How to Use natural gas in a Sentence

natural gas

noun
  • The price of natural gas plays a role, too.
    IEEE Spectrum, 30 Oct. 2025
  • There’s been no rise in the price of natural gas.
    NBC news, 10 May 2026
  • Coal will fall the most, oil will fall, and natural gas may or may not fall.
    Ian Palmer, Forbes, 29 Feb. 2024
  • But that speed bump doesn’t hurt the long-term case for natural gas power names.
    Darla Mercado, Cfp®, CNBC, 30 Jan. 2025
  • Turbines for natural gas plants are scarce.
    Ivan Penn, New York Times, 28 Sep. 2025
  • Those gases come from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas.
    Seth Borenstein, Fortune, 9 Jan. 2024
  • Oil and natural gas prices plunged and stock markets rallied on the news.
    Bloomberg, Oc Register, 17 Apr. 2026
  • Those gases come from the burning of coal, oil, and natural gas.
    Seth Borenstein, The Christian Science Monitor, 9 Jan. 2024
  • Despite that, natural gas prices barely budged in the storm.
    Brian Sullivan, CNBC, 25 Jan. 2026
  • Turn off the gas at the outside main valve, then call your natural gas provider from a neighbor's home.
    Pat Harvey, CBS News, 9 Jan. 2026
  • The biggest miss of all was in energy, such as crude oil and natural gas.
    Josh Zumbrun, WSJ, 31 Dec. 2021
  • The slack has been taken up by natural gas and solar and wind power.
    Business Columnist, Los Angeles Times, 5 Mar. 2026
  • Solar stayed flat at a fraction of the amount of coal and natural gas power.
    Matthew Daly, Arkansas Online, 8 Feb. 2026
  • Idaho produces no coal, not much oil and less natural gas than all but seven states.
    Sammy Roth, Los Angeles Times, 28 Sep. 2023
  • Most of us don’t know the price of natural gas or electricity.
    Nedra Rhone, ajc, 14 Dec. 2022
  • Roughly a fifth of the world’s oil and natural gas is shipped through the waterway.
    Damian J. Troise, Los Angeles Times, 29 May 2026
  • He's heard too many stories about out-of-control fires at natural gas power plants.
    The Arizona Republic, 7 Apr. 2024
  • The gas fields in Iran and Qatar are the world's largest natural gas reserves.
    Frank Morris, NPR, 26 Mar. 2026
  • That waterway carries about one-fifth of the world’s oil and natural gas.
    Zac Anderson, USA Today, 14 June 2026
  • Qatar is one of the world's biggest producers of natural gas.
    WSJ, 17 Jan. 2023
  • Oil and natural gas are its economy.
    Brian Sullivan, CNBC, 3 June 2026
  • The natural gas market, meanwhile, could soon face a supply glut.
    Scott Montgomery, Forbes.com, 30 Jan. 2026
  • India also imports more than half of its natural gas.
    Jordan Blum, Fortune, 31 Mar. 2026
  • What about natural gas customers?
    Don Sweeney, Sacbee.com, 30 Dec. 2025
  • Might an effect of the war be speeding up the transition away from natural gas?
    David Marchesephoto Illustration By Bráulio Amado, New York Times, 22 Apr. 2022
  • Iran has imposed tolls on shipping in the strait where 20% of the world’s oil and natural gas move.
    Bart Jansen, USA Today, 30 Apr. 2026
  • With the transition from coal, natural gas is now poised to play the central role as a bridge fuel.
    Gordon Feller, Ars Technica, 6 Feb. 2025
  • Take the recent winter storm blitz, when global natural gas prices rose due to a surge in demand.
    Mary Cunningham, CBS News, 4 Feb. 2026
  • Heating your home and cooking food with natural gas are also likely to cost more as the war grinds on.
    Cathy Bussewitz, Chicago Tribune, 14 Mar. 2026
  • The amount of natural gas burned to create electricity climbed by more than half.
    John Moritz, Hartford Courant, 11 June 2026

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'natural gas.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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