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Rental Compression
www.RentalCompression.com
We Want Your Gas Compressor
Business!
* Rental
Compression
* Contract
Compression
*
Contract Gas Compression
Our contract compression services include:
designing/engineering
sourcing
owning
installing/commissioning
operating, servicing, repairing and maintaining
gas compressors to provide reliable and dependable
gas compression to our customers.
* Gas Compressor Sales
(new and used)
We GUARANTEE 98% monthly mechanical availability
on our gas compressor packages we provide under our contract compression
services agreement.
Our goals are to provide our customers with:
1. Best Price
2. Best Service
For a no-cost, no-obligation quotation on
your next gas
compressor,
Please
CLICK HERE to complete our form
found on this link
and email
back to us - allowing one full business day
to provide our quote.
Gas
Compressors, Inc.
www.GasCompressorsInc.com
We Want to be Your Gas Compression Company!
For a No-cost, No-obligation Quote for your Next
Gas Compressor Purchase
or Contract Compression Services, please
click here to complete our on-line form
The clean-burning properties of natural gas make it
one of the preferred fuels for "clean power generation."
Natural gas consumption
(in the United States) for the power generation sector is projected to increase from 5.0 trillion cubic feet in 2003 to 9.4 trillion cubic feet in 2025.
This
means there is a significant market opportunity for gas compressors and
for providing gas compression services as well as gas gathering, gas
compression, gas transmission and gas storage.

Joint-Venture Partners Wanted for Natural Gas Opportunities
Through
our strategic positioning and our founder's 20 years experience and
business relationships in the natural gas industry, we have the unique
ability to learn about new natural gas opportunities before most of our
competitors. This provides us with a strategic competitive advantage
and the "first look" at new natural gas projects - that we will
either pursue, or pass on.
We are
seeking joint venture partners interested in the natural gas market
opportunities in the U.S. There is no other company better
positioned to provide these natural gas products and services than
us! Interested joint venture partners are welcome to call (800) 983
- 0672 to find out more about us and our joint venture opportunities in
the natural gas markets.
About Gas Compressors
We provide "vendor-neutral" gas compressor sales, rentals and services. About
Fuel Gas Boosters
We provide "vendor-neutral"
fuel gas booster sales, rentals and services. About
Rental Compression
We provide
Rental Compression services.
Cooler,
Cleaner, Greener Power & Energy Solutions project
development services are one of our many specialties. These projects are
Kyoto Protocol compliant and generate clean energy and significantly
fewer greenhouse gas emissions. Unlike most companies, we are equipment
supplier/vendor neutral. This means we help our clients select the best
equipment for their specific application. This approach provides our
customers with superior performance, decreased operating expenses and
increased return on investment.
Cogeneration
Technologies provides
project development services that generate clean energy and
significantly reduce greenhouse
gas emissions and carbon
dioxide emissions. Included in this are our
turnkey "ecogeneration"
products and services which includes renewable
energy technologies, waste to
energy, waste to watts and waste
heat recovery solutions. Other project development
technologies include; Anaerobic
Digester, Anaerobic Lagoon, Biogas
Recovery, BioMethane, Biomass
Gasification, and Landfill Gas
To Energy, project development services.
Products and
services provided by Cogeneration Technologies includes the following
power and energy project development services:
-
Project
Engineering Feasibility & Economic Analysis Studies
-
Engineering,
Procurement and Construction
-
Environmental
Engineering & Permitting
-
Project
Funding & Financing Options; including Equity Investment, Debt
Financing, Lease and Municipal Lease
-
Shared/Guaranteed
Savings Program with No Capital Investment from Qualified Clients
-
Project
Commissioning
-
3rd
Party Ownership and Project Development
-
Long-term
Service Agreements
-
Operations
& Maintenance
-
Green
Tag (Renewable Energy Credit, Carbon Dioxide Credits, Emission
Reduction Credits) Brokerage Services; Application and Permitting
-
Gas
Gathering System Sales, Design, Appraisals
-
Flare
Gas Recovery
-
Gas
Compressors
-
Glycol
Dehydrators
-
Heater
Treaters
-
Natural
Gas Measurement
-
Vapor
Recovery Units
-
Engineering
and Economic Feasibility Studies
-
Project
Design & Permitting
-
Project
Construction
-
Project
Funding & Financing Options
-
Operations
& Maintenance
For
more information: call us at: 832-758-0027
We
are Renewable Energy
Technologies specialists and develop clean power and energy projects
that will generate a "Renewable
Energy Credit," Carbon
Dioxide Credits and Emission
Reduction Credits. Some of our products and services solutions
and technologies include; Absorption
Chillers, Adsorption Chillers,
Automated Demand Response, Biodiesel
Refineries, Biofuel Refineries,
Biomass Gasification, BioMethane,
Canola Biodiesel, Coconut
Biodiesel, Cogeneration, Concentrating
Solar Power, Demand Response
Programs, Demand Side
Management, Energy
Conservation Measures, Energy
Master Planning, Engine Driven
Chillers, Geothermal Heatpumps,
Groundsource Heatpumps, Solar
CHP, Solar Cogeneration, Rapeseed
Biodiesel, Solar Electric
Heat Pumps, Solar
Electric Power Systems, Solar
Heating and Cooling, Solar
Trigeneration, Soy Biodiesel, Trigeneration,
and Watersource Heatpumps.
About Gas Compressors
We provide "vendor-neutral" gas compressor sales, rentals and services. About Gas
Gathering
The physical facilities that accumulate and transport
natural gas from a well to an acceptance point of a transportation
pipeline are called a gas gathering system.
Prior to FERC Order 636 in 1992, many interstate pipeline companies had
a completely integrated supply system that was capable of delivering
natural gas from the wellhead to the ultimate retail gas consumer. But,
following Order 636, which separated gathering, marketing, and
transmission operations, many pipeline companies reorganized and broke
up this system into discrete parts and assigned them to affiliated
companies.
The facilities, functions, and services required for gathering,
processing, and transportation were placed in affiliated companies or
were spun off or sold to other companies. Since most gas prices were no
longer regulated, gas gathering service charges became subject to market
forces and were a function of buyer/seller negotiation, isolated from
the transmission charges imposed by the pipeline transporter.
More about Gas Gathering:
The corporate reorganizations brought about under the influence of FERC
Order 636 caused a shift in the jurisdictional entities regulating the
various facilities and services. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
(FERC) had once regulated the entire integrated interstate pipeline
system, but after the reorganizations, FERC became the regulating entity
for only the interstate pipeline transportation and processing facilities
and services. The spun-off or affiliated gathering facilities and services
generally fell under state jurisdiction or other Federal agencies, such as
the Department of the Interior, but in some cases FERC maintained
jurisdiction. Especially unclear, and still contested in 2004, is the
jurisdictional status of some Gulf of Mexico gathering systems.
These cases involve FERC's reclassification of portions of a pipeline's
system operating on the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) as
non-jurisdictional gathering facilities and FERC's determination that a
pipeline company can transfer those facilities to its non-jurisdictional
gathering affiliate. The key consideration in these, and similar onshore
cases, is that FERC retains rate jurisdiction over those reclassified
facilities that the pipeline retains and thus may regulate rates charged
for transportation on the pipeline's own gathering facilities performed in
connection with jurisdictional transportation. Rates on non-jurisdictional
facilities are market based and not subject to FERC oversight or review.
Consequently, some shippers have raised complaints that rates on
non-jurisdictional facilities may exceed a reasonable rate by an undue
degree.
As a result of FERC's decision in Order 636 to promote competition by
requiring interstate pipelines to "unbundle" their previously
bundled sales and transportation into separate services and to transport
natural gas for all qualified shippers, some such pipelines have sought to
shed OCS facilities that primarily perform a gathering function.
Accordingly, those pipelines have asked FERC to reclassify OCS facilities
that were previously classified as transportation, and to authorize
"spin-downs" of OCS gathering facilities to affiliates.
To differentiate jurisdictional transportation and non-jurisdictional
gathering for pipelines, FERC for many years has employed two principal
tests. Under the "behind-the-plant" test, facilities upstream of
compressors and processing plants (i.e., toward the wellhead where the gas
comes out of the ground) were presumptively gathering facilities, while
facilities downstream of the plants (i.e., toward the consumer) were
presumptively transportation facilities. For gas that requires no
processing, FERC employed a "central-point-in-the-field" test,
under which lateral lines that collect and transport gas from separate
wells that then converge into a single large line were classified as
gathering facilities, while facilities downstream of the collection point
in a field were classified as transportation. Since 1983, FERC has
subsumed those two tests into a "primary function" test that
focuses on a number of physical factors (e.g., length, diameter, and
configuration of a pipeline) and certain other criteria, to determine
whether facilities are primarily devoted to gathering or transportation.
Under the primary function measure, no one factor is determinative, nor do
all factors apply in every situation.
FERC developed its primary function test in the context of onshore
gathering patterns. For natural gas produced on the Outer Continental
Shelf (OCS), pipelines generally are configured differently and typically
do not gather gas at a local, centralized point within a field as they
would onshore to prepare it for traditional transportation. As stated in
EP Operating Co. v. FERC (5th Circuit, 1989), "Rather, on the OCS,
relatively long lines are constructed to carry the raw gas from offshore
platforms where 'only the most rudimentary separation and dehydration
operations' are conducted, to the shore or a point closer to shore, where
it can be processed into 'pipeline quality' gas." It also notes that
pipelines on the OCS must construct large pipes to carry (often over a 100
miles away) the raw gas from offshore rigs to the shore for processing. In
response to the practical and physical differences between onshore and
offshore pipeline configurations, FERC modified its primary function test
for the OCS to allow for the increasing length and diameter of OCS
gathering lines, and later announced that it would "presume
facilities located in deep water [over 200 feet] are primarily engaged in
gathering or production."
* Some of the above information from the Department
of Energy website with permission.
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