I believe drip gas is a term used by farmers who would use it in their engines as gasoline. It is the condensate, gas liquids, natural gas liquids, NGLs, etc. that is produced with wet gas. Dry gas streams would not contain much of these. Wet gas contains these liquids which most likely are treated as oil production. In wet gas not all of the liquids come out and further processing in a gas plant is required. Liquids produced are similar to gasoline and the price would be that for oil.
Sarah Violet
Can someone tell me what these mean? Gas R1, Gas R6, PPRO R6, COND R1.
Jan 6, 2013
Dick Bonnet
I used to run drip gas in a van 50-50 with gasoline. Pings a little.
Anthony is correct this is the easily condensed fractions of the natural gas and tend to be liquid at room temp.
Jan 10, 2013
Bill Hill
I believe drip gas is a term used by farmers who would use it in their engines as gasoline. It is the condensate, gas liquids, natural gas liquids, NGLs, etc. that is produced with wet gas. Dry gas streams would not contain much of these. Wet gas contains these liquids which most likely are treated as oil production. In wet gas not all of the liquids come out and further processing in a gas plant is required. Liquids produced are similar to gasoline and the price would be that for oil.
Jan 10, 2013