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ITCM designs and develops special-purpose machinery and production processes with core strengths in web processing, powder dosing, novel packaging and high-speed assembly automation.



 

Power Engineer - Renewable Energy


Ice gas find could be US’s largest fossil energy resource

Drilling tests in Alaska’s North Slope have revealed ‘staggering’ deposits of gas hydrate that could contain 200000 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. This is over a hundred times greater than most reserves, says the US Office of Fossil Energy’s National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL).

Gas hydrate is an ice-like solid that results from the trapping of methane molecules, the main component of natural gas, within a lattice-like cage of water molecules. Dubbed the ‘ice that burn’s, this substance releases gaseous methane when it melts.

The find, within the Milne Point unit of the Prudhoe Bay region of Alaska’s North Slope, is a joint project of a consortium co-funded by NETL and conducted through the National Methane Hydrate R&D Program, which is a

DOE-led collaboration.

Methane hydrate is the most abundant natural form of clathrate, a class of chemical substance in which molecules of one material, water in this case, form an open solid lattice that encloses, without chemical bonding,

appropriately-sized molecules of another material, methane in this case.

The US Geological Survey estimates that methane hydrate may contain more organic carbon than all the world’s coal, oil, and non-hydrate natural gas combined.

For more information, visit www.netl.doe.gov

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