History of the petroleum industry in Canada (natural gas) (original) (raw)

About DBpedia

Natural gas has been used almost as long as crude oil in Canada, but its commercial development was not as rapid. This is because of special properties of this energy commodity: it is a gas, and it frequently contains impurities. The technical challenges involved to first process and then pipe it to market are therefore considerable. Furthermore, the costs of pipeline building make the whole enterprise capital intensive, requiring both money and engineering expertise, and large enough markets to make the business profitable.

thumbnail

Property Value
dbo:abstract Natural gas has been used almost as long as crude oil in Canada, but its commercial development was not as rapid. This is because of special properties of this energy commodity: it is a gas, and it frequently contains impurities. The technical challenges involved to first process and then pipe it to market are therefore considerable. Furthermore, the costs of pipeline building make the whole enterprise capital intensive, requiring both money and engineering expertise, and large enough markets to make the business profitable. Until it became commercially viable, natural gas was often a nuisance. Dangerous to handle and hard to get to market, early oilmen despised it as a poor relation to its rich cousin crude oil. Although early processing procedures were able to remove water, in the 19th century discoveries were only developed if consumers could use the gas just as it came out of the ground. If the gas required further processing or needed to be piped a long distance to market, the producer shut in the well. Flares got rid of gas coming from oil wells. Natural gas processing changes the commodity in two critical ways. First, it extracts valuable by-products; second, it renders natural gas fit to be transported to a point for commercial sale and consumption. Through the use of evolving technology, the gas processing industry of each era extracts higher percentages of a wider range of hydrocarbons and other commercial by-products than its predecessors. It also removes ever-higher percentages of dangerous and other unwanted impurities. Steady growth has made natural gas a major industry, with 180 cubic kilometres of gas flowing from Canadian fields to market, every year. Part of a series on Canada's petroleum industry, this entry focuses on the second of these two functions of gas processing - removing impurities from the gas stream - rather than recovering natural gas liquids, described elsewhere. Of course, most large plants perform both functions, and plants have no other ultimate purpose than to quickly, safely and profitably turn raw gas into products to be safely shipped (mostly by pipeline) to market. The discussion covers gas processing as an engineering feat, critical developments in exploration and development and the fundamentals of the marketplace. (en)
dbo:thumbnail wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Canada_Gas_Production_1980-2012.png?width=300
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink https://archive.org/details/greatoilagepetro0000mcke%7Cdate=15
dbo:wikiPageID 12051433 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength 32074 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID 1048123210 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbr:Calgary dbr:Canada dbr:Canadian_Association_of_Petroleum_Producers dbr:Canadian_Pacific_Railway dbr:Carbon_dioxide dbr:Caroline,_Alberta dbr:Propane dbr:Quebec dbr:Bow_Island,_Alberta dbr:Energy_Resources_Conservation_Board dbr:Exshaw,_Alberta dbr:Money dbr:Refrigeration dbr:Barnett_Shale dbr:Dehydration dbr:Demand_(economics) dbr:History_of_the_petroleum_industry_in_Canada dbr:Horn_River_Formation dbr:Horseshoe_Canyon_Formation dbr:Husky_Energy dbr:Hydraulic_fracturing dbr:Hydrocarbons dbr:Hydroelectric dbr:Hydrogen_sulfide dbr:Peace_River_Country dbr:Petroleum dbr:Capital_intensive dbr:Deregulation dbr:Industry_(economics) dbr:Oil_refinery dbr:Pipeline_transport dbr:List_of_natural_gas_fields dbr:Vertical_integration dbr:Crude_oil dbc:Natural_gas_in_Canada dbr:Gas dbr:Gas_flare dbr:Natural_resource dbr:Energy dbr:Energy_policy_of_Canada dbr:Engineering dbr:Ministry_of_Energy_(Alberta) dbr:Montney_Formation dbr:Murphy_Oil dbr:Muskwa_Formation dbc:History_of_the_petroleum_industry_in_Canada dbr:Consumer dbr:Mackenzie_River dbr:Shipping dbr:Commodity dbr:Common_carrier dbr:Fuel dbr:Permafrost dbr:Supply_(economics) dbr:Banff,_Alberta dbr:British_Columbia dbr:Business dbr:Butane dbr:Central_Canada dbr:Tonne dbr:Washington,_D.C. dbr:Winnipeg dbr:Land_use dbr:Liquefied_natural_gas dbr:Liquefied_petroleum_gas dbr:Mineral_rights dbr:APA_Corporation dbr:ATCO dbr:Alberta dbr:Amoco dbr:Crystals dbr:Edmonton dbr:Ethane dbr:Ethylene dbr:Eugene_Coste dbr:Fort_St._John,_British_Columbia dbr:Barrel_(unit) dbr:Nova_Scotia dbr:Nuclear_power dbr:Ottawa dbr:Central_Alberta dbr:History_of_the_petroleum_industry_in_Canada_(natural_gas_liquids) dbr:Market_fundamentalism dbr:Natural_gas dbr:Ocean_floor dbr:Price dbr:Profit_(economics) dbr:Regulation dbr:Cost dbr:Texas dbr:The_Crown dbr:Acid_gas dbr:Sulfur dbr:Sulfur_dioxide dbr:Coal dbr:Coalbed_methane dbr:Cogeneration dbr:Oil_well dbr:Market_(economics) dbr:Ice dbr:Imperial_Oil dbr:Natural_gas_liquids dbr:Natural_gas_processing dbr:New_Brunswick dbr:Railway dbr:Monoethanolamine dbr:Risk dbr:Sable_Offshore_Energy_Project dbr:Safety dbr:Shale dbr:Western_Canadian_Sedimentary_Basin dbr:Union_Gas dbr:NIMBY dbr:Natural_gas_field dbr:Natural_gas_in_Canada dbr:Sour_gas dbr:Unconventional_gas dbr:Petrochemical_industry dbr:Shale_gas_in_Canada dbr:Medicine_Hat,_Alberta dbr:Lethbridge,_Alberta dbr:Oil_reservoir dbr:Turner_Valley,_Alberta dbr:Shell_Oil dbr:Land_rights dbr:Gas_hydrates dbr:Natural_gas_condensate dbr:Pipeline_transportation dbr:Permeability_(fluid) dbr:Westcoast_Transmission_Co._Ltd. dbr:Excess_capacity dbr:Expertise dbr:Horizontal_drilling dbr:A.W._Dingman dbr:File:Canada_Gas_Production_1980-2012.png dbr:File:Canada_Gas_Proved_Reserves_1980-2012.png dbr:File:NatGasProcessing.png dbr:File:Oil-rig-BC-north.JPG
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:Canadianpetroleumhistory dbt:Cite_book dbt:Convert dbt:Portal dbt:Refbegin dbt:Refend dbt:Reflist dbt:Petroleum_industry dbt:Western_Canadian_Sedimentary_Basin
dct:subject dbc:Natural_gas_in_Canada dbc:History_of_the_petroleum_industry_in_Canada
rdfs:comment Natural gas has been used almost as long as crude oil in Canada, but its commercial development was not as rapid. This is because of special properties of this energy commodity: it is a gas, and it frequently contains impurities. The technical challenges involved to first process and then pipe it to market are therefore considerable. Furthermore, the costs of pipeline building make the whole enterprise capital intensive, requiring both money and engineering expertise, and large enough markets to make the business profitable. (en)
rdfs:label History of the petroleum industry in Canada (natural gas) (en)
owl:sameAs freebase:History of the petroleum industry in Canada (natural gas) wikidata:History of the petroleum industry in Canada (natural gas) https://global.dbpedia.org/id/THgE
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:History_of_the_petroleum_industry_in_Canada_(natural_gas)?oldid=1048123210&ns=0
foaf:depiction wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/NatGasProcessing.png wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Oil-rig-BC-north.jpg wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Canada_Gas_Production_1980-2012.png wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Canada_Gas_Proved_Reserves_1980-2012.png
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf wikipedia-en:History_of_the_petroleum_industry_in_Canada_(natural_gas)
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of dbr:Caroline,_Alberta dbr:List_of_environmental_history_topics dbr:History_of_the_petroleum_industry_in_Canada dbr:Pembina_Institute dbr:Natural_gas dbr:Natural_gas_in_Canada dbr:Unconventional_(oil_&_gas)_reservoir
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:History_of_the_petroleum_industry_in_Canada_(natural_gas)