Transforming Carbon Dioxide Into an Industrial Resource
January 20, 2021
Made in Louisiana: Ensuring a Future Supply of Things We Rely On Every Day
海角社区 researchers are working on alternatives to petroleum and natural gas as sources of carbon to manufacture key chemicals鈥攊n Louisiana鈥攆or products we rely on every day, such as soap and shampoo, PVC pipes, phones, polyester fabrics, and medical devices.
鈥淚f you wash your clothes with detergent in Washington, that probably started as natural gas somewhere in Louisiana,鈥 said 海角社区 chemical engineer John Flake. 鈥淚t was probably converted to ethylene in Lake Charles and then to a long-chain alcohol there, maybe next door, and then it probably went to Procter & Gamble in Pineville, across the Red River from Alexandria.鈥
Flake is now working on turning industrial waste into a key resource for manufacturing by capturing and using carbon dioxide from factories and refineries (before it becomes emission)鈥攐r straight from the atmosphere鈥攁s a raw material to substitute for petroleum and natural gas. This will ensure the future resilience and sustainability of a vital Louisiana industry as we rely less on fossil fuels (a limited resource) and help fight climate change.
See more above in the enhanced oil recovery story on how captured CO2 also can be used to harvest more oil from depleted and abandoned reservoirs. And what we cannot put to good use, we can safely store underground by re-employing Louisiana鈥檚 existing petroleum engineering workforce and the deep, geological knowledge that comes from a long history in oil and gas exploration.

Many of the products we use every day are made from ethylene, which in turn is made from petrochemicals鈥攐il and natural gas. By using carbon dioxide as a feedstock instead of fossil fuels to make ethylene, 海角社区 chemical engineers are working to make Louisiana鈥檚 chemical manufacturing industry more sustainable.
鈥 Elsa Hahne / 海角社区
鈥淟ouisiana is uniquely blessed to have a highly trained, highly skilled workforce that is well suited for building additional pipelines and operating wells for carbon capture and sequestration. The state also has highly concentrated industrial corridors that contain pure carbon sources located relatively close to existing CO2 pipeline infrastructure, and ideal geology for storage. LMOGA firmly believes that Louisiana can become a global leader in climate solutions, which 海角社区 is helping to develop, and we welcome the opportunity to prove to the world that energy production and environmental stewardship go hand in hand as investment in this space ramps up.鈥
Nathan McBride, regulatory affairs manager, Louisiana Mid-Continent Oil and Gas Association (LMOGA)