associated gas
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The tools to reduce flaring are well within reach, but the results will depend on a long-term commitment by operators and governments.
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The planned facility was designed to process 34 MMcf/D of associated gas into fully refined gasoline.
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Monitoring on the ground is helping the industry shift from best estimates to hard data so it can bring the true emissions profile into focus.
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Iraq’s Gas Growth Integrated Project aims to increase electricity generation by capturing flare gas collected from three southern oil fields. A desalination project will use treated seawater to maintain well pressures.
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The modular facility will process associated gas to produce electricity for up to 200,000 households in the Basra region.
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This paper presents practical solutions to monetize small-volume associated gas and their resulting technoeconomic implications at five offshore locations.
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Barriers remain, but oil companies across the world are now in a position to reap big profits by capturing methane instead of flaring and venting it.
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Oil production is reaching new levels in the Permian Basin and it has created some uncertainty about where all the associated gas will go.
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For an industry once fueled by the law of supply and demand, the new economic reality has brought new rules.
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While much progress has been made to reduce flaring, associated gas continues to be flared at thousands of oil production sites around the world. A further reduction may be achieved through a market-oriented approach to commercialization
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