Peak Oil, Schmeak Oil.
- Mobius
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Peak Oil, Schmeak Oil.
It's always seemed to me the doom sayers were wrong. The 1000 square miles in the test area in Colorado contains over a billion, easily extractable barrels of oil. The Brazillian and Canadian oil shales (the ones which are easy to get to) contain more than 5 times the amount of oil that's ever been extracted to date.
http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/n ... 09,00.html
In other words, there's no shortage of oil in the world, and no reason oil shouldn't settle back down to a price less than $50 a barrel once oil shales are exploited.
"Peak Oil" is simply a bunch of dumb people who the oil companies have no reason to discredit, because it allows them to make record profits off the backs of uninformed consumers. *sigh*
http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/n ... 09,00.html
In other words, there's no shortage of oil in the world, and no reason oil shouldn't settle back down to a price less than $50 a barrel once oil shales are exploited.
"Peak Oil" is simply a bunch of dumb people who the oil companies have no reason to discredit, because it allows them to make record profits off the backs of uninformed consumers. *sigh*
Prices will not go down no matter WHAT they do unless refinery capacity is increased. It has not increased since 1970 and you have the militaristic liberal environmentalists to thank for that. Unless one is built you will not see the prices go down. That and Exxon and other compaies are making billions per FREAKING QUARTER and they dont give a ★■◆● about you, the consumer or the American economy. So unless they go "oh ★■◆●, we better lower the prices or else" it will not go down.
A more efficient solution however would be to hold a gun against the head's of these billionaires and "politely ask" that they "give back" to the American economy.
A more efficient solution however would be to hold a gun against the head's of these billionaires and "politely ask" that they "give back" to the American economy.
- Mr. Perfect
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Uhm --
Sounds like a lot of energy to get the oil out..While the rock is cooking, at about 650 or 750 degrees Fahrenheit, how do you keep the hydrocarbons from contaminating ground water? Why, you build an ice wall around the whole thing. As O'Connor said, it's counterintuitive.
But ice is impermeable to water. So around the perimeter of the productive site, you drill lots more shafts, only 8 to 12 feet apart, put in piping, and pump refrigerants through it. The water in the ground around the shafts freezes, and eventually forms a 20- to 30-foot ice barrier around the site.
The republicans control the house, senate, and the presidency. Blaiming 'the environmentalists' is becomming cliché. They don't have anywhere near the political sway as the oil companies. If the oil companies wanted us to be drilling in Colorado, we would be drilling in colorado. They don't.
Do you really think Bush cares about the environmentalists opinion? He wont step up and do it, because he is an 'oil baron'. With the current system the oil companies profits are through the roof. Even conservative Bill Oreilly has asked that they just 'give some money back.'Riiiiiight do you really think that the environmentalists will let any more drilling in the U.S. No President will step up and do it, even the much beloved by the left Oil Baron Bush wont do it
If refinement is the bottleneck, why is crude oil so expensive then?Sarge wrote:The problem isn't the amount of crude available, the problem is the (intentional) lack of refining capacity.
There hasn't been a major refinery built (in the US) since the 70s!
It's just oligopolist capitalism and China starting to take up a good share of oil. Plus, where there's oil, there are a$$holes
umm...Grendel wrote:Uhm --
Sounds like a lot of energy to get the oil out..While the rock is cooking, at about 650 or 750 degrees Fahrenheit, how do you keep the hydrocarbons from contaminating ground water? Why, you build an ice wall around the whole thing. As O'Connor said, it's counterintuitive.
But ice is impermeable to water. So around the perimeter of the productive site, you drill lots more shafts, only 8 to 12 feet apart, put in piping, and pump refrigerants through it. The water in the ground around the shafts freezes, and eventually forms a 20- to 30-foot ice barrier around the site.
Sounds pretty good to me. A lot better than hydrogen fuel cells anyway.Rocky Mountain News wrote:The energy balance is favorable; under a conservative life-cycle analysis, it should yield 3.5 units of energy for every 1 unit used in production. The process recovers about 10 times as much oil as mining the rock and crushing and cooking it at the surface, and it's a more desirable grade.
Recovery from oil shales or tar sands; if it were as easy and potentially profitable as the article suggests, then why aren't at least some producers tripping over themselves to do it?
Maybe because they don't believe the economics quoted. Maybe because there's more involved in infrastructure layout required here than is well understood.
Maybe because they don't believe the economics quoted. Maybe because there's more involved in infrastructure layout required here than is well understood.
I think y'all are reading that sentence wrong. It should be commercially viable at >=$30/barrel, not <=$30/barrel. Meaning it's already commercially viable and has been for quite a while.
Although I doubt their claim of a 3.5:1 energy payoff. I'll bet that's for the heating portion only and that the sustained refrigeration portion of the energy budget isn't reflected in it.
I am fully prepared to be incorrect in both of my assertions above.
Although I doubt their claim of a 3.5:1 energy payoff. I'll bet that's for the heating portion only and that the sustained refrigeration portion of the energy budget isn't reflected in it.
I am fully prepared to be incorrect in both of my assertions above.
interesting.
but is anyone else asking to this statement:
why is more recovered through non-lab (not on the surface) conditions? it doesn't add up to me.
but is anyone else asking to this statement:
WHY?The process recovers about 10 times as much oil as mining the rock and crushing and cooking it at the surface, and it's a more desirable grade.
why is more recovered through non-lab (not on the surface) conditions? it doesn't add up to me.
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who was talking about creating energy?Ferno wrote:uhm.. you can't create energy. it always has a 1:1 ratio. meaning energy remains constant, but changes form.
the energy payoff means the energy "profit".
like an energy investment - you use a certain amount of energy to mine a bigger amount of energy.