Ethane
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Ethane burns very hot and must be removed from natural gas before it can be used to heat homes and for industry. It is removed with a cracker and produces ethylene oxide, a basic feedstock for plastic manufacturing. | Ethane burns very hot and must be removed from natural gas before it can be used to heat homes and for industry. It is removed with a cracker and produces ethylene oxide, a basic feedstock for plastic manufacturing. | ||
- | There are no crackers in the Appalachian Basin, but with full development of the Marcellus shale it is anticipated that one or more crackers will eventually set up in the area. | + | There are presently no crackers in the Appalachian Basin, but with full development of the Marcellus shale it is anticipated that one or more will eventually set up in the area. |
+ | |||
+ | Most U.S. petrochemical plants are located on the Gulf Coast and it is where ethane must be shipped for sale. As of October, 2010 there still was a lack of infrastructure to move product to market. Two projects underway to address that need include: | ||
+ | * [[Kinder Morgan Energy Partners|Kinder Morgan's Marcellus Lateral]] | ||
+ | * [[MarkWest Liberty Midstream & Resources:The Mariner Project]] |
Revision as of 23:29, 30 October 2010
Ethane is a natural gas liquid (NGL) richly found in the Marcellus shale's wet gas region. Ethane burns very hot and must be removed from natural gas before it can be used to heat homes and for industry. It is removed with a cracker and produces ethylene oxide, a basic feedstock for plastic manufacturing.
There are presently no crackers in the Appalachian Basin, but with full development of the Marcellus shale it is anticipated that one or more will eventually set up in the area.
Most U.S. petrochemical plants are located on the Gulf Coast and it is where ethane must be shipped for sale. As of October, 2010 there still was a lack of infrastructure to move product to market. Two projects underway to address that need include: