Hi. I had a problem with this one too.
The logical flow is: Any "new" natural gas-powered electrical generation
needs:
-- to be located close to a natural-gas pipeline
--a large body of water for cooling
-- transmission lines and needs to
-- be situated in a region where residents "will not" oppose construction...
It goes on to explain that the country is missing two of the elements needed. Although it has transmission lines, the lines are by bodies of water where residents in the vicinity "would" oppose any significant construction.
You said that answer choice (A) was a Time-Shift error. Don't the words "new", "will not" and "would oppose" indicate future circumstances?
Also, the necessary conditions that it must be near a large body of water, with non-complaining residents, aren't being met. How then can the existing natural-gas pipelines be expanded? Wouldn't we have to assume that expanding the pipelines would not be a significant construction project and that the residents won't complain about that assumed, insignificant construction project? If so, wouldn't that negate the premises of the stimulus which are to be taken as true?
It seems to me that as the necessary conditions are failing, a new (future) natural-gas powered electrical generation station won't be happening. Therefore, electrical needs will have to be met by some other alternative means, answer (A).
Jamena Pirone wrote:Hi wrjackson,
Answer Choice A exhibits a common logical flow: Time Shift Error. It is a flaw to presume that because something has occurred or exists in the past or present, that it will continue to occur or exist in the future. The classic example is "The sun has risen every day for the past 6 billion years, so it will rise tomorrow." Though the sun rising tomorrow is possible, and even probable, one cannot logically claim that it WILL rise.
In the context of this question, the answer choice states that because present electrical needs can't be met by natural gas, then future electrical needs WILL have to be met by other means. That is not necessarily so. Perhaps the country will build a new pipeline near one of the other bodies of water where the residents won't oppose construction. If that were to happen, assuming the other conditions are met, then future electrical needs could indeed be met by natural gas power.
Be on the lookout for this logical flaw. It is an LSAT favorite!