NGLs definition

NGLs means natural gas liquids.
NGLs means natural gas liquids, which are the heavier hydrocarbon liquids that are separated from the gas stream; such liquids include ethane, propane, isobutane, normal butane and natural gasoline.
NGLs means the propane and heavier components of Natural Gas that can be classified according to their vapor pressures; as low vapor pressure (Condensate), intermediate vapor pressure (Natural Gasoline) and high vapor pressure (LPG).

More Definitions of NGLs

NGLs means the liquid hydrocarbons extracted from gas through Processing, including such constituents or components as ethane, propane, iso-butane, normal butane, natural gasolines, incidental methane, and other miscellaneous liquids that are associated with those liquid hydrocarbons.
NGLs means natural gas liquids, including pentanes-plus (or condensate) (C5+), ethane (C2), propane (C3) and butane (C4).
NGLs means natural gas liquids products, including, without limitation, ethane, propane, ethane/propane mix, iso-butane, normal butane and natural gasoline and any other natural gas liquids or combination or mixes thereof.
NGLs has the meaning assigned to such term in the Definitions Agreement.
NGLs means any hydrocarbon found in Natural Gas which may be extracted or isolated as liquefied Petroleum.
NGLs means the mixture of liquid hydrocarbons and non-hydrocarbon components that are condensed, adsorbed and/or absorbed from or separated out of natural gas currently and subsequently processed in the Plant(s). Unless otherwise mutually agreed, NGL’s shall not include field condensate recovered in gas gathering systems.
NGLs means ethane, propane, methane, normal butane, isobutane, and C5+, and, depending on the context (a) mixtures thereof that are present in Gas as Tendered into the TGP System for the System Services, (b) mixtures thereof that are in a liquid state as Tendered into the TGP System for the System Services (“Injected NGLs”), or (c) mixtures thereof that exist as recovered products after extraction, whether as a combined mixture, raw make, or Y-Grade stream, or as individual product components after fractionation.