Syntroleum

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Syntroleum Corporation
Type Public
Traded as NASDAQ: SYNM
Industry Engineering
Founded 1984 (1984)
Founder(s) Kenneth Agee
Headquarters Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States
Key people Edward G. Roth (President and CEO)
Products GTL and CTL technologies
Website www.syntroleum.com

Syntroleum Corporation is a United States company engaged in development and commercialization of proprietary gas to liquids (GTL) and Coal to liquids (CTL) processes known jointly as the Syntroleum Process.

History

Syntroleum was incorporated in 1984 by Kenneth Agee. It became a publicly held company on Nasdaq in August, 1998, when it merged with publicly traded SLH Corporation.[citation needed] On March 16, 2004, the compamy was reported shipping the first load of diesel from its gas-to-liquids demonstration plant at the Port of Catoosa near Tulsa to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. [1] On July 15, 2010 it was reported that Energy Opportunity Ltd out of the British Virgin Islands made the commitment to purchase $10 million in Syntroleum stock. The commitment was to purchase stock in Syntroleum over a 24 month period. Energy Opportunity was limited to a purchase no more than 4.9% of Syntroleum stock ownership.[citation needed]

Technology

The Syntroleum process produces synthetic fuel by the Fischer-Tropsch process, which can use natural gas, coal, or biomass as feedstocks. One of the unique features of the Syntroleum process is that it uses air instead of oxygen to produce synthesis gas from natural gas in the gas to liquids process.[citation needed]

Operations

Syntroleum has been working with the U. S. Air Force to develop a synthetic jet fuel blend. The Air Force, which is the U.S. military's largest user of fuel, began exploring alternative fuel sources in 1999. On December 15, 2006, a B-52 took off from Edwards AFB for the first time powered solely by a 50-50 blend of JP-8 and Syntroleum's FT fuel. The seven-hour flight test was considered a success. The goal of the flight test program was to qualify the fuel blend for fleet use on the service's B-52s, and then flight test and qualification on other aircraft.[2]

Syntroleum has opened the $15 million Dynamic Fuels facility in Geismar, Louisiana. The facility operates as a joint venture with Tyson Foods. The produces synthetic fuel by utilizing Syntroleum's technology and Tyson sourced agricultural feedstock. Starting from October, 2010, the facility produces 2,500 barrels per day (400 m3/d) or 39 million US gallons per year (150×10^3 m3/a) of synthetic fuel.[citation needed]

References

  1. "Syntroleum ships first fuel from Tulsa,". 
  2. Zamorano, Marti, "B-52 synthetic fuel testing: Center commander pilots first Air Force B-52 flight using solely synthetic fuel blend in all eight engines", Aerotech News and Review, 2006-12-22

External links

  • Syntroleum Company Website
  • Wright Patterson Air Force Base Tests Syntroleum R-8 Blend
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.