Options for Gas-to-Liquids Technology in Alaska

The purposes of this work was to assess the effect of applying new technology to the economics of a proposed natural gas-to-liquids (GTL) plant, to evaluate the potential of a slower-paced, staged deployment of GTL technology, and to evaluate the effect of GTL placement of economics. Five scenarios...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Robertson, Eric Partridge
Other Authors: United States. Department of Energy.
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Idaho National Laboratory 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2172/911486
http://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc890618/
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author Robertson, Eric Partridge
author2 United States. Department of Energy.
author_facet Robertson, Eric Partridge
author_sort Robertson, Eric Partridge
collection University of North Texas: UNT Digital Library
description The purposes of this work was to assess the effect of applying new technology to the economics of a proposed natural gas-to-liquids (GTL) plant, to evaluate the potential of a slower-paced, staged deployment of GTL technology, and to evaluate the effect of GTL placement of economics. Five scenarios were economically evaluated and compared: a no-major-gas-sales scenario, a gas-pipeline/LNG scenario, a fast-paced GTL development scenario, a slow-paced GTL development scenario, and a scenario which places the GTL plant in lower Alaska, instead of on the North Slope. Evaluations were completed using an after-tax discounted cash flow analysis. Results indicate that the slow-paced GTL scenario is the only one with a rate of return greater than 10 percent. The slow-paced GTL development would allow cost saving on subsequent expansions. These assumed savings, along with the lowering of the transportation tariff, combine to distinquish this option for marketing the North Slope gas from the other scenarios. Critical variables that need further consideration include the GTL plant cost, the GTL product premium, and operating and maintenance costs.
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Alaska
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Alaska
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spelling ftunivnotexas:info:ark/67531/metadc890618 2025-01-16T23:49:16+00:00 Options for Gas-to-Liquids Technology in Alaska Robertson, Eric Partridge United States. Department of Energy. 1999-10-01 Text https://doi.org/10.2172/911486 http://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc890618/ English eng Idaho National Laboratory rep-no: INEEL/EXT-99-01023 grantno: DE-AC07-99ID-13727 doi:10.2172/911486 osti: 911486 http://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc890618/ ark: ark:/67531/metadc890618 Natural Gas Gas-To-Liquids (Gtl) Economics Syn-Crude North Slope Liquefied Natural Gas Gtl Product Premium Economic Profitability Gtl Plant Cost 03 - Natural Gas Economic Profitability Report 1999 ftunivnotexas https://doi.org/10.2172/911486 2016-10-22T22:11:20Z The purposes of this work was to assess the effect of applying new technology to the economics of a proposed natural gas-to-liquids (GTL) plant, to evaluate the potential of a slower-paced, staged deployment of GTL technology, and to evaluate the effect of GTL placement of economics. Five scenarios were economically evaluated and compared: a no-major-gas-sales scenario, a gas-pipeline/LNG scenario, a fast-paced GTL development scenario, a slow-paced GTL development scenario, and a scenario which places the GTL plant in lower Alaska, instead of on the North Slope. Evaluations were completed using an after-tax discounted cash flow analysis. Results indicate that the slow-paced GTL scenario is the only one with a rate of return greater than 10 percent. The slow-paced GTL development would allow cost saving on subsequent expansions. These assumed savings, along with the lowering of the transportation tariff, combine to distinquish this option for marketing the North Slope gas from the other scenarios. Critical variables that need further consideration include the GTL plant cost, the GTL product premium, and operating and maintenance costs. Report north slope Alaska University of North Texas: UNT Digital Library
spellingShingle Natural Gas
Gas-To-Liquids (Gtl)
Economics
Syn-Crude
North Slope
Liquefied Natural Gas
Gtl Product Premium
Economic Profitability
Gtl Plant Cost
03 - Natural Gas Economic Profitability
Robertson, Eric Partridge
Options for Gas-to-Liquids Technology in Alaska
title Options for Gas-to-Liquids Technology in Alaska
title_full Options for Gas-to-Liquids Technology in Alaska
title_fullStr Options for Gas-to-Liquids Technology in Alaska
title_full_unstemmed Options for Gas-to-Liquids Technology in Alaska
title_short Options for Gas-to-Liquids Technology in Alaska
title_sort options for gas-to-liquids technology in alaska
topic Natural Gas
Gas-To-Liquids (Gtl)
Economics
Syn-Crude
North Slope
Liquefied Natural Gas
Gtl Product Premium
Economic Profitability
Gtl Plant Cost
03 - Natural Gas Economic Profitability
topic_facet Natural Gas
Gas-To-Liquids (Gtl)
Economics
Syn-Crude
North Slope
Liquefied Natural Gas
Gtl Product Premium
Economic Profitability
Gtl Plant Cost
03 - Natural Gas Economic Profitability
url https://doi.org/10.2172/911486
http://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc890618/