Natural Gas Conversion Guide

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Natural Gas

Conversion Guide

Contents
MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT OF IGU

4-5

SECTION 1
1.1) Standard Conversion Tables
SECTION 2
2.1)
2.2)

2.3)

2.4)

Terminology and Assumptions


Natural Gas (NG)
Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG)
Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG)

SECTION 3
3.1) Inter-Fuel Conversion Tables
SECTION 4
4.1) References/Links
SECTION 5
5.1) Terms
5.2) Abbreviations
5.3) Measurements
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

8 - 13

16 - 18
19 - 21
22 - 23
24 - 25

28 - 33

36

38 - 45
46
47
48

Copyright 2012 International Gas Union (IGU). The entire content of this publication is protected by
copyrights, full details of which are available from the publisher. All rights reserved. No part of this publication
may be reproduced, stored in retrieval systems or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic,
mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior permission of the copyright owner.
3

Message from the President of IGU

Dear colleagues,
Thanks to technology, the energy industry today is moving towards
an almost seamless environment. The consumer is now no longer
locked to a single type of fuel. The ability to switch between using
oil, natural gas and coal, has enabled one to take full advantage of
the most ef cient and lowest priced source of energy. owever,
to do so, one has to calculate and compare which fuel, at the
given point in time, would provide the best value for money.
As a spokesperson for the IGU, I nd a conversion guide almost
a necessity. You can never know what type of questions would be
asked. Even within the gas industry, we use different measurement
systems for different regions of the world. ence, the best way is
to equip oneself with a tool which would enable one to carry out
a quick comparison of natural gas using a common denominator
or making inter-fuel comparisons.
This Natural Gas Conversion Guide is IGUs contribution to assist
analysts from different types of background to quickly convert
and nd the equivalent value between the three fossil fuels, under
a given set of parameters. This guide comprises four sections,
namely: standard conversion tables; characteristics and conversion
tables for natural gas, lique ed natural gas NG , and lique ed
petroleum gas
G ; inter-fuel conversion; and a set of glossary
of terms and abbreviations. The guide also comes in two sizes,
a normal A5-sized handbook, and a pocket-sized booklet.

or those who do not have a copy of the guide, you can log
onto the IGU website www.igu.org , and proceed to the section
on natural gas conversion. or those who wish to undertake a
more detailed conversion under a more comple environment, we
have also included in the guide a list of links to a few websites.
The publication of this conversion guide has been made possible
from the contributions of a few organisations which had provided
their e perts to participate in this initiative. I therefore wish to
e press our heartfelt gratitude to ET NA , hell, and Tokyo
Gas, for their invaluable contributions. I also wish to thank those
organisations whose previous publications have been used
as reference by the team during the course of developing the
conversion guide, in particular hell, The etroleum Economist,
and Alphatania.
To conclude, I wish to emphasise that this guide is meant only
as a tool and a quick guide to assist you to nd the equivalent
values for natural gas, NG,
G, oil and coal. I trust that you
would nd the guide to be handy and useful.
Thank you.

Datuk (Dr) Abdul Rahim Hashim


resident, IGU
alaysian IGU residency Triennium

Natural Gas
Conversion Guide
SECTION 1

Standard Conversion Tables


Conversion factors are rounded up to at most four
decimal places for approximation purpose.

(1) Length
multiply by

centimetre
(cm)
cm

metre
(m)

kilometre
(km)

inch
(in)

foot
(ft)

yard
(yd)

mile

0.01

1.0 x 10-5

0.3937

0.0328

0.0109

6.214 x 10-6

0.001

39.37

3.281

1.094

6.214 x 10-4

100

km

100,000

1,000

in

2.54

0.0254

2.540 x 10-5

ft

30.48

0.3048

3.048 x 10-4

12

-4

36

1.609

63,360

5,280

yd

91.44

0.9144

mile

160,934

1,609

39,370

9.144 x 10

3,281

1,094

0.6214

0.0833

0.0278

1.578 x 10-5

0.3333

1.894 x 10-4
5.682 x 10-4

1,760

Example: To convert 100 centimetres (cm) to inches (inch): 100 centimetres = 100 x 0.3937 = 39.37 inches

(2) Area
multiply by

square metre
(m2)
m2
in

ft2
yd

square inch
(in2)

square foot
(ft2)

square yard
(yd2)

acre

hectare

1,550

10.76

1.196

2.471 x 10-4

1.0 x 10-4

0.0069

-4

-7

6.452 x 10-8

2.296 x 10-5

9.290 x 10-6

-4

8.361 x 10-5

-4

6.452 x 10

0.0929
0.8361

144
1,296

7.716 x 10

0.1111
9

1.594 x 10

2.066 x 10

acre

4,047

6,272,640

43,560

4,840

hectare

10,000

15,500,031

107,639

11,960

0.4047
2.471

(3) Volume
multiply by

cubic
metre (m3)
m3

cubic inch
(in3)

cubic foot
(ft3)

cubic yard
(yd3)

35.31

Imperial
gallon
liquid
(Imp. gal.)

Oil barrel
(US bbl)

264.2

6.290

1.308

1,000

220.0

0.0164

0.0036

0.0370

28.32

6.229

764.6

168.2

202.0

4.809

0.22

0.2642

0.0063

1.201

0.0286

ft3

0.0283

1,728

0.7646

46,656

27

0.001

61.02

0.0353

0.0013

Imp. gal.

0.0045

277.4

0.1605

0.0059

4.546

US gal.

0.0038

231

0.1337

0.005

3.785

0.8327

US bbl

0.159

9,702

5.615

0.2079

159

34.97

yd

US gallon
liquid
(US gal.)

5.787 x 10-4 2.143 x 10-5

61,024

in3 1.639 x 10-5

litre
()

0.0043 1.031 x10-4


7.481

0.1781

0.0238
42

(4) Velocity
multiply by

metre/second metre/minute
(m/s)
(m/min)
m/s

60

kilometre/
hour (km/h)

foot/second
(ft/s)

foot/minute
(ft/min)

mile/hour
(mi/h)

yard/hour
(yd/h)

3.6

3.281

0.06

0.0547

196.9

2.237

3,937

3.281

0.0373

65.62

0.9113

54.68

0.6214

1,094

60

0.6818

1,200

m/min

0.0167

km/h

0.2778

16.67

ft/s

0.3048

18.29

1.097

ft/min

0.0051

0.3048

0.0183

0.0167

mi/h

0.4470

26.82

1.609

1.467

88

yd/h

2.540 x 10-4

0.0152

9.144 x 10-4

8.333 x 10-4

0.05

0.0114

20
1,760

5.682 x 10-4

(5) Mass
multiply by
ton

kilogram
(kg)

ton

kg
gr

6.480 x 10-5

oz

0.0283

grain
(gr)

ounce
(oz)

pound
(lb)

metric
(tonne)

long

15,432

35.27

2.205

0.001

9.842 x 10-4

0.0011

0.0023

1.429 x 10-4

6.480 x 10-8

6.378 x 10-8

7.143 x 10-8

0.0625

2.835 x 10-5

2.790 x 10-5

3.125 x 10-5

-4

-4

5.0 x 10-4

0.9842

1.102

437.5

lb

0.4536

7,000

16

metric

1,000

15,432,358

35,274

2,205

long

1,016

15,680,000

35,840

2,240

1.016

short

907.2

14,000,000

32,000

2,000

0.9072

4.536 x 10

4.464 x 10

short

1.12
0.8929

Note: tonne is an alternative designation for the metric ton.

(6) Force Or Weight


multiply by
ton-force

newton
(N)

ton

10

kilogramforce (kgf)

pound-force
(lbf)

poundal
(pdl)

metric
(tonne)

long

short

0.1020

0.2248

7.233

1.020 x 10-4

1.004 x 10-4

1.124 x 10-4

70.93

0.001

-4

0.0011

32.17

4.536 x 10-4

4.464 x 10-4

5.0 x 10-4

1.410 x 10-5

1.388 x 10-5

1.554 x 10-5

0.9842

1.102

2.205

kgf

9.807

lbf

4.448

0.4536

pdl

0.1383

0.0141

0.0311

metric

9,807

1,000

2,205

70,932

long

9,964

1,016

2,240

72,070

1.016

short

8,896

907.2

2,000

64,348

0.9072

9.842 x 10

1.12
0.8929

(7) Pressure
multiply by

bar =
kilogram- pound-force/
100 kN/m2 force square square inch
(lbf/in2)
centimetre
(kgf/cm2)
[psi]
bar

1.020

kgf/cm2

0.9807

psi

0.0689

milimetre Inch mercury


Standard
at 32 oF
atmosphere mercury at 0 oC
(atm)
(mmHg)
(inHg)

Inch water
at 4 oC
(inAq)

14.50

0.9869

750.1

29.53

401.5

14.22

0.9678

735.6

28.96

393.7

0.0680

51.71

2.036

27.68

0.0703

760

atm

1.013

1.033

14.70

mmHg

0.0013

0.0014

0.0193

0.0013

inHg

0.0339

0.0345

0.4912

0.0334

25.40

inAq

0.0025

0.0025

0.0361

0.0025

1.868

29.92

406.8

0.0394

0.5352
13.60

0.0736

(8) Mass Per Unit Volume


multiply by

kilogram/
cubic metre
(kg/m3)
kg/m3

pound/ pound/gallon pound/gallon


US
cubic feet
Imperial
(lb/gal)
(lb/ft3)
(lb/gal)

tonnes/
cubic metre
(tonnes/m3)

grains/cubic
feet
(gr/ft3)

pound/cubic
inch
(lb/in3)

437

3.613 x 10-5

0.0624

0.01

0.0083

0.001

8.267 x 10-8

1.429 x 10-4

2.293 x 10-5

1.910 x 10-5

2.288 x 10-6

gr/ft

0.0023

lb/in3

27,680

12,096,000

lb/ft3

16.02

7,000

5.787 x 10-4

lb/gal (Imp.)

99.78

43,602

0.0036

6.229

lb/gal (US)

119.8

52,364

0.0043

7.481

1.201

tonnes/m3

1,000

436,996

0.0361

62.43

10.02

1,728

277.4

231

27.68

0.1605

0.1337

0.0160

0.8327

0.0998
0.1198

8.345

11

(9) Energy Or Work


multiply by

Joule (J) = Nm

kilowatt-hour
(kWh)

kilocalorie
(kcal)

horsepower
hours (metric)

British thermal
unit (Btu)

2.778 x 10-7

2.388 x 10-4

3.777 x 10-7

9.478 x 10-4

1.360

3,412

0.0016

3.968

kWh

3,600,000

kcal

4,187

0.0012

hp-h (metric)

2,647,796

0.7355

632.4

Btu

1,055

2.931 x 10-4

0.2520

859.8

2,510
3.985 x 10-4

(10) Power
multiply by

kilowatt (kW) =
kJ/s
kW

12

kcal/s

4.187

kilocalories/sec
(kcal/s)

toncal/day

horsepower
(metric) (hp)

0.2388

20.64

1.360

3,412

86.40

5.692

14,286

0.0659

165.3

toncal/day

0.0485

0.0116

hp (metric)

0.7355

0.1757

15.18

Btu/h

2.931 x 10-4

7.0 x 10-5

0.006

British thermal
unit/hour (Btu/h)

2,510
3.985 x 10-4

(11) Rates Of Flow


multiply by

cubic metre/ cubic metre/hour cubic metre/day


minute (cm/min)
(cm/d) x 103
(cm/h) x 103
0.06

cm/min

cubic foot/min cubic foot/hour


(cf/min)
(cf/h) x 103

cubic foot/day
(cf/d) x 103

1.44

35.31

2.119

50.85

24

588.6

35.31

847.6

24.52

1.471

35.31

0.06

1.44

cm/h x 10

16.67

cm/d x 103

0.6944

0.0417

cf/min

0.0283

0.0017

0.0408

cf/h x 103

0.4719

0.0283

0.6796

16.67

0.0197

0.0012

0.0283

0.6944

cf/d x 10

24
0.0417

(12) Temperature
o

-50

-40

-30

-20

-10

0.0

+10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

-58

-40

-22

-4

14

32

50

68

86

104

122

140

158

176

194

212

From

To

Formula

Degrees Celsius

Degrees Fahrenheit

[(9/5) x oC] + 32

Degrees Fahrenheit

Degrees Celsius

(oF 32) x 5/9

Degrees Celsius

Kelvins

Kelvins

Degrees Celsius

C + 273.15
C 273.15

13

14

Natural Gas
Conversion Guide
SECTION 2

15

erminolo
nd onsti uen s
Of Natural Gas

METHANE

ETHANE

LNG

P N
LPG

NATURAL
GAS
ex well

BUTANE
P N N a d ea ier ra tio s also
referred to as:
C 5+
Pe ta es lus
Natural gasoline
Condensate
NON-HYDROCARBONS
e.g. water, carbon dioxide, etc

LNG
LPG
NGL

16

liquefied atural as
liquefied etroleum as
= natural gas liquids

NGL

Natural Gas Value Chain

Power
Generation

LPG Extraction
Gas

LNG
Liquefaction

Industrial
LNG Export

Regasification

Commercial
Residential

Upstream

Methane
Gas District
Cooling
Ethane
NGV Transport

Gas Processing Plant

Propane

Butane

Export

Export

Condensate

Petrochemical
Feedstock
Residential
Industrial

Refineries

17

emar s

ssumptions

This section is intended to provide additional information as a reference ONLY on the properties/characteristics
o atural as liquefied atural as (LNG) a d liquefied etroleum as (LPG) or a
rou d u dersta di .
The approximations in the tables in Section 2 and Section 3 are based upon the following assumptions:(i)

For natural gas:


l

(ii)

Gas State in conversion tables is assumed at Normal, N (0 oC, 1 atm)


1,100 Btu/scf (60 oF, 1 atm) = 1,163 Btu/cf (0 oC, 1 atm)
*Scf = Standard cubic feet. Standard means (60 oF, 1 atm)

For LNG
l

1 tonne LNG = 1,300 Nm3 gas [*N: Normal. Normal means (0 oC, 1 atm)];

Density = 450 kg/m3 LNG

(iii)

or LPG
l

An assumed 50/50 propane/butane mixture with (r) and (p) i di ati


refrigerated or pressurised.

e simulatio so t are o as irtual aterials Grou (


in the process. Other assumptions are as below:-

Pressurised (p): temperature = 20 oC, Vapour Fraction (VapFrac) = 0

Refrigerated (r) tem erature ea

18

G) Pro ess imulator is used

oi t Pressure Pa ( ) au e ressure

Corresponding boiling points ->


(i )

oili

t at t e LPG is eit er

Ethane
Pro a e
n-Butane
C3.C4 mix

: -88.7 oC
-42.2 oC
: -0.6 oC
: -29.2 oC

alorifi alues mm tu ( ross)


mmBtu/tonne (gross)

mmBtu/bbl

mmBtu/m3

LNG

53.4

3.82

24.0

LPG (r)

47.3

4.52

28.5

LPG (p)

47.3

4.13

25.9

Oil

39.68

5.80

Coal

27.3

(v)

1 tonne of oil equivalent (toe) = 41.868 GJ = 39.68 mmBtu

(vi)

1 barrel of oil equivalent (boe) = 5,800,000 Btu = 5.8 mmBtu

Natural Gas (NG)

Introduction

efi itio

l
l

Naturall o urri atural as as dis o ered a d ide tified i meri a as earl


as 1626, when French explorers discovered natives igniting gases that were
seeping into and around Lake Erie.
Conventional natural gas is commonly found in underground sandstone
and limestone formation whereas Unconventional Gas refers to coal bed
methane, shale gas, gas hydrates and tight sand gas.
A gaseous hydrocarbon fuel obtained from underground sources.
Natural gas remains in the gaseous state under the temperature and pressure
conditions in service.

Compsoition

A mixture of primarily methane (CH4) and may also include ethane (C2H6), propane
(C3H8), butane (C4H10) and other higher hydrocarbons. It generally also includes
some inert gases, such as nitrogen (N) and carbon dioxide (CO2), plus minor
amounts of trace constituents.

Characteristics

Colourless, odourless, tasteless, shapeless and lighter than air.


At atmospheric pressure, it is gaseous at any temperature over -161 C.
i i itio tem erature a d arro amma ilit ra e ma i it a i ere tl
safe fossil fuel compared to other fuel sources.
Condenses to LNG when cooled to a temperature of approximately -161 C
at atmospheric pressure.
Commercialised natural gas is practically sulphur free and produces virtually
no sulphur dioxide (SO2), emits lower levels of nitrogen oxides (NOx) and CO2
than other fossil fuels.

l
l
l

oili

Poi t

et a e t e mai om o e t o atural as as a oili


(-257.8 F) at a pressure of one atmosphere.

l
l
l

Gas district cooling


Fuel for industrial and residential
Transportation

alorifi alue

l
l

1 ft3 gas = 900 Btu 1,200 Btu


1 ft3 gas = 1,055 kJ

Energy Density

Pri i

l
l
l

Uses

ormulas

e ifi e er

53.

l
l
l

oi t o

l Cooking
Po er se tor
l Heating
LNG
Feedstock in petrochemical industry

t at is equi ale t to 3 .

m3 (0.0387 MJ/ )

Regionalised pricing : North America, Europe and Asia


Oil-indexed in Asia and continental Europe
Gas-to-gas competition in North America and North Western Europe
19

Natural Gas Conversion Tables

(1) Heat & Volume


multiply by

cm = Nm3

cf = ft3
35.31

cm

mmBtu

GJ

Mcal

0.0411

0.0433

10.35

12.03

0.0071

0.0012

0.0012

0.2930

0.3407

2.005 x 10-4

1.055

252.0

293.1

0.1724

238.8

277.8

0.1634

1.163

6.842 x 10-4

cf

0.0283

mmBtu

24.36

860.1

GJ

23.08

815.2

0.9478

Mcal

0.0967

3.413

0.0040

0.0042

kWh

0.0831

2.935

0.0034

0.0036

0.8598

boe

141.3

4,989

5.8

6.119

1,462

kWh

boe

5.883 x 10-4
1,700

Note: 1 PetaJoule (PJ) = 1 million GigaJoule (GJ)

(2) Energy Consumption


multiply by

N bcm/yr

mmcf/d (0 oC, 1 atm)

N bcm/yr

toe/yr x 103

19.39

1,035

0.2005

10.69

96.75

mmcf/d

0.0103

0.0516

4.989

toe/yr x 103

0.0010

0.0935

boe/d x 10

boe/d x 103

boe volumes are normally expressed in gross and toe in net

(3) Gross Calorific Value < > Net Calorific Value (Natural Gas)

Gross
Net
20

Gross

Net

0.9

1.1

53.35
0.0187

(4) Gas Consumption for Industrial Purposes

NP

Po er Ge eratio (

le)

Po er Ge eratio ( om i ed
LNG Pro e t (Pla t a d

1.0 bcm gas into plant

3,700 GWh electricity

le) 1.0 bcm gas into plant

5,800 GWh electricity

1.0 bcm gas into plant

. 5

m re asified

mmo ia rea Produ tio

1.0 bcm gas into plant

1.8 million tonnes fertiliser

et a ol Produ tio

1.0 bcm gas into plant

1.1 million tonnes methanol

1.0 bcm gas into plant

4.0 million barrels oil

Gas-to-Liquids

These figures can vary greatly, depending on such factors as the process used, the design and age of the plant,
efficiency of operation, ambient conditions, etc. They should be used with caution and only for general exercises. All
numbers are rounded.

(5) Pipeline Capacities


External diameter (inches)

Capacity (bcm/y)

20

2.0

24

3.2

28

4.7

32

6.6

36

9.0

40

11.7

44

14.9

These numbers are indicative only and can vary widely

21

i ue ed a ural as

Introduction

efi itio

Composition

Natural as i a ter ro essi as ee liquefied or stora e a d tra s ortatio


purpose. At atmospheric pressure, the LNG will be at temperature between
-161 C and -158 C.

Primaril met a e ( 4) but also contains other components like ethane (C2H6),
butane (C4H10) up to hexane (C6H14) and nitrogen (N).
Impurities may include carbon dioxide (CO2), sulphur (S), carbonyl sulphide (COS),
mercaptans and mercury (Hg).

Characteristics

l
l
l

Colourless, odourless and lighter than air.


Volume is typically 585 times smaller in a liquid state based on composition,
pressure and temperature.
With its clean burning properties, it produces less air pollutants and can be
more e fi ie t om ared to traditio al uels e. . oil diesel ood oal a d ot er
organic matters.
LNG is an option when piping gas is not possible or economically viable due to
distance, environment (deep sea, natural reserve, mountains) or political reasons.

Typical -161.5 C

l
l

Po er e eratio
Transportation

alorifi alue

At normal (N) state, the range is in between 930 Btu/cf and 1,185 Btu/cf

Energy Density

Roughly in the range 410 kg/m3 (0.41 kg/ ) to 500 kg/m3 (0.5 kg/ ) depending
on temperature, pressure and composition.
e ifi e er 5 .3
t at is equi ale t to 25 3
m3 (25.3 MJ/ ).

oili

Poi t

Uses

Pri i

22

Natural gas liquefaction dates back to the 19th century when British chemist
and physicist Michael Faraday experimented with liquefying different types of
gases, including natural gas.
e first LNG la t as uilt i est ir i ia i
2 a d e a o eratio i
.
a uar 5 t e orld s first LNG ta er The Methane Pioneer, carried
an LNG cargo from Lake Charles, Louisiana to Canvey Island, United Kingdom.

ormulas

l
l

Heating
Cooling

Market price will vary according to where it is being sold, the local marker prices
(e. .
N P) a d t e ot er o tra tual terms (e. . rude oil-li ed ri e s ot
cargo, long term, etc.)

LNG Conversion Tables


(1) Mass, Volume and Heat
multiply by

Tonnes LNG

m3 LNG

Nm3 gas

ft3 gas

mmBtu

boe

2.222

1,300

45,909

53.38

9.203

585

20,659

24.02

4.141

35.31

0.0411

0.0071

0.0012

2.005 x 10-4

Tonnes LNG
m3 LNG

0.450

m3 gas

7.692 x 10-4

0.0017

ft3 gas

2.178 x 10-5

4.8 x 10-5

0.0283

mmBtu

0.0187

0.0416

24.36

860.1

boe

0.1087

0.2415

141.3

4,989

0.1724
5.8

(2) LNG Characteristics


The average composition is chosen as being representative among compositions provided by different
receiving terminals

Origin

Abu Dhabi
Algeria-Arzew
Algeria-Bethioua 1
Algeria-Bethioua 2
Algeria-Skikda
Australia-NWS
Brunei
Egypt-Damietta
Egypt-Idku
Equatorial Guinea
Indonesia-Arun
Indonesia-Badak
Indonesia-Tangguh
Libya
Malaysia
Nigeria
Norway
Oman
Peru
Qatar-Qatargas I
Russia-Sakhalin
Trinidad
U.S.A-Alaska
Yemen

Nitrogen
N2
%

Methane
C1
%

Ethane
C2
%

Pro a e
C3
%

C4+
%

0.3
0.6
0.9
0.6
0.5
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.0
0.0
0.2
0.0

84.8
88.0
88.1
90.7
91.8
87.4
90.6
97.7
95.9
93.4
90.7
91.2

0.7
0.3
0.1
0.8
0.4
0.6
0.4
0.1
0.0
0.2
0.0

81.6
90.3
92.1
91.8
87.9
89.1
90.1
92.6
97.1
99.7
93.3

13.2
9.0
8.4
7.8
6.9
8.3
5.0
1.8
2.8
6.5
6.2
5.5
2.9
13.4
5.3
5.3
5.7
7.3
10.3
6.2
4.5
2.5
0.1
5.7

1.6
2.0
2.0
0.8
0.6
3.4
2.9
0.22
0.9
0.0
2.0
2.4
0.5
3.7
3.1
2.1
1.3
2.9
0.1
2.3
1.9
0.2
0.0
0.9

0.1
0.5
0.7
0.0
0.1
0.8
1.5
0.2
0.5
0.0
1.0
0.9
0.2
0.7
1.1
0.5
0.4
1.6
0.0
1.0
0.2
0.1
0.0
0.1

Gas
LNG
density
density
kg/m3 kg/m3 (n)
467
464
455
450
446
467
461
427
436
439
457
456
432
485
461
458
451
470
456
460
449
429
423
434

0.826
0.813
0.806
0.780
0.769
0.831
0.816
0.730
0.752
0.755
0.803
0.801
0.744
0.867
0.813
0.809
0.782
0.834
0.808
0.727
0.719
0.765

Expansion
ratio Gas GCV
m3(n)/ MJ/m3 (n)
m3 liq
566
570
573
577
580
562
564
585
579
585
569
568
580
559
567
566
577
563
579
569
570
590
589
567

44.9
44.1
35.7
36.0
35.5
45.3
44.6
40.8
38.9
42.0
43.9
43.9
41.0
46.6
44.3
44.2
40.1
45.3
44.0
39.8
39.9
38.5
23

i ue ed e roleum as
Introduction

l
l
l
l

efi itio

Composition

mi ture o ro a e a d uta e i as ee liquefied redu i t e


tem erature i reasi t e ressure or a om i atio o ot . LPG is ommo l
called bottled gas.

It is made up primarily by propane (C3H8) and butane (C4H10), or a mix of the two.
Other hydrocarbons that include propylene, butylenes, isobutene and isobutylene
may also be present.

Characteristics

l
l
l

oili

Poi t

Uses

Varies considerably from about -42 oC to 0 oC (-44 oF to 32 oF) at atmospheric pressure.

Transportation
omesti use

alorifi alue
(in Gas State)

Energy Density
(in Liquid State)

ormulas

l
l
l

24

A higher percentage of propane is used in winter since propane is lighter than


butane and the same for butane in summer since it has a higher vapor pressure
and lower boiling point.
No -to i amma le as odorless olorless a d ea ier t a air.
Volume typically is 250 times smaller in a liquid state based on composition,
pressure and temperature.
Can be easily condensed, packaged, stored and utilised, which makes it an ideal
energy source for a wide range of applications.

Pri i

Discovered by Dr. Walter Snelling in 1910.


First commercial production was in 1912 and sold commercially by 1920.
irst LPG oo i sto e as made i
2.
irst LPG- ueled ar as de elo ed i
3.

l
l

Industrial
Petro emi al

1 ft3 propane = 2,716 Btu


1 ft3 n-butane = 3,572 Btu
e ifi e er ro a e (p) = 50.4 MJ/kg that is equivalent to 25,400 MJ/m3
(25.4 MJ/ )
e ifi e er - uta e (p) = 49.5 MJ/kg that is equivalent to 28,800 MJ/m3
(28.8 MJ/ )
(Note: p means pressurised for propane and n-butane)
olesale mar et ri e o LPG (quoted i
Annual consumption
Cost plus

).

(1) LPG & Ethane: Weight, Volume and Heat


C3. C4 mix is treated separately in which the results are generated from the VMG Simulator.

u i etres Per o
3

m /tonne

Ethane

Pro a e

n-Butane

C3. C4 mix

Pressurised (p)

3.00

1.98

1.72

1.82

Refrigerated (r)

1.84

1.71

1.66

1.66

mmBtu/tonne

Ethane

Pro a e

n-Butane

C3. C4 mix

49.2

47.7

46.6

47.3

C3. C4 mix

mm tu Per o

Pressurised (p)

Refrigerated (r)
arrels Per o

bbl/tonne

Ethane

Pro a e

n-Butane

Pressurised (p)

18.9

12.5

10.8

11.5

Refrigerated (r)

11.5

10.8

10.4

10.5

mmBtu/m3

Ethane

Pro a e

n-Butane

C3. C4 mix

Pressurised (p)

16.4

24.1

27.3

25.9

Refrigerated (r)

26.8

27.8

28.2

28.5

mm tu Per u i etre

mm tu Per arrel
mmBtu/bbl

Ethane

Pro a e

n-Butane

C3. C4 mix

Pressurised (p)

2.60

3.83

4.34

4.13

Refrigerated (r)

4.26

4.42

4.49

4.52

1 bbl/d = tonne/y

Ethane

Pro a e

n-Butane

C3. C4 mix

Pressurised (p)

19.3

29.3

33.8

31.8

Refrigerated (r)

31.6

33.8

34.9

34.9

arrel Per a o

es Per

um

25

26

Natural Gas
Conversion Guide
SECTION 3

27

Inter-fuel Conversion Tables

The tables contain quick reference equivalents and other


fac ors of eneral rele ance o e na ural as indus r .
ll ures are o e a en as
onl
for use
en a i de ree of precision is no re uired.
e approximations in ese a les are ased upon e
assumptions a are lis ed in pa e .

(1) Natural Gas: Cubic Metre Equivalents

Per ear
35.31 x 109
41.06 x 1012

1 bcm
natural gas
per year =

Per a

cf
Btu

gas

0.77 x 106
10.75 x 106

tonnes
barrels

LNG

0.87 x 106
9.08 x 106
9.95 x 106

tonnes
barrels
barrels

1.03 x 106
7.08 x 106
1.50 x 106

96.75 x 106
112.5 x 109

cf
Btu

gas

2,107
29,457

tonnes
barrels

LNG

LPG
LPG (r)
LPG (p)

2,378
24,869
27,268

tonnes
barrels
barrels

LPG
LPG (r)
LPG (p)

tonnes
barrels

oil

2,835
19,395

tonnes
barrels

oil

tonnes

coal

4,120

tonnes

coal

Per ear
9

cf
Btu

gas

0.28 x 106
3.92 x 106

tonnes
barrels

LNG

0.32 x 106
3.31 x 106
3.63 x 106

tonnes
barrels
barrels

0.38 x 106
2.58 x 106
0.55 x 106

12.9 x 10
15.0 x 1012

1 mmcm
natural gas
per day =

28

Per a
6

cf
Btu

gas

769.2
10,752

tonnes
barrels

LNG

LPG
LPG (r)
LPG (p)

868
9,077
9,953

tonnes
barrels
barrels

LPG
LPG (r)
LPG (p)

tonnes
barrels

oil

1,035
7,079

tonnes
barrels

oil

tonnes

coal

1,504

tonnes

coal

35.31 x 10
41.06 x 109

(2) Natural Gas: Cubic Foot Equivalents

Per ear
1 tcf
natural gas
per year =

cm

Per a

1.0 x 1012
28.32 x 109

cf
cm

gas

29.30 x 106
200.5 x 106

tonnes
barrels

oil

42.59 x 106

tonnes

coal

2.74 x 109
77.58 x 106

cf
cm

gas

80,269
0.55 x 106

tonnes
barrels

oil

0.12 x 106

tonnes

coal

m3 = kilolitre

Per ear
9

36.50 x 10
1.034 x 109
42.44 x 1012
100 mmcf
natural gas
per day =

cf
cm
Btu

Per a
8

gas

1.0 x 10
2.83 x 106
0.12 x 1012

cf
cm
Btu

gas

0.795 x 106
11.11 x 106

tonnes
barrels

LNG

2,178
30,446

tonnes
barrels

LNG

0.897 x 106
9.38 x 106
10.29 x 106

tonnes
barrels
barrels

LPG
LPG (r)
LPG (p)

2,458
25,703
28,183

tonnes
barrels
barrels

LPG
LPG (r)
LPG (p)

1.07 x 106
7.32 x 106

tonnes
barrels

oil

2,930
20,046

tonnes
barrels

oil

1.55 x 106

tonnes

coal

4,259

tonnes

coal

29

(3) LNG: Volumetric Equivalents

Per ear
45.91 x 109
1.30 x 109
53.38 x 1012

P
LNG =

cf
cm
Btu

Per a
gas

78.48 x 106
2.22 x 106
13.98 x 106

cf
cm
barrels

LNG

1.13 x 106
11.80 x 106
12.94 x 106

tonnes
barrels
barrels

1.35 x 106
9.20 x 106
1.96 x 106

0.126 x 109
3.56 x 106
146.2 x 109

1 mmcm
LNG
per year =

30

gas

0.22 x 106
6,088
38,294

cf
cm
barrels

LNG

LPG
LPG (r)
LPG (p)

3,092
32,329
35,448

tonnes
barrels
barrels

LPG
LPG (r)
LPG (p)

tonnes
barrels

oil

3,685
25,213

tonnes
barrels

oil

tonnes

coal

5,357

tonnes

coal

gas

56.60 x 106
1.603 x 106
65.81 x 109

Per ear
20.66 x 109
0.585 x 109
24.02 x 1012

cf
cm
Btu

cf
cm
Btu

Per a
cf
cm
Btu

gas

0.45 x 106
6.29 x 106

tonnes
barrels

LNG

1,233
17,232

tonnes
barrels

LNG

0.508 x 106
5.31 x 106
5.82 x 106

tonnes
barrels
barrels

LPG
LPG (r)
LPG (p)

1,391
14,548
15,952

tonnes
barrels
barrels

LPG
LPG (r)
LPG (p)

0.605 x 106
4.14 x 106

tonnes
barrels

oil

1,658
11,346

tonnes
barrels

oil

0.88 x 106

tonnes

coal

2,410

tonnes

coal

(4) LPG (Refrigerated)


Equivalent based on 50% C3, 50% C4
Per ear

1 MT
LPG
per year =

Per a

40.68 x 109
1.15 x 109

cf
cm

gas

0.886 x 106
12.39 x 106

tonnes
barrels

LNG

1.66 x 106
10.46 x 106

cm
barrels

1.19 x 106
8.16 x 106
1.73 x 106

111.5 x 106
3.16 x 106

cf
cm

gas

2,428
33,935

tonnes
barrels

LNG

LPG (r)

4,555
28,649

cm
barrels

LPG (r)

tonnes
barrels

oil

3,266
22,343

tonnes
barrels

oil

tonnes

coal

4,747

tonnes

coal

Per ear
9

10,000 bbl
LPG
per day =

Per a

14.2 x 10
0.402 x 109

cf
cm

gas

0.349 x 106
0.58 x 106

tonnes
cm

LPG (r)

0.416 x 106
2.85 x 106

tonnes
barrels

0.605 x 106

tonnes

cf
cm

gas

956.3
1,590

tonnes
cm

LPG (r)

oil

1,140
7,799

tonnes
barrels

oil

coal

1,657

tonnes

coal

67.04 x 106
1.90 x 106

38.91 x 10
1.102 x 106

Per ear

1 mmcm
LPG
per year =

Per a

24.47 x 109
0.693 x 109

cf
cm

gas

0.601 x 106
6.29 x 106

tonnes
barrels

LPG (r)

0.717 x 106
4.91 x 106

tonnes
barrels

oil

1.04 x 106

tonnes

coal

cf
cm

gas

1,648
17,232

tonnes
barrels

LPG (r)

1,964
13,439

tonnes
barrels

oil

2,855

tonnes

coal

31

(5) LPG (Pressurised)


Equivalent based on 50% C3, 50% C4
Per ear

1 MT
LPG
per year =

Per a

40.68 x 109
1.15 x 109

cf
cm

gas

0.886 x 106
12.39 x 106

tonnes
barrels

LNG

1.82 x 106
11.47 x 106

cm
barrels

1.19 x 106
8.16 x 106
1.73 x 106

111.5 x 106
3.16 x 106

cf
cm

gas

2,428
33,935

tonnes
barrels

LNG

LPG (p)

4,994
31,413

cm
barrels

LPG (p)

tonnes
barrels

oil

3,266
22,343

tonnes
barrels

oil

tonnes

coal

4,747

tonnes

coal

Per ear
9

10,000 bbl
LPG
per day =

Per a

12.95 x 10
0.367 x 109

cf
cm

gas

0.318 x 106
0.58 x 106

tonnes
cm

LPG (p)

0.379 x 106
2.60 x 106

tonnes
barrels

0.552 x 106

tonnes

cf
cm

gas

872.2
1,590

tonnes
cm

LPG (p)

oil

1,040
7,113

tonnes
barrels

oil

coal

1,511

tonnes

coal

61.14 x 106
1.73 x 106

35.48 x 10
1.0048 x 106

Per ear

1 mmcm
LPG
per year =

32

Per a

22.32 x 109
0.632 x 109

cf
cm

gas

0.549 x 106
6.29 x 106

tonnes
barrels

LPG (p)

0.654 x 106
4.47 x 106

tonnes
barrels

oil

0.95 x 106

tonnes

coal

cf
cm

gas

1,503
17,232

tonnes
barrels

LPG (p)

1,791
12,257

tonnes
barrels

oil

2,604

tonnes

coal

(6) Oil and Coal Equivalents

Per ear
34.13 x 109
0.967 x 109
39.68 x 1012
1 MT
oil
per year =

cf
cm
Btu

Per a
gas

93.51 x 106
2.65 x 106
108.7 x 109

tonnes
barrels

LNG

2,037
28,470

tonnes
barrels

LNG

0.839 x 106
8.77 x 106
9.62 x 106

tonnes
barrels
barrels

LPG
LPG (r)
LPG (p)

2,299
24,036
26,354

tonnes
barrels
barrels

LPG
LPG (r)
LPG (p)

6.84 x 106

barrels

oil

18,745

barrels

oil

1.45 x 106

tonnes

coal

3,982

tonnes

coal

Per ear
23.48 x 10
0.665 x 109
27.30 x 1012

cf
cm
Btu

Per a
6

gas

64.33 x 10
1.82 x 106
74.79 x 109

cf
cm
Btu

gas

0.511 x 106
7.15 x 106

tonnes
barrels

LNG

1,401
19,586

tonnes
barrels

LNG

0.577 x 106
6.035 x 106
6.618 x 106

tonnes
barrels
barrels

LPG
LPG (r)
LPG (p)

1,581
16,535
18,130

tonnes
barrels
barrels

LPG
LPG (r)
LPG (p)

0.688 x 106

tonnes

oil

1,885

tonnes

oil

Per ear
10,000 bbl
oil
per day =

gas

0.743 x 106
10.39 x 106

1 MT
coal
per year =

cf
cm
Btu

18.21 x 109
0.52 x 109
21.17 x 1012

Per a

cf
cm
Btu

gas

0.533 x 106

tonnes

oil

0.775 x 106

tonnes

coal

49.89 x 106
1.41 x 106
58.0 x 109

cf
cm
Btu

gas

1,462

tonnes

oil

2,125

tonnes

coal
33

34

Natural Gas
Conversion Guide
SECTION 4

35

elec ed eferences

The following references were used by the team in the preparation of this guide.
The IGU wishes to thank and record its appreciation to the respective publishers and organisations:
[2]
3
[4]
5


[8]
[9]
[10]

[12]
[13]
4
[15]

36

N
L G P si al a d
i eeri ata ell om a ies i ala sia ar
3
Natural Gas Equivalents, Shell International Gas Limited, 1992
Natural Gas u dame tals al olm . . Pee les ell ter atio al Gas Limited
2
The Alphatania Natural Gas Glossary of Terms & Measurements and Natural Gas
Conversion Tables, Alphatania Ltd.
e u dame tals o t e Natural Gas dustr e Petroleum o omist a d Gas orld
International, October 1995
u dame tal o Natural Gas ter atio al Pers e ti e i e a dra e tem er 2
irtual aterials Grou (
G) Pro ess imulator ommer iall a aila le so t are
LNG Industry in 2010, The International Group of Liquefied Natural Gas Importers (GIIGNL)
Gas and LNG Industry Glossary, Alphatania Training,
http://www.gasstrategies.com/industry-glossary
Santos, Conversion Calculator, http://www.santos.com/conversion-calculator.aspx
o ersio a tors P tt
. . om o ersio a tors. s
Online Conversion, http://www.onlineconversion.com/
OECD, Glossary of Statistical Terms, http://stats.oecd.org/glossary/detail.asp?ID=4109
Ge eral a ts o LPG LPG
L
N tt
.l -solutio s. o.u a ts. tml
Standards, The American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) International,
http://www.astm.org/Standard/index.shtml

Natural Gas
Conversion Guide
SECTION 5

37

GLOSSARY OF TERMS
A
Acid Gas

Natural gas that contains a certain quantity of gases such as carbon dioxide
(CO2) or hydrogen sulphide (H2S). These gases will form acidic compound when
combined with moisture.

Associated Gas

Gas i oe ists it oil i a rimaril oil field. t ma e a as or solutio as


where the differences are the behaviour and treatment.

tmos

eri Pressure

The pressure of the weight of air and water vapour on the surface of the earth.

B
Boil-off gas

Volume of gas naturally converted to gaseous phase when LNG in a storage tank
or ship warms to its boiling temperature. It may be collected and used for ship fuel
or reliquefied to LNG.

Boiling point

Temperature at which a substance changes its state from liquid to gas.

Bottled Gas

Usually butane or propane or both, stored in the liquid form at moderate pressure in
steel containers. Used in small residential and commercial applications.

British thermal Unit (Btu)

tu is defi ed as t e amou t o eat required to raise t e tem erature o o e


pound (0.454 kg) of liquid water by 1 F (0.556 C) at a constant pressure of an
atmosphere.

Bunker fuel

Any fuel oil or diesel fuel taken into the bunkers of ships.

Butane

A member of the alkane group of hydrocarbons that consists of four carbon atoms
in its molecule (C4H10, often abbreviated to C4 in non-technical usage). Colourless,
amma le as at ormal tem erature a d ressure ut is easil liquefied
pressure for storage and transportation are few of its characteristics. There are two
isomeric forms, Normal and Iso-Butane. At atmospheric pressure, Normal Butane
liquefies at a d so- uta e ( et l ro a e) at 2 .
Iso-Butane (Methylpropane)

H
H

H
H

C
H

H
C

C
H

Normal Butane

C
C 6+

All hydrocarbons with a carbon number of 6 and above also referred to as hexane
and heavier fractions.

Calorie (cal)

u it o eat t at equals to 4.
oules. ormerl defi ed as t e qua tit o
heat required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water by 1C under standard
o ditio s. t as o lar el ee re la ed t e oule or s ie tifi ur oses.

alorifi alue (

38

The amount of heat produced in a complete combustion of a fuel. This can be


measured either dry or saturated with water vapour; and net or gross.

Cap Gas

Gas found in a gas cap in relation with oil but not commingled with it.

Capacity Charge

Fee made for reserving capacity in a pipeline, a gas store or other piece of
infrastructure. Frequently used interchangeably with Demand Charge.

Churning

A term used in gas trading to point out the number of times on average that gas is
traded between initial sale and ultimate consumption.

Coal Bed Methane


(CBM)

Coal bed methane is methane that is or can be recovered from coal seams. Also
well-known as Coal Seam Gas. Wells are drilled into suitable coal seams and the
pressure in the rock is reduced, usually by pumping out water in order to recover
CBM. The pumped out water may be saline and cause environmental issues until
the methane can be desorbed from the coal. CBM is not trapped beneath a seal like
conventional natural gas but is adsorbed into the coal.

Coal Gas

Coal Gas is gas manufactured by the destructive distillation of bituminous coal.


The principal components are hydrogen (more than 50%), methane (10% to 30%)
carbon monoxide and higher hydrocarbons.

Coal Mine Methane


(CMM)

Methane recovered from coal mines, whichever while active or after abandonment,
which can be used in local power generation or heat production.

Combined Cycle Gas


Turbine (CCGT)

A CCGT is a type of electricity generation plant in which the heat generated from
combustion of the gases is used twice. Gas Turbine is driven by burning the gas.
Then, to raise steam for a secondary steam turbine unit, the hot exhaust gases
need to be passed through a heat exchanger. Combined cycle plants have a
t ermal e fi ie
a out 5 reater t a a ormal sim le or o e tur i e.

Combined Heat and


Po er ( P)

P is t e use o a si le u ified s stem to deli er ot t e eat a d o er


requireme ts o a ro e t mi imisi t e aste o eat. e o er is ormed
through gas turbines or another prime mover. The exhaust heat is harnessed for
requirements other than electricity generation. Also known as cogeneration and
total e er . t as a t i al e fi ie
is o more t a
.

Compressed Natural Gas


(CNG)

Natural gas compressed into gas cylinders, mainly used as an alternative for liquid
fuels in road vehicles. CNG remains a gas irrespective of the amount of pressure.

Condensate

Natural gas liquid with low vapour pressure, produced from a reservoir with high
pressure and temperature. In a pipeline or separation plant, condensate will
separate naturally through the normal process of condensation. Can refer to any
mixture of relatively light hydrocarbons which stay put liquid at normal temperature
and pressure. There will be some propane and butane dissolved in it. Not like crude
oil, it contains little or none of the heavy hydrocarbons which make up heavy fuel
oil. There are three main sources of condensate:
a)
b)
c)

riti al Pressure

The liquid hydrocarbons which are produced from a gas/condensate reservoir.


These may be only somewhat distinguishable from a light stabilised crude oil.
The liquid hydrocarbons which are recovered at the surface from nonassociated gas.
The liquid hydrocarbons which are separated out when raw gas is treated. This
condensate normally consists of C5 to C8.
e mi imum ressure

must e a

lied to a as e ore it a e liquefied.

Critical Temperature

The temperature above which a gas will not liquefy, irrespective of the pressure
applied.

Crude Oil

A mixture of hydrocarbons that exists as a liquid in natural underground reservoirs


and remains liquid at atmospheric pressure after passing through surface
se arati a ilities. rude is t e ra material i is refi ed i to LPG asoli e
etrol a t a erose e diesel as oil uel oil lu ri ati oil ara fi a a d
asphalt.

Cryogenics

The process of producing, maintaining and utilising very low temperatures


(below -46 C/ -50 F). Relevant in the LNG business.

Custody transfer

e ro ess o a di o er t e fi al rodu t rom its seller to t e fi al u er. t


t is oi t ot t e fi al alue o t e ar o is determi ed a d all lia ilit is assed.

39

D
Density (LNG or gas)
e Poi t

e mass o a liquid or as sam le di ided its olume at s e ified o ditio s o


pressure and temperature. The density is commonly expressed in kg/m3.
When either hydrocarbons (hydrocarbon dew point) or water (water dew point) start
to condense out of a given gas stream, the temperatures below this phenomenon
is known as dew point. Condensation could reduce the accuracy of metering and
creates the trouble of liquid slugs in pipelines, which will need to be cleared out from
time to time assi a Pi t rou t e i eli e.

Downstream
Dry Gas

ose a ti ities i t e as

ai losest to fi al ustomers.

Another name for Lean Gas. It does not mean free of water, though in some cases
it may be.

E
Energy Density

The heating value per unit volume. It is measured as MJ per cubic metre. See Gross
Heating Value.

Ethane

Ethane (C2H6, often abbreviated to C2 in non-technical usage) is one of the main


constituent elements of natural gas along with methane. Boils at -84.4 C. It is a
dry, colourless and odourless gas at normal temperatures. A feedstock for ethylene
production.

Ethylene

Also known as Ethene. A colourless gas (C2H4) produced by cracking hydrocarbons


such as ethane or naphtha and used as a feedstock for petrochemicals, such as
fi res a d ma lasti s. oils at - 3. .

F
Feedstock

Hydrocarbons used as raw material in an industrial process, not as a fuel. The


principal uses of natural gas as a feedstock are in the manufacture of ammonia,
ammonia-based fertilisers and methanol.

Flash point

e lo est tem erature orre ted to arometri ressure o


.3 Pa at i
application of ignition source causes the vapor of a specimen of the sample to ignite
u der s e ified o ditio o test (
3).

Floating LNG

Floating LNG (FLNG) is the use of purpose built or converted ships to enable
re asifi atio o LNG (a d lique a tio ) to e arried out o s ore. LNG as t e
advantage that LNG production and importation can start more quickly than could
happen onshore, where lead times are often lengthened by the local approval
process. It also enables the processes to move location to satisfy short term demand.

Fractionation

A distillation process in which the distillate is collected as a number of separate


fractions based on a different boiling range.

Fuel Gas

Gaseous fuels, in particular low pressure natural gas used to fuel production or
treatment facilities.

Fuel oil

uel oil defi es oils t at ma e u distillatio residue. t om rises all residue uel oils
including those obtained by blending. Its kinematic viscosity is above 10 cSt at 80 C.
.
e as oi t is al a s a o e 5 a d t e de sit is al a s i er t a .

40

Gas : Oil Ratio

The relationship between the volume of gas produced at atmospheric pressure and
t e olume o oil rodu ed i a i e field. is olume ill ormall ar o sidera l
o er t e li e o t e field. a e e ressed as a sim le olumetri ratio e. . 5

or as ft3/barrel.

Gas-to-Liquid (GTL)

Gas to Liquid (GTL) processes convert natural gas into Synthetic Gasoline or Middle
Distillates, by using the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis method. Increasingly relevant
ere as is ou d i fields remote rom mar ets su t at deli er i eli e is
likely to be uneconomic.

Gas Condensate Ratio

The ratio of gas to condensate in a gas or condensate reservoir, usually uttered in


practice as the ratio of condensate to gas. Usual units are barrels of condensate
per million cubic feet of gas.

Gas Liquefaction

The conversion of natural gas into LNG.

Gas Pro essi

The separation of oil, gas and the removal of impurities and natural gas liquids from
atural as to meet t e deli er s e ifi atio .

Gas Turbine

A turbine propelled by the expansion of compressed air, heated by the combustion


of a fuel such as natural gas or gas oil. Commonly used for power generation.

Gravity

ommo a re iatio usuall mea s s e ifi ra it i t e


Petroleum stitute ( P ) ra it i t e .

Gree field

A planned development which must be built from scratch on a new site without
existing infrastructure.

Gross Heating Value


(GHV or HHV)

The amount of heat which would be released by the complete combustion in air of
1 kg, 1 Mol or 1 standard cubic metre (mass based, molar based or volume based)
of gas at conditions of t2,p2; in such a way that the pressure (p1) at which the
reaction takes place remains constant, and all the products of the combustion are
retur ed to t e same s e ified tem erature (t ) as t at o t e rea ta ts all o t ese
components being in the gaseous state except for water formed by combustion,
which is condensed to the liquid state. The Gross Heating value mass based is
expressed in MJ/kg, Molar based in KJ/Mol and volume based in MJ/m3. This under
sta dard o ditio s o 5 a d
325 Pa. (

5). ee er e sit .

a d meri a

H
Heel LNG

LNG left in ship and shore storage tanks to maintain their cryogenic temperatures.

Henry Hub

e r u is o ed a d o erated a i e Pi e Li e LL i is a oll
owned subsidiary of ChevronTexaco and the largest centralised point for natural gas
spot and futures trading in the United States. Henry Hub is based on the physical
interconnection of nine interstate and four intrastate pipelines in Louisiana. The
New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) uses Henry Hub as the notional point
of delivery for its natural gas futures contract. NYMEX deliveries at Henry Hub are
treated in the same way as cash-market transactions. Many natural gas marketers
also use Henry Hub as their physical contract delivery point or their price benchmark
for spot trades of natural gas.

High Sulphur Fuel Oil


(HSFO)

The term is the bottom of the oil barrel. The lowest priced oil product now, for
environmental reasons, frequently banned or only allowed to be used where rigorous
control of emissions is practiced. In some countries with developing gas-to-oil
competition, it represents the marker for power station fuel.

Hub

Most frequently in the U.S. and now used in Europe. There are many hubs in the
U.S., of which the most important is Henry Hub (HH). In Europe the largest hub is
t e Natio al ala i Poi t (N P) i t e . .

Hydrates

Ice-like solids in which methane molecules are held within the molecular spaces of
the water molecule. Can form in pipelines and wells under certain conditions of near
freezing temperatures and high pressures.

Hydrocarbon

An organic compound containing the elements hydrogen and carbon only.


Hydrocarbons exist as solids, liquids and gases.

I
Impurities

Unwanted components that could be present in the product that might cause damage
to the manufacturing or processing facility. These can typically be solids, chemicals,
carbon dioxide (CO2), sulphur (S), mercaptans and mercury (Hg).

International Energy
Agency (IEA)

The IEA compiles detailed energy statistics and country reports, including countries
outside the organisation itself. An autonomous wing of the Organisation for Economic
o-o eratio a d e elo me t (
). Paris- ased or a isatio i oordinates the energy policies of its member countries.

International Gas Union


(IGU)

orld ide o - rofit or a isatio t at as ou ded i 3 ose o e ti e is to


promote the political, technical and economic progress of the gas industry.

41

J
Japan Crude Cocktail

Crude oil price based on average Japan importing price of a basket of crude oil
commonly used as an index for Asian LNG pricing.

Joules

The derived SI unit of work or energy; the work done when the point of application
of a force of 1 newton is displaced through a distance of 1 metre in the direction
of the force.

K
Kerosene

Kerosene (other than kerosene used for aircraft which is included with aviation fuels)
om rises refi ed etroleum distillate i termediate i olatilit et ee asoli e a d
gas/diesel oil. It is medium oil distilling between 150 C and 300 C.

L
Lean Gas

Gas high in methane content typically 95% or more and with few higher fractions.
us o relati el lo alorifi alue. lso o as r Gas.

Li e Pa

It is a procedure for allowing more gas to enter a pipeline than is being withdrawn,
t us i reasi t e ressure filler more as i to t e s stem a d e e ti el
reati stora e. e filled as a su seque tl e it dra e eeded.
useful method of meeting short term (hourly or diurnal) peak demand requirements.

Liquefaction

The conversion of natural gas into LNG.

Liquefied atural as
(LNG)

Natural Gas i a ter ro essi as ee liquefied or stora e a d tra s ortatio


purpose. At ambient pressure the LNG will be at temperatures close between
-161 C to -158 C.

Liquefied etroleum as
(LPG)

A mixture of propane and butane which has been liquefied by reducing the
tem erature i reasi t e ressure or a om i atio o ot . LPG is ommo l
called bottled gas.

LNG Pla t

LNG plants consist of one or more LNG trains, each of which is an independent gas
liquefaction unit. It is more cost effective to add a train to an existing LNG plant,
than to build a new LNG plant, because infrastructure built for early trains, such as
ship terminals and other utilities, may be capable of being used or expanded for
new LNG trains. The process of Liquefaction is carried out in a liquefaction plant.

Load Factor

Load factor is a measurement of utilisation for plant, or of the relationship between


average and peak demand or supply, as determined by the formula: Average x 100
Pea . or su l a d dema d al ulatio s a era e a d ea most o te re er to
dail dema d it i a ear ut a ot er eriods are ossi le. e resulti fi ure
is usually expressed as a percentage.

Low sulphur fuel oil


(LSFO)

Fuel oil with low sulphur content. Usually less dense than high sulphur fuel oil. In
new markets with gas-to-oil competition, this frequently represents the marker fuel
for large segments of the industrial market.

42

Mercaptans

Chemical compounds of sulphur used as Odorants.

Methane

olourless odourless amma le as li ter t a air u der ormal o ditio s ( 4,


i al usa e). et a e is t e first mem er i t e
often abbreviated to C1 i o -te
al a e ( ara fi ) series a d is t e rimar o stitue t o Natural Gas. t atmos eri
ressure it liquefies at - 2 .

Methane number

Rating indicating the knocking characteristics of a fuel gas (ISO 14532)

Methanol

Methyl alcohol, produced from natural gas via Synthesis Gas. Used as a chemical
in the resin and paint industry and in the manufacture of Methyl Tertiary Butyl Ether
(MTBE) and acetic acid, but also of interest as a possible total or partial substitute
for motor gasoline in cars. Very toxic.

Middle Distillate Synthesis


(MDS)

A chemical process using the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis method for making synthetic
middle distillates (principally naphtha, kerosene and gas oil) from natural gas.

Midstream

Those activities in the gas chain related to moving gas between the source and
local distribution.

N
Naphtha

Natio al ala
(N P)

mi ture o se eral i l olatile amma le liquid dro ar o distilled rom


petroleum, coal tar or natural gas and used as fuel, solvent, or as feedstock for various
chemicals. A feedstock destined either for the petrochemical industry (e.g. ethylene
manufacture or aromatics production) or for gasoline production by reforming or
isomerisatio it i t e refi er .
i

Poi t

e N P is a ima i ar ( otio al or irtual) oi t at i all as t at as aid t e


entry charge to enter the UK National Transmission System is deemed to be located.
The point at which most UK gas trading takes place and the largest gas hub in Europe.

Natural Gas

A gaseous fuel obtained from underground sources and consisting of a complex


mixture of hydrocarbons, primarily methane, but generally also including ethane,
propane and higher hydrocarbons in much smaller amounts. It generally also includes
some inert gases, such as nitrogen and carbon dioxide (CO2), plus minor amounts of
trace constituents. Natural gas remains in the gaseous state under the temperature
and pressure conditions normally found in service.

Natural Gas Liquids


(NGLs)

Heavier hydrocarbons found in natural gas production streams and extracted for
dis osal se aratel . it i defi ed limits et a e ro a e a d uta e ma e le t i
t e as to e ri t e alorifi alue. e terms atural as liquids a d o de sates
are in practice used virtually interchangeably.

Natural Gasoline

Butanes and heavier fractions extracted from rich natural gas which, after stabilisation
(removal of the lighter fractions) may be blended into motor gasoline.

Natural Gas Vehicle (NGV)

A motorised vehicle powered by natural gas.

Net alorifi alue (N

The heat generated by the complete combustion of a unit volume of gas in oxygen,
excluding the heat which would be recovered by condensing the water vapour
formed. It is usually seen as a measure of the effective heat produced rather than
the total heat in the gas.

Nitrogen Oxides

Oxides of Nitrogen (NOx) resulting from the combustion of fuels, causing atmospheric
pollution in the form of smog.

Non-Associated Gas

Non-Associated is gas found in a reservoir which contains no crude oil, and can
therefore be produced in patterns best suited to its own operational and market
requirements.

O
Odorants

tro smelli emi als i e ted i to atural as


in order to make its presence more easily detectable.

Odorisation

e ro ess o i i odourless atural as a smell or sa et reaso s i e ti


small quantities of organic sulphur compounds, such as Mercaptans, typically at
the rate of 30 ppm. Usually carried out at the city gate or at the exit from the high
pressure transmission system.

ta e Poi t
il Gasifi atio
Open Cycle Gas Turbine
(OCGT)

ot er ise is odourless

The point in a gas system where gas is taken by supply pipe to a consumer.
The conversion of oil or naphtha into gas to be used as a fuel.
A gas turbine, often derived from aero-engines, used for peak generation of electricity.
lso used i o u tio it a steam tur i e i a om i ed le o er la t. e
only the gas turbine is used it may be termed single cycle.

43

P
Pea

a i

Pea s a i is a mea s o redu i t e ea load o t e as tra s ortatio a d


supply system by supplying some gas from sources at or close to the point of ultimate
o sum tio t us im ro i t e a era e load a tor. Pea s a i ma e dail or
seasonal and will be handled in a variety of ways e.g. underground storage, peak shaving
LNG plants, line pack, gas holders, propane-air plant and, occasionally, special peak
shaving supply contracts.

Pe ta es Plus

Often used interchangeably with Condensates or C5 ut e ludi

Petroleum

The general name for hydrocarbons, including crude oil, natural gas and NGLs. The
name is derived from the Greek word petros (rock) and the Latin word oleum (oil).

Pro a e

mem er o t e al a e ( ara fi ) rou o dro ar o s it t ree ar o atoms i


i al usa e). Liquefies at -42 .
its molecule (C3H8, often abbreviated to C3 i o -te

Pro e eser es

Those quantities of petroleum which, by analysis of geological and engineering data,


can be estimated with reasonable certainty to be commercially recoverable, from a
given date forward, from known reservoirs and under current economic conditions,
o erati met ods a d o er me t re ulatio s. Pro e ( ro ed) reser es a e
categorised as developed or undeveloped. Where probabilistic methods have been
used to estimate reserves, proven reserves are those with a better than 90% chance
o ei e o omi all re o era le. ometimes a re iated as P .

Pro a es a d uta es.

eser es it a reater t a 5 a e ut less t a


a e are defi ed as
Pro a le or P5 . eser es it a reater t a
a e ut less t a 5 a e
are Possi le or P . eser es ma e lassified as ro ed i a ilities to ro ess
and transport them to market are operational at the time of the estimate or there is a
reasonable expectation that such facilities will be installed.

R
P atio

Raw Natural Gas


e asifi atio

The reserves: production ratio is the number of years that current reserves would last
at current production levels. Thus, reserves of 100 divided by consumption of 20 / year
i es a P ratio o 5 a d im lies a li e o 5 ears or t e reser es.
Natural gas still containing impurities and unwanted substances, such as water (H2O),
nitrogen (N), carbon dioxide (CO2), hydrogen sulphide gas (H2S) and helium (He).
The reconversion of LNG into gas suitable for pipeline transportation.

Reticulation

A reticulation network is a small diameter, low pressure gas system serving residential
and commercial customers. (From the Latin word reta, meaning net).

Rich Gas

Rich gas is gas with relatively large quantities of heavier fractions in its composition
(t i all u to a out 5 ) a d t us o i alorifi alue. lso o as et Gas.

44

Sales Gas

a as a ter ro essi to elimi ate LPG o de sate a d ar o dio ide. suall


sales as o sists ie o met a e a d et a e a d is odorised.

Sour Gas

Gas containing a high level of carbon dioxide (CO2) or hydrogen sulphide (H2S), which
are acidic and corrosive in the presence of water. They may therefore need drying or
removal to conserve the pipeline.

e ifi atio

The technical description of the allowable limits of the chemical composition of gas
which may be admitted into a pipeline or process.

Spot Trading

A loose term covering the buying and selling of gas other than under a long term contract.
Generally, it means immediate delivery in trading parlance spot delivery.

Storage

For natural gas, storage facilities fall into a number of categories. Seasonal storage
om rises de leted as fields aqui ers salt a it stora e mi ed a er s a d
disused mi es. Pea stora e i ludes as olders li e a le t s o i eli e uried
s e ifi all or stora e use a d LNG stora e used eit er or ase-load or ea -s a i
duties, depending on the market. Increasingly used in liberalised markets to enable gas
to be traded at any time of the year for reasons not related to peak demand.

Sweet Gas

Gas containing little or no carbon dioxide (CO2) or hydrogen sulphide (H2S)

Synthesis gas (Syngas)

Synthetic gas mixture of hydrogen (H) and carbon monoxide (CO) produced from
methane and other hydrocarbons and steam used to produce various chemicals
notably methanol and GTL.

T
a e or Pa (

P)

A general provision in gas contracts under which, if the buyers annual purchased
volume is less than the Annual Contract Quantity minus any shortfall in the sellers
deliveries, minus any Downward Quantity Tolerance, the buyer pays for such a shortfall
as if the gas had been received. The buyer may have the right in subsequent years to
ta e t e as aid or ut ot re ei ed eit er ree or or a amou t to re e t a es
in indexed prices.

Tariff

A schedule of rates or charges offered by a common carrier or utility. Tariffs are


commonly available for all parts of the gas industry where third party access is enforced
or offered, for example for gas transmission in pipelines, for the use of gas stores, for
gas sales to residential customers.

Train

An LNG production unit.

Transmission

The transportation of huge quantities of gas at high pressures, often through national
or regional transmission systems. The gas is then transferred into local distribution
systems for supply to customers at lower pressures.

ra smissio Pi eli e
Treatment

A network of pipelines moving natural gas from a gas processing plant via compressor
stations, to storage centres or distribution points.
as urifi atio ro ess ut most e erall a lied to t e treatme t o as
immediately after production, to bring it to adequate standard for the market in question
and/or to extract valuable components for separate sale. This may involve the removal
o LPGs a d ill ertai l i ol e stri i out o de sates ar o dio ide ( 2) and
hydrogen sulphide (H2S) and other sulphur compounds mercury (Hg) and excessive
water (H2O) which may be in the raw gas.

U
Unconventional gas

Collective term for natural gas, mainly methane, found such as coal bed methane,
shale gas, gas hydrates and tight sand gas whereas conventional gas is found within
sandstone and limestone reservoir.

Upstream

Upstream typically refers to exploration, development and production of oil and gas.

V
Vapour pressure

The pressure exerted by the vapour escaping from a liquid. As the temperature of the
liquid rises, its vapour pressure increases; eventually, it exceeds the pressure of the
o fi i atmos ere a d t e liquid oils.

W
Wet Gas

Natural gas containing condensable hydrocarbons. A synonym for rich gas.

Wobbe Index

Occasionally referred to as the Wobbe number. A measure of the rate at which gas will
deliver heat on combustion and hence of the compatibility of a gas with gas burning
equipment.

Y
Yellow Tipping

Incomplete combustion whereby excess hydrocarbons can possibly result in


unacceptable levels of carbon monoxide (CO) being produced (ISO 14532).

A more detailed list of glossary terms can be obtained from the


natural gas conversion.

website, www.igu.org under the section on

45

GLOSSARY OF ABBREVIATIONS
A
ACQ
P

Annual Contract Quantity


ual eli er Pro ramme

P
ASTM

meri a Petroleum stitute


American Society for Testing and Materials

Cost and Freight


Coal Bed Methane
Combined Cycle Gas Turbine
Carbon Capture and Storage
om i ed eat a d Po er

CIF
CMM
CNG
COI
CV

Cost, Insurance and Freight


Coal Mine Methane
Compressed Natural Gas
o firmatio o te t
alorifi alue

Daily Delivery Rate

DQT

Downward Quantity Tolerance

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

FLNG

Floating LNG

Gross alorifi alue


Gas and Electricity Markets Authority

GHV
GNL

Gross Heating Value


Ga Natural Liquifi
(French language acronym for LNG)

i er alorifi alue
Higher Heating Value

HOA
HSFO

Heads of Agreement
High Sulphur Fuel Oil

International Energy Agency


International Gas Union

P
ISO

ter atio al Petroleum


a
International Organisation for
Standardisation

Lo er alorifi alue
Local Distribution Company
Lower Heating Value

LOI
LPG

Letter of Intent
Liquefied Petroleum Gas

Maximum Daily Quantity


Middle Distillate Synthesis

MDR

Maximum Daily Rate

Natio al ala i Poi t


Net alorifi alue
Natural Gas Liquids
Natural Gas Vehicle

NHV
N P
NYMEX

Net Heating Value


Ne otiated ird Part
ess
New York Mercantile Exchange

TSO

Transmission System Operator


C
C&F
CBM
CCGT
CCS
P
D
DDR
F
FERC
G
GCV
GEMA

H
HCV
HHV
I
IEA
IGU

L
LCV
LDC
LHV
M
MDQ
MDS
N
N P
NCV
NGLs
NGV
O
OCM

On the day Commodity Market

S
Syngas

Synthesis Gas

T
P
P

ird Part
a e or Pa

ess

U
UKCS
46

United Kingdom Continental Shelf

GLOSSARY OF MEASUREMENTS
B
bar
bbl
bbl/day
bcf
bcm
billion
boe

A term to specify natural gas pressure in pipelines. 1 bar is equal to 0.987 standard atmospheric pressure.
A US barrel, 1 barrel = 0.159 cubic metres = 42 U.S. gallons (approx=35 imperial gallons).
arrels er da . sed to qua ti a refi er s out ut a a it or a oilfield s rate o o .
Billion cubic feet (i.e. 109 cubic feet).
Billion cubic metres (i.e. milliard or 109 cubic metres).
In the US, 109. The natural gas industry has generally adopted the US usage.
Barrels of oil equivalent. To quantify on general energy requirements. 1 boe equals to 5.8 MMBtu gross.
British thermal unit (Btu). A unit of heat generally used in the gas industry. The most common multiple is
one million Btu, normally abbreviated to mmBtu and USD/mmBtu is the unit for comparing gas prices on a
common basis.

C
cal
cf
cm

Calorie is formerly the SI unit of energy. The most common multiple used is the Megacalorie (Mcal).
u i oot u i eet. e amou t o as required to fill a olume o o e u i oot. e term a lied to t e
volume of gas produced or consumed.
u i metre. m is also t e o fi ial a re iatio or e timetre.

G
GJ

GigaJoule = (109) oule

GWh

Giga (109) Watts hour

K
kW
kWh

KiloWatt = One thousand Watts (measurement of capacity)


KiloWatt hour = One thousand Watts per hour (measurement of consumption)

M
Mcal
mcf
mcm
mrd
MJ
mmbbl
mmBtu
mmcf

Megacalorie (one million calorie)


Thousand (103) cubic feet
Thousand (103) cubic metres
Milliard.Synonymous with US billion(109)
MegaJoule (106)
Million (106) barrels
Million (106) British thermal units
Million (106) cubic feet

mmcm
mmscf
mmscm
MT
MTOE
P
MW
MWh

Million (106) cubic metres


Million (106) standard cubic feet
Million (106) standard cubic metres
Million (106) tonnes.
Million (106) tonnes of oil equivalent
Million (106) tonnes per annum
MegaWatt. One million (106) Watts
MegaWatts hour

P
P
ppm
psi

Peta oules. sta dard u it i t e ustralia as i dustr equals to millio ( 6) GJ and nearly 1 million mmBtu.
Parts er millio
Pou ds er square i
. e ommo
lis u it o ressure 4.5 si ar.

S
scf
standard cubic foot
scm
standard cubic metre
SI Multiples These include103 kilo (k), 106 mega (M), 109 giga (G), 1012 tera (T), 1015 eta (P)

18

exa (E).

T
tBtu
tce
TJ
tcf
toe
tcm
Ton (t)

Trillion (1012) Btu


Tonne of coal equivalent
TeraJoules
Trillion (1012) cubic feet
Tonne of oil equivalent
Trillion (1012) cubic metres
To cover a variety of measures: the metric tonne (1,000 kg); the long tonne (2,240 lbs); the short tonne (2,000 lbs).

U
US $/bbl

US Dollars per barrel

W
Watt (W)

e asi u it o ele tri al o er defi ed as o e oule er se o d

47

Acknowledgement
The IGU wishes to thank and record its appreciation
to the following members of the IGU Task Force and
the respective organisations:Malaysian Gas Association (MGA)
(1) Mohd Seth Haron
(2)
o amad afiqi as im
PETRONAS
(1) Lenny Marlina Omar
(2) Nurhaslina Abu Samah (Nasha)
(3) a a Nor
i a a a aa ar
Shell
(1) Marc Van Spaandonk
(2) Jaime Lai
Tokyo Gas
(1) Hideaki Shibata
(2) Naoki Nagamura

48

Notes

49

Notes

50

51

The International Gas Union (IGU), founded in


1931, is a worldwide non-profit organisation
promoting the political, technical and economic
progress of the gas industry with the mission to
advocate for gas as an integral part of a sustainable
global energy system. IGU has more than 110
members worldwide and represents more than 95%
of the world's gas market. The members are national
associations and corporations of the gas industry.
The working organisation of IGU covers the
complete value chain of the gas industry from
upstream to downstream. For more information
please visit www.igu.org.

52

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