MPCatchup wrote:Of course once distilling crude oil becomes common then some smart hillbilly will adapt it to distill alcohol and kick start the liquor and spirits industry.
I think it has been specifically mentioned that safehold was given distillation right from the beginning, and if not it has been clearly mentioned that whiskey and other distilled alcohols are widely consumed (think Chisolmian Whiskey).
As the previous couple posters have mentioned there is no need to use electricity to refine crude oil. Also mentioned is diesel and its cousins ease of refining. But even extremely crude refining will yield many wonderful products, and as has always proven the case there is an incentive to turn today's by-product into tomorrow's product.
I think bunker oil and kerosene would the first obvious choices of target products. Bunker oil is more energy dense than coal and would significantly reduce the need for coaling stations around the world. I remember reading that when the British switched their navy over to fuel oil from coal they experienced a several knot increase in speed because the oil would burn much more efficiently than the coal they had used previously (that was one of their several key technological edges over the German High Seas fleet in WWI). And kerosene could prove even more valuable for lighting, kicking off the huge productive increase that accompanied widespread (and cheap) lighting.
Other valuable products available with minimal refining could be tars, I don't think that Siddarmark wouldn't see the advantage that asphalt would bring to their already advanced road building techniques. Petroleum Jelly (Vaseline) is a useful stabilizing agent and base for all sort of products, and is a classic example of a waste product being turned into a thousand useful (and profitable) products.
Also the Haber-Bosch process can be conducted without electricity by using a steam reformer (burning methane gas in the presence of hot high pressure steam)instead of electrolyzing water. The ability to generate effective fertilizers on industrial scales set off the green revolution here on earth allowing us to (so far) feed the global population.