from Colorado gas fields) to California, where gas prices are higher than that in Colorado, more than doubled in capacity. As a result, local gas prices have become more competitive, and Colorado's price advantage compared to the rest of the nation has eroded. The prices are expected to increase further in future, with the early 2008 opening of part of the Rockies Express Pipeline, which is expected to have a final capacity to transport 1.8 billion cubic feet natural gas a day from western Colorado to the Midwest.
For additional information about factors that affect residential natural gas prices, see the EIA brochure, 'Residential Natural Gas Prices: Information for Consumers'.
Additional Information:
- Residential Price : The price of gas used in private dwellings, including apartments, for heating, cooking, water heating, and other household uses.
- Commercial Price : The price of gas used by non-manufacturing establishments or agencies primarily engaged in the sale of goods or services such as hotels, restaurants, wholesale and retail stores and other service enterprises; and gas used by local, State and Federal agencies engaged in non-manufacturing activities.
- Industrial Price : The price of natural gas used for heat, power, or chemical feedstock by manufacturing establishments or those engaged in mining or other mineral extraction as well as consumers in agriculture, forestry, fisheries and construction.
- Electric Power Price : The price of gas used by electricity generators (regulated utilities and non-regulated power producers) whose line of business is the generation of power.
On Compass-
- Electricity Consumption
- Population Size & Growth
- Recycling
- Water Consumption
- Wind Energy Consumption
Outside Compass-
Colorado Natural Gas Companies
- Colorado Interstate Gas Company
- Colorado Springs Utilities
- Devon Energy
- Greeley Gas (Atmos Energy)
- Kinder Morgan
- Questar Corporation
- Western Gas Resources
- Xcel Energy
Other Links
- Colorado Oil and Gas Association
- Energy Information Administration: International Natural Gas Information: International data on natural gas supply, consumption, prices, and exports.
- Energy Information Agency's Residential Energy Consumption Survey (2005): National report on residential energy consumption
- Natural Gas Supply Association: An organization that represents integrated and independent companies that produce and market domestic natural gas.
- NaturalGas.org: An educational website covering a variety of topics related to the natural gas industry.
- Transfort: All Transfort buses run on either bio-diesel or Compressed Natural Gas.
Industry Standards or Target: N/A
Data Tables:
Fort Collins Natural Gas Consumption by Sector, 1997-2006 (Million Cubic Feet)
|
Year |
Million Cubic Feet |
|
1997 |
2,786 |
|
1998 |
3,948 |
|
1999 |
4,028 |
|
2000 |
4,050 |
|
2001 |
4,454 |
|
2002 |
4,725 |
|
2003 |
4,295 |
|
2004 |
2,712 |
|
2005 |
7,228 |
|
2006 |
7,192 |
Colorado Natural Gas Consumption by Sector, 2002-2006 (Millions of Cubic Feet)
|
Year |
Residential |
Commercial |
Industrial |
Vehicle Fuel |
Electric Power |
|
2002 |
128,828 |
66,939 |
130,336 |
598 |
78,171 |
|
2003 |
124,214 |
62,616 |
112,339 |
731 |
77,895 |
|
2004 |
120,574 |
61,956 |
112,174 |
820 |
83,369 |
|
2005 |
124,255 |
62,099 |
126,360 |
166 |
92,629 |
|
2006 |
119,270 |
59,851 |
110,362 |
181 |
92,927 |
Colorado Natural Gas Prices by Sector, 2002-2006 (Average Price Per 1,000 Cubic Feet)
|
Year |
Residential |
Commercial |
Industrial |
Vehicle Fuel |
Electric Power |
|
2002 |
$5.62 |
$4.82 |
$4.79 |
$3.57 |
$2.53 |
|
2003 |
$6.61 |
$5.93 |
$4.46 |
$4.16 |
$4.42 |
|
2004 |
$8.47 |
$7.48 |
$6.54 |
$5.99 |
$5.65 |
|
2005 |
$10.29 |
$9.38 |
$8.68 |
$8.17 |
$7.41 |
|
2006 |
$10.45 |
$9.61 |
$11.53 |
$5.32 |
$6.22 |