Regardless of where you think it may have come from, do you dispute that on a factual basis?On no, its the copy and paste from the anti-supply manifesto. I heard it 10 years ago too.
Regardless of where you think it may have come from, do you dispute that on a factual basis?On no, its the copy and paste from the anti-supply manifesto. I heard it 10 years ago too.
Regardless of where you think it may have come from, do you dispute that on a factual basis?
On no, its the copy and paste from the anti-supply manifesto. I heard it 10 years ago too.
A bus full of economists drives off a cliff into a deep mountain valley, but they are not afraid.
Why?
Because they are CERTAIN that the sudden huge demand for parachutes will be met by the invisible hand of the marketplace.
Joke? I like jokes!
A physicist, a chemist and an economist are stranded on an island, with nothing to eat. A can of soup washes ashore. The physicist says, "Lets smash the can open with a rock." The chemist says, "Let’s build a fire and heat the can first." The economist says, "Lets assume that we have a can-opener..."
Back to back one person accuses me of giving the free market to much credit and another accuses me of giving it to little!![]()
There has been off and on talk about replacing natural gas with nuclear for a few years now.
As long as you can make a profit on your own sales it really doesn’t matter if competitors make more per unit. At $40 per barrel there is officially 170 billion barrels or recoverable oil in the Canadian oil sands, but that’s based on a much lower recovery rate then they are getting in practice so the real number is likely 2-3 times that. At $100+ or $200+ oil this will be even higher. The return on energy is in the range of 6X-10X compared to 10X-20X for conventional oil and 0.8X-2X for oil shale.
A reasonable objection. And from the other side of the gulf separating the two camps are often heard very ambitious estimates of the size of various reserves, with little or no consideration given to the amount of effort (and, again, the amount of energy) required to actually extract those resources.The anti-supply arguements usually have 2 major fallacies:
1. The "that will only last us X years as our only supply" fallacy. To make this even dumber, they usually the lowest lowball estimate of the amount of oil as well supplied by some activist group.
I would like to see where you found the numbers on energy return for oil sands and shale as well. Right now, oil shale isn't economically feasible and only a few strata produce oil due to the advent of angle drilling.
Oil sands return on energy invested in only about 1.5 or so...and that doesn't include the cleanup requried.
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2009/03/canadian-oil-sands/kunzig-text/1
glenn
But I just heard a funny one. A friend of mine who leans toward conspiracy theories said, "world peak oil is behind us. the oil companies just can't let us know about it."
No. Harvesters can typically be run on grid power, since they don't need to run for weeks on end;
You must not live in the American plains. The "way of the future" is the big automatic combine fleets, all controlled by computers via GPS, running 24/7 (with some drying needed for night). If there are any operators, and there often is only one on these operations, he eats lunch in the cab - no stopping ever.
Where is the energy coming from for all these batteries?
I see. And how do you fuel these fleets of diesels?
If you're suggesting that they return to their hangars to refuel, we change the batteries there.
If you're suggesting that mobile tenders bring the fuel to them in the fields, the mobile tenders can bring batteries instead.
If you're suggesting that Scotty simply teleports the fuel into their tanks as needed, he can use the transporter to send batteries instead.
And if you're suggesting that these combine fleets carry the several thousand-gallon fuel drums they need to operate through the entire harvest season and only need to be fueled every September, I'm afraid I'd want to see pictures.
I can’t recall now where some of those figures came from. I do recall that the one for oil shale represents different deposits, ~3 for green river and the less then 1 for places in the Bakkan.
Apparently oil sands current observed ROEI is in the 5-6 range, some estimates seem to suggest better for oil shale, but that seems unlikely since it requires a lot more energy to process. Possibly some of these estimates are based on burning part of the resource itself to supply the energy needed to process the rest.
http://www.theoildrum.com/node/3839
This would work for oil sands as well, and has proposed. In that case bitumen would be upgraded to natural gas instead of light crude and the replace the natural gas used in the heating process when the bitumen is upgraded or extracted. This is probably where the upper range I gave for oil sands comes from, but I couldn’t find
Don't tell me: You want to go back to horse power......
Where is the energy coming from for all these batteries?
I think the 5-6 range is optimistic--the sites never give enough information on the calcs.
None of those (with the possible exception of the pixies) can be materialized out of thin air. They involve an investment in energy, and you don't begin to see a return on that until you've paid off the energy debt aquired during the manufacturing process.Solar, wind, geothermal, nuclear, fusion, antimatter, magic pixies,.... take your pick.