, Columnist
BBQ Gas Is Helping to Cool a Warming Planet
The good gas.
Photo: Sean Gallup/Getty Images
There are plenty of sophisticated materials that the world is counting on to limit global warming. Polysilicon for solar panels. Rare-earth magnets for wind turbines. Lithium for electric vehicle batteries. But propane?
Believe it or not, the fossil hydrocarbon — produced from oil and gas wells, and mostly used as a cooking and heating fuel for barbecues, boilers and domestic stoves — may help turn the tide on some of the most damaging greenhouse gases humans have ever produced. Isobutane, another popular BBQ fuel, has a similar role to play, as do ammonia and even carbon dioxide.
