The American Gas Association was formed in June 1918 after the merger of the American Gas Institute and the National Commercial Gas Association, organizations serving the interests of companies that dealt in manufactured, as opposed to natural, gas.
Manufactured gas was the dominant fuel in the early United States; during the 19th century natural gas supplanted it. In January 1919, the AGA launched a publication for the natural gas industry providing information on trends, activities, and strategies on how to improve gas companies. In 1925, the association formed laboratories in
Cleveland, and five years later expanded to Los Angeles. These labs developed technology to improve gas appliances and equipment, making them more energy-efficient and consumer-friendly. The labs also did testing to ensure gas equipment conformed to national standards for safety, durability, and performance. The AGA ended its laboratory activities in 1997 and the new
CSA International took its place. CSA today still runs a U.S. certification-type program from the AGA's original Cleveland laboratory. In 1927, the AGA merged with the National Gas Association to help the AGA's member companies which depended on manufactured gas to make a smooth transition to natural gas. In 1935, Congress passed the
Public Utility Act and broke up the
holding company that dominated much of the country's utility industry; this law continued to be enforced until 2005. During the 1930s, the AGA formed the National Advertising Committee to oversee a nationwide advertising program promoting gas for cooking, water heating, refrigeration, and house heating. Notably, one the employees
Deke Houlgate coined the phrase "Now you're cooking with gas!", and made a deal with
Bob Hope and other radio stars to subtly insert it in as an early form of
product placement; the campaign that began 1940 was so successful the phrase eclipsed its original intent as advertising and entered the popular lexicon as an idiom with the figurative meaning of functioning particularly effectively or achieving something substantial. Karen Alderman Harbert became the association's president and CEO on April 1, 2019. She is a former federal government official and leader of energy industry organizations. She replaces
Dave McCurdy who retired from the association on February 28, 2019. ==Lobbying work==