You have the crude. We have the plant.
ThinkEnergy's modular processing plant converts crude oil and condensate into ultra-low-sulfur diesel on-site — no pipeline, no logistics chain, no centralized infrastructure. Operational in 90 days.
One plant. Crude in. Diesel out.
The ThinkEnergy modular processing plant is a compact, containerized facility that converts crude oil and condensates into ultra-low-sulfur diesel at or near the point of production — with no pipeline required.
Condensates
Diesel
No pipeline.
No waiting.
No dependency.
Conventional refining infrastructure takes years to build and requires massive capital investment. The ThinkEnergy plant is designed to deploy in 90 days on a 2-acre footprint — scalable as your operation grows, without the overhead of centralized infrastructure.
Millions of gallons produced and sold. The technology has been validated by Texas A&M University and proven in the marketplace across multiple active installations.
From contract
to first barrel.
Four steps from initial evaluation to on-site fuel production. The entire process from contract signature to operational plant takes 90 to 120 days — no large civil works, no pipeline dependency.
Assessment
You get: A clear viability report showing your processing potential and estimated cost savings versus purchased diesel.
Configuration
You get: A plant design tailored to your operation, one built around your crude, your volume, and your location.
Installation
You get: A fully operational processing plant on your site, before the next fuel delivery truck arrives.
Production
You get: Full control of your fuel supply chain, independent of market price swings, logistics disruptions, or third-party availability.
Built for operators who recognize the problem.
If your operation runs on purchased diesel and has crude or condensate accessible on-site, the economics of on-site processing apply directly to you.
Remote mining sites run continuous fleets of heavy equipment on diesel trucked from terminals hundreds of kilometers away. Every delivery adds logistics cost and supply interruption risk.
A modular processing plant deployed at the mine site converts available crude or condensate into diesel on-site — eliminating the logistics chain and transforming fuel from a variable cost into a controlled operational input.
mining operations
Operators running diesel generators in Non-Interconnected Zones pay the highest effective electricity costs in the world — because every kilowatt-hour carries the full logistics premium of the fuel behind it.
On-site processing converts crude into generator fuel at a fraction of the purchased diesel cost — turning energy generation from a cost center dependent on supply chains into a self-sufficient operational function.
conventional refining
The IMO MARPOL 0.5% sulfur cap has made compliant bunker fuel significantly more expensive and harder to source in remote ports and offshore locations. Operators near offshore production pay market price for what sits below them.
ThinkEnergy produces ultra-low-sulfur marine fuel validated by Texas A&M University to meet the MARPOL 0.5% cap — processed from nearby crude production at a fraction of the cost of purchasing compliant bunker fuel at port.
Texas A&M validated
Producers with associated condensate typically sell it at a significant discount to crude, flare it, or leave it stranded — while simultaneously purchasing diesel at market price to power their own operations.
Convert that discounted condensate into high-quality diesel on-site — capturing the full downstream value of a resource you already own, without additional pipeline infrastructure or third-party refining arrangements.
condensate into revenue
The comparison tends to be straightforward.
Your diesel invoice is the starting point. The full cost of purchased fuel — once logistics, risk, and carbon liability are included — looks very different from on-site processing.
If your operation has access to crude or condensate and runs on purchased diesel, ThinkEnergy can show you exactly what on-site processing would cost versus what you are paying today. The comparison tends to be straightforward.