‘Chasing the Dream of Half-Price Gasoline from Natural Gas’

January 15th, 2014

Frack that.

Via: MIT Technology Review:

At a pilot plant in Menlo Park, California, a technician pours white pellets into a steel tube and then taps it with a wrench to make sure they settle together. He closes the tube, and oxygen and methane—the main ingredient of natural gas—flow in. Seconds later, water and ethylene, the world’s largest commodity chemical, flow out. Another simple step converts the ethylene into gasoline.

The white pellets are a catalyst developed by the Silicon Valley startup Siluria, which has raised $63.5 million in venture capital. If the catalysts work as well in a large, commercial scale plant as they do in tests, Siluria says, the company could produce gasoline from natural gas at about half the cost of making it from crude oil—at least at today’s cheap natural-gas prices.

If Siluria really can make cheap gasoline from natural gas it will have achieved something that has eluded the world’s top chemists and oil and gas companies for decades. Indeed, finding an inexpensive and direct way to upgrade natural gas into more valuable and useful chemicals and fuels could finally mean a cheap replacement for petroleum.

One Response to “‘Chasing the Dream of Half-Price Gasoline from Natural Gas’”

  1. j.biddy says:

    It will then be promptly shipped to Asian markets where it will fetch a higher price than in the US… which in turn will keep our gas prices going up and up. Yay, technology…

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