Liberty Oilfield Services : The Next Generation of Fracturing Fleets, A Liberty ESG Evaluation
January 17, 2020 at 04:54 pm
Share
The Next Generation of Fracturing Fleets, A Liberty ESG Evaluation
January 17, 2020|News Stories
We are excited to release a new whitepaper from Roy Aune, Chris Wright, and Madison Hollaway that analyzes a parallel shift towards natural gas' growing role in powering hydraulic fracturing fleets. In the electric power sector, the rise of natural gas has been displacing coal. In the frac fleet world, natural gas is displacing diesel either through dual fuel engine technology or via natural gas turbine powered electric frac fleets. This shift provides significant environmental and economic benefits. Head over to the technical library to download the full paper!
Posted in News Stories
Post navigation
← Dr. Leen Weijers Presented on Frac Trends in Liquid-Rich Basins at the December SPE Denver Luncheon
Attachments
Original document
Permalink
Disclaimer
Liberty Oilfield Services Inc. published this content on 17 January 2020 and is solely responsible for the information contained therein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 17 January 2020 21:53:06 UTC
Liberty Energy Inc. is an integrated energy services and technology company. The Company is focused on providing hydraulic services and related technologies to onshore oil and natural gas exploration and production companies in North America. It offers customers hydraulic fracturing services, together with complementary services, including wireline services, proppant delivery solutions, field gas processing and treating, compressed natural gas delivery, data analytics, related goods (including its sand mine operations), and technologies. It primarily provides its services in the Permian Basin, the Williston Basin, the Eagle Ford Shale, the Haynesville Shale, the Appalachian Basin (Marcellus Shale and Utica Shale), the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin, the Denver-Julesburg Basin, and the Anadarko Basin. The process of hydraulic fracturing involves pumping a pressurized stream of fracturing fluid (typically a mixture of water, chemicals and proppant) into a well casing or tubing.