How Natural Gas Gets To Your Home
Just like electricity, natural gas has to travel a long way to get to your home.
The gas that heats your home or cooks your food might have come from thousands of miles away – like the Arctic Circle in Canada!
Here’s how natural gas gets to your house:
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Natural gas companies drill thousands of feet into the earth and use big wells and pumps to bring it to the surface.
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Then they send the gas to your town through gas mains buried underground. Utility companies bring it to your house in smaller pipes.
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Those pipes connect to the meter outside your house, which measures how much natural gas your family uses.
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More pipes connect the meter to the gas appliances you use at home, like the furnace, water heater, clothes dryer or stove.
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Want to learn more?
If you’d like to learn more about natural gas, visit this Web page:
Natural Gas: A Fossil Fuel by the U.S. Energy Information Administration
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Links for teachers and parents:
What Is Natural Gas?
By the American Gas Association
From Wellhead to Burner Tip
By the American Gas Association
Natural Gas – A Fossil Fuel
By the U.S. Department of Energy
Natural Gas Timeline
By the U.S. Department of Energy
Current Natural Gas Statistics
By the U.S. Energy Information Administration
More resources for teachers and parents
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