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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by MisplacedFate1313 (talk | contribs) at 00:19, 27 March 2009. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

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More information?

Given the shortness of the article, and this company's prominence in terms of being the world leader in synthetic fuel production (the future growth of which is largely inevitable), it can't hurt to have perhaps a little bit more info here on Sasol's history and the technologies they produce. I don't mean to include a lot of information that might have POV problems, ie biased data from the Sasol website. So I'm putting the info here for comment - and perhaps some or all of it can be rephrased in an encyclopedic syntax, by you or by me, for sometime in the future.

"The history of Sasol began in 1927 when a White Paper was tabled in Parliament to investigate the establishment of a South African oil-from-coal industry.

It was realised then that, because South Africa did not have crude oil reserves, the country's balance of payments had to be protected against increasing crude oil imports. After many years of research and international negotiations, the South African Coal Oil and Gas Corporation was formed in 1950.

From its first eight drums of creosote to the acquisition of the German CONDEA Group in 2001, Sasol is a company whose success has been founded on innovative thinking. Major milestones include our first automotive fuel (1955), the construction of the National Petroleum Refiners of South Africa (1967) and the establishment in 1990 of our first international marketing company, Sasol Chemicals Europe, which paved the way for our globalisation programme." - www.Sasol.com company history page

Here is some additional info from an article already referenced on this wiki. Again, rewording is necessary to eliminate biased phrasing, but still some very valid information here:

"...It's not at all hyperbolic to observe that the apartheid regime picked up where the Nazis left off when it came to producing gasoline from coal. Nazism, apartheid, and international sanctions created a fuel source that might never have existed in a better world.

The circuitous travels of the Fischer-Tropsch process, a chemical technique to convert natural gas and coal into liquid fuels, provide an object lesson in historical irony. Used by the Nazis to make oil from coal during World War II, it was commercialized by the century's second-most-odious racial supremacist regime in the 1950s through South Africa's state energy company. Now, that privatized company, Sasol, may help liberate Western democracies (and non-Western ones, like India) from the grip of crude oil produced largely by loathsome authoritarian regimes." - www.slate.com "Thanks for the Cheap Gas, Mr. Hitler!" By Daniel Gross

If you are interested, as I am, in the historical implications and technological developments of this industry, I hope you'll help contribute to this article. Thanks - MisplacedFate1313 (talk) 00:19, 27 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]