Natural Gas Compressors

Millions of miles of pipeline. Tens of thousands of engines. A methane liability that compounds every year.

A close up of a blue flame on a stove

Challenges.

Challenges.

The United States operates over 2.5 million miles of natural gas pipeline supported by roughly 650 compression stations, most powered by reciprocating engines. Independent measurements show these engines slip methane at nearly twice manufacturer specifications — a gap regulators and carbon markets will close.

Alternatives

Alternatives

The economics are already here. Canadian operators face $70 per ton CO₂e today, rising to $170 by 2030. California and Washington markets trade $30 to $70 per ton. At Endaris's $5 per ton abatement cost, the payback case pencils today — no future regulation required.

Opportunity

Opportunity

The retrofit opportunity is uniquely durable. Unlike new-build markets that rise and fall with capital cycles, the installed engine base only grows. Every year's new installations become future retrofit demand, creating compounding long-term revenue as carbon pricing expands and compliance obligations tighten.