LNG and Natural Gas Facilities: Anastroy in the Engineering of Cold and Pressure
At the heart of energy geopolitics today, no resource is as decisive as liquefied natural gas (LNG). LNG technology — which cools natural gas to as low as -162 °C, shrinking its volume by roughly 600 times and thus making it transportable across oceans — is rewriting the rules of global energy trade. Yet the magnificent scale of this technology brings extraordinary engineering challenges with it. Extreme cold (cryogenic) conditions, massive pressurized systems, and unforgiving safety standards place LNG facilities among the most complex industrial structures on Earth.


