A New Push To Use Existing Clean Energy Sources

August 10, 2009

A New Push To Use Existing Clean Energy Sources

Industry advocates argue low-carbon propane can be central in making immediate environmental gains

Washington, DC (PRWEB) -- A nationwide education effort to promote the ways propane can help cut greenhouse gas emissions, improve air quality, lower energy costs, and reduce America's dependence on foreign oil was announced today by the propane industry.

Propane is a low-carbon alternative fuel that emits significantly lower amounts of greenhouse gases and smog-producing hydrocarbons than conventional fuels emit. While its portability has made it a staple for home and water heating in rural areas, its environment-friendly profile also makes it extremely appealing to people looking for clean energy options for transportation, commercial, and agricultural uses, said Willis. And propane also boasts the most robust nationwide infrastructure of any alternative fuel, meaning it is ready for expansion beyond rural households immediately.

Advocates see propane as a natural complement to the renewable and alternative energies -- like wind, solar, natural gas, and ethanol -- that are frequently cited in any energy discussion. Only through a combination of these energies, including propane, they maintain, will the United States be able to reduce greenhouse gases, improve air quality, lower energy costs, and expand its energy self-reliance.

Recently, T. Boone Pickens highlighted propane as an important part of the Pickens Plan, citing propane's environment-friendly profile and ample production in the United States.

"America has the opportunity today to reduce its dependence on foreign oil while protecting the environment by making the most of domestic energy sources," said Pickens. "Propane is clean, it's American-made, and it can be put to work right now."

About 95 percent of propane, a byproduct of natural gas processing and crude oil refining, is produced in North America, much of it from natural gas found in the United States. As more U.S. natural gas reserves are explored, more propane can be produced domestically.

Despite the environmental and energy self-reliance advantages of propane, it is often overlooked as a viable national energy option. The propane industry's desire to change that omission is central to the campaign, rolling out nationwide with television, radio, newsmagazine, and online advertising beginning to appear this week and continuing through 2009. And the propane industry will continue its partnership with T. Boone Pickens to help tell the stories of the many examples of propane technology already in use today to educate through public relations, social media, conferences, and other online opportunities.

For more information about propane and how to make every energy choice count toward a better future, visit propane.com.

The Propane Education & Research Council was authorized by the U.S. Congress with the passage of Public Law 104-284, the Propane Education and Research Act (PERA), signed into law on October 11, 1996. The mission of the Propane Education & Research Council is to promote the safe, efficient use of odorized propane gas as a preferred energy source.

SOURCE: PRWeb

View original release here: http://www.prweb.com/releases/perc/alternative_energy/prweb2728664.htm