Agreeable_Ad3760 t1_iypuh13 wrote
Reply to comment by gibbillionreasons in Private firm prepares to send first Methane-fuelled rocket into Space by wmdolls
Methane reflects a much higher percentage of IR light back at earth relative to CO2, making it a much more potent greenhouse gas. So all things equal, it is better to burn it than leak it. Some cattle farms actually do this, capturing the cow farts to burn. It’s still primarily a fossil fuel though; the rocket industry is so niche it’s not really an issue, but long term huge consumers like national energy grids will not be able to rely on it (aka natural gas, a neat marketing ploy ;) )
mmrrbbee t1_iypwqyi wrote
Before natural gas, in the 1800’s, they used to gassify coal by putting it in pressure chambers and melting it and storing that in giant tanks. NG is naturally gas from the ground, so technically correct.
rocketsocks t1_iyuoy4h wrote
"Coal gas" (which can be produced from coal, charcoal, or even wood) used to be widely plumbed through major cities into people's homes where it was used for things like heating and cooking. Coal gas is basically the product of incomplete combustion and it contains a various mixture of different combustible and non-combustible gases including hydrogen and most importantly large amounts of carbon monoxide.
And this is precisely why there is the "trope" of committing suicide by putting your head in the oven, because with an oven fueled by coal gas if you blow out (or don't light) the pilot light and turn on the gas you will rapidly build up an area of high concentrations of carbon monoxide inside the oven. And if you put your head in there you will very quickly lose consciousness and then die as the carbon monoxide begins to convert all of the hemoglobin in your blood incapable of transporting oxygen.
Eventually people, mostly, grew wise to the risks of piping such potent poisons into people's homes and switched to the comparatively much safer natural gas (especially as it began to become more available with the boom in the petroleum industry).
However, I'll point out that natural gas usage is actually very old, dating back to the early iron age in some places, like parts of China which used bamboo pipes for drilling wells for shallow natural gas deposits and transporting the gas to the point of use, most especially to evaporate the water from brine in order to produce salt.
smithsp86 t1_iysnzs3 wrote
Technically not reflection. It absorbs and reemits.
inko75 t1_iytqs5h wrote
cows burp methane, not fart (well i assume they fart too-- but the main methane emissions from cows are burps). farms don't capture that anyhow, they store the solid waste and capture the methane released from decomposition.
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