Gasification Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Gasification stocks.

Gasification Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Jul 3 CVX Chevron Corporation (CVX): Why Are Analysts Bullish on This Dividend Aristocrat Right Now?
Jul 3 CVX Chevron, Energy Transfer among Mizuho’s top energy picks for July
Jul 3 CVX Global Oil Firms Bet Big on Namibia Discovery Amid Energy Shift
Jul 3 CVI Sector Update: Energy Stocks Edge Higher Premarket Wednesday
Jul 3 CVX Chevron (CVX) Stock Barely Moves in a Month: An Opportunity?
Jul 3 CVX Ride the Crude Rally With These 3 Promising Energy Stocks
Jul 3 CVX Dispute Over $53B Chevron-Hess Merger Heats Up, Arbitration Panel Nears Formation: Report
Jul 2 CVI Sector Update: Energy Stocks Mixed Late Afternoon
Jul 2 CVI CVR Energy submits bid in Citgo share auction - Reuters
Jul 2 CVI Exclusive-Icahn-owned oil refiner CVR bidding in Citgo share auction, sources say
Jul 2 CVX The Supreme Court’s Judicial Earthquake Will Shake the Administrative State
Jul 2 CVX Exxon and Chevron Are Among the Safest Dividend Stocks. Check These Out, Too.
Jul 2 GLNG Institutional investors control 70% of Golar LNG Limited (NASDAQ:GLNG) and were rewarded last week after stock increased 3.9%
Jul 2 CVX Column: With its 'Chevron' ruling, the Supreme Court shows that it thinks it's smarter than scientific experts
Jul 2 CVX What the Chevron decision might mean for FDA’s nutrition policy agenda
Jul 2 CVX Supreme Court’s Chevron, Corner Post decisions could delay energy investments, spur litigation: analysts
Jul 2 CVX What the Supreme Court’s Chevron Ruling Means for the FDA
Jul 1 GLNG Golar LNG Limited – Q2 2024 results presentation
Jul 1 CVX Chevron's 4.2% Yield Is A Steal (Upgrade)
Jul 1 CVX Chevron (CVX) Confirms Exploration Rig Deployment in Namibia
Gasification

Gasification is a process that converts organic- or fossil fuel-based carbonaceous materials into carbon monoxide, hydrogen and carbon dioxide. This is achieved by reacting the material at high temperatures (>700 °C), without combustion, with a controlled amount of oxygen and/or steam. The resulting gas mixture is called syngas (from synthesis gas) or producer gas and is itself a fuel. The power derived from gasification and combustion of the resultant gas is considered to be a source of renewable energy if the gasified compounds were obtained from biomass.The advantage of gasification is that using the syngas (synthesis gas H2/CO) is potentially more efficient than direct combustion of the original fuel because it can be combusted at higher temperatures or even in fuel cells, so that the thermodynamic upper limit to the efficiency defined by Carnot's rule is higher or (in case of fuel cells) not applicable. Syngas may be burned directly in gas engines, used to produce methanol and hydrogen, or converted via the Fischer–Tropsch process into synthetic fuel. Gasification can also begin with material which would otherwise have been disposed of such as biodegradable waste. In addition, the high-temperature process refines out corrosive ash elements such as chloride and potassium, allowing clean gas production from otherwise problematic fuels. Gasification of fossil fuels is currently widely used on industrial scales to generate electricity.

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