How natural is natural gas? In the past 30 years, the use and consumption of natural gas has increased. It is also known as hydraulic crushing or hydraulic crushing, which caused great disruption in the environment and political society. The use of natural gas is an important energy source in the world, and it is possible to generate gold rush by extracting only in the United States. Natural gas does not depend much on foreign oil, demand for coal-fired power plants decreases, and energy prices go down worldwide.
Natural gas occurs deep in the surface of the earth. Natural gas is composed mainly of methane, compounds having one carbon atom and four hydrogen atoms. Natural gas also contains small amounts of hydrocarbon gas liquids and non-hydrocarbon gases. Natural gas is used as fuel for manufacturing raw materials and chemical products. Millions of years ago, animal and plant remnants (diatoms) rotted to form a thick layer, sometimes mixed with sand and silt. Over time, these layers are buried in sand, silt and rock. Pressure and heat convert organic matter to coal, some to oil (oil), and some to natural gas. In some places, natural gas moves into large cracks or spaces between the upper layers. Elsewhere, natural gas occurs in small holes (spaces) in specific layers of shale, sandstone and other types of sedimentary rocks, where it is called shale gas or tight gas.
Natural gas is a fossil fuel produced by decomposition of organic matter in anaerobic environments (usually from ancient marine life). There are two types of natural gas reserves: conventional type and non-conventional type. Conventional deposits are related to oil reserves such as mineral deposits that are not molded, coalbed methane, shale gas, tight sandstone and so on. Like natural gas, petroleum is produced by organic decomposition under anaerobic conditions for millions of years. Petroleum supplies 40% of the national energy demand for the production of gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, propane, asphalt. Petroleum is also used for the manufacture of petrochemical products such as plastics, synthetic rubber, chemicals, etc.