Oil shale gas has served as a substitute for
natural gas. In the 19th century and in the beginning of the 20th century oil shale gas was used as illuminating gas. In the 1920s, gas plants in
Tallinn and
Tartu produced oil shale gas as a
town gas. Since 1948, Estonian-produced oil shale gas was used in
Leningrad and the cities in North Estonia. For this purpose, 276 gas generators were operational in
Kohtla-Järve until 1987. As oil shale gas often occurs as a byproduct of shale oil extraction, depending on the processing technology, it may be used for heating the pyrolysis process. ==References==