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10.05.2011

TransGas coal-to-gasoline complex begins construction

The ceremony was conducted on the project site at Wharncliffe, West Virginia, USA. The Adams Fork Energy plant will convert regional coal into 18,000 barrels per day of premium grade, ultra clean gasoline. The facility was permitted by the State of West Virginia, and is based on Uhde’s PRENFLO PDQ gasification technology provided by Uhde Corporation of America, which belongs to the ThyssenKrupp group. Uhde Corporation of America is business partner of Uhde. Uhde is among the world leaders in coal gasification and has 70 years of experience in coal gasification.

Due to the current energy market situation, Uhde sees a significant increase in the demand for coal-based, alternative energy projects; the Adams Fork Energy plant is one that will create more independence from the oil sector and a new marketplace for coal-derived fuels. Gasification offers a number of upstream and downstream advantages in an environment of record oil and gas prices and dwindling energy reserves also worldwide. Coal gasification plants provide higher efficiency, and particularly lower emissions than conventional coal conversion plants, and allow the utilisation of low-grade feedstocks, such as coal, petcoke or biomass, for a variety of products. Uhde’s PRENFLO process is based on Uhde’s proprietary Koppers-Totzek coal gasification process which was developed 70 years ago, and has been proven for over a decade in the world’s largest single-train IGCC power plant in Puertollano, Spain.

The Adams Fork Energy coal-to-gasoline plant will be the first licensed Uhde PRENFLO gasification application in the United States. TransGas and Uhde Corporation of America had signed the license agreement as early as in December 2008, followed by the minor source permitting effort that led to the Air Permit which was issued in February 2010. The plant complex will consist of coal preparation, coal gasification, gas cleaning, methanol synthesis and a methanol-to-gasoline (MTG) technology. This coal-to-gasoline complex in Mingo County is expected to be completed by 2015.

Source: ThyssenKrupp