Joke Collection Website - Bulletin headlines - Why is it difficult for natural gas to "go to the countryside"?

Why is it difficult for natural gas to "go to the countryside"?

I am from the countryside. When we laid the natural gas pipeline network in our city, we basically ignored the coverage in rural areas. I think this is normal. After all, enterprises should make profits rather than do charity. They can't do thankless things.

One is laying pipelines, which is a very huge project. The distance from laying pipelines in the gas field to the countryside is not short, and the pipelines along the way must be protected from being damaged. However, cities are different, with dense population, more convenient planning and more users, and the cost of laying pipelines is earned back at once.

If natural gas companies lay natural gas pipelines in rural areas, the cost will be high, and the villagers' living areas are not densely populated. The most important thing is that fewer people are used, and the cost of laying pipelines cannot be recovered. Every month, the pipeline is still idle, wasting a lot of time, money and manpower. Any leader who dares to do this must have a strong background or have not done any inspection.

As rural people, our family is still burning firewood. Although we also use liquefied natural gas and induction cookers, most of the time, we still use firewood more.

The same is true of other villagers, especially in rural areas with mountains and forests.

For them, there are free natural forest farms in the mountains, and there is as much firewood as they want, and it is free, convenient, fast and free!

Now you're talking about laying natural gas pipelines. If the money is still "the wool is on the sheep" and the villagers pay for it, who do you think is willing? And the cost of using natural gas is not low. If there is such an extra expenditure out of thin air every month, the villagers will also have contradictions in their hearts …

In fact, biogas digesters are more common in rural areas. Those villagers who have livestock have them at home. There should also be rural areas in other places.

The biogas digester can ferment pig manure through the biogas digester to make biogas fuel for villagers' families. This way can make rational use of excreta, provide gas, and regularly clean up the accumulated fertilizer for farmland use.

Tell me, why don't the villagers spend a sum of money to build their own biogas digesters, but accept natural gas to the countryside?

We all say that the right time, the right place and the right people are the keys to doing a good job. In this case, it is basically negative and difficult to land, which is obvious.

Of course, if natural gas is forcibly promoted, it may be promoted from environmental protection, energy conservation and emission reduction, safety and other aspects. However, natural gas going to the countryside should have served the villagers in rural areas and improved their quality of life, instead of causing them an economic burden. I think this is the first time that natural gas has gone to the countryside.