Then there is the cost of gasoline, which is higher still. Gasoline where I live is about $3.3/gal, which is $3.3/gal * 1 gal/114,000 BTU * 10^6 BTU/MMBtu = $29/MMBtu.
So, LNG is only 17% the cost of gasoline (on an energy equivalency basis), and natural gas (non liquefied) is 12% the cost of gasoline.
Since you can run lots of things on natural gas (cars, trucks, buses, fork lifts, power plants, generators, etc.), because it is a small fraction of the cost of gasoline, it will probably increasingly be used as a fuel for those things. The problem as pointed out earlier is currently distribution. But that will get solved incrementally, first by particular companies converting their own trucks to LNG or using compressed natural gas (CNG) for their forklifts, say.