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OIL AND GAS
Russia to build hydrogen-powered Arctic outpost in natural gas country
by Ed Adamczyk
Washington DC (UPI) Feb 03, 2020

The plant is projected to cost $13.3 million and open in 2022. Photo courtesy Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology

A new Russian-built research station that operates without oil or natural gas will be located in the heart of Moscow's greatest concentration of natural gas in the Arctic, officials said.

The autonomous Station Snezhinka, or "snowflake" complex, will be created as an international platform for engineers, researchers and scientists in Russia's sparsely-populated Yamal-Nenets region, an Arctic area about 1,000 miles northeast of Moscow.

Meant for the study of climate research, environmentally friendly life support technologies, robotics, telecommunications and smart home applications, the outpost will be entirely powered by hydrogen and renewable energy sources, officials say. Incidentally, it will sit in the region that produces 80 percent of Russia's natural gas and 12 percent of its oil.

The project is supported by the Arctic Council, an intergovernmental forum of eight countries adjoining the Arctic Ocean, and will open in 2022, a presentation said this week. Nikolay Kudryavtsev of the Moscow Physical-Technical Institute said it will cost $13.3 million and be built near Salekhard in Russia's Yamal-Nenets region.

The plan is a departure from what Yamal-Nenets Gov. Dmitry Artyukhov said just a year ago.

"[Renewable energy] is not for us," he said then. "Our mission is to produce hydrocarbons and deliver it to the markets."

Source: United Press International


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OIL AND GAS
Bats inspire detectors to help prevent oil and gas pipe leaks
Lancaster UK (SPX) Feb 03, 2020
Engineers have developed a new scanning technique inspired by the natural world that can detect corroding metals in oil and gas pipelines. By mimicking how bats use differing wavelengths of ultrasound to detect objects, hunt, and avoid predators, engineers have developed a new system that combines two separate types of radiation, fast neutrons and gamma rays, to detect corrosion - a major cause of pipeline leaks. With thousands of kilometres of pipelines used to transport oil and gas over hu ... read more

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