Summary
Natural gas is becoming a more popular energy source worldwide and its use
is expected to increase dramatically over the next 2 decades. Natural gas has
been gaining wider significance as a result of sustained high oil prices, a
need for energy diversification and security, the growing global awareness of
environmental issues, and the development of new gas-related technologies.
Traditionally natural gas has been delivered to markets using two main
commercially proven methods--pipelines and liquefied natural gas (LNG). Each of
these alternatives is highly capital intensive and requires considerable
working terms regarding the quantities and distances to market. In other words,
these two methods are economical only over a specified range of quantities and
distances and not over the whole range, which opens the door to a number of
alternative technologies that have the potential to make the development for
smaller quantities to be transported to specific distances.
The most advanced among these alternative technologies include onshore
gas-to-liquid (GTL), floating LNG and GTL, natural-gas hydrates (NGH), adsorbed
natural gas (ANG), and compressed natural gas (CNG). However, none of these has
been developed yet and been proved on a commercial scale, although they have
proved themselves viable on the basis of technical parameters.
This paper will be concerned mainly with (1) marine CNG alternatives, which
are currently in their final stages of commercialization, indicating the
various available marine CNG technologies used worldwide; (2) the operating
differences between LNG and CNG transportation; (3) technical and economic
evaluation of both the obstacles facing the commercialization of marine CNG
transportation and its advantages.
© 2010. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
9 March 2010
- Meeting paper published:
23 March 2010
- Revised manuscript received:
6 June 2010
- Manuscript approved:
17 June 2010
- Published online:
18 November 2010