Posted on 05/04/2015 5:51:20 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
A report in The New York Times published on Monday revealed that the Chinese are aggressively engaged in securing the countrys energy future overseas. The Peoples Republic is courting Latin American governments, securing its ties to African strongmen, is building up a military presence in the South China Sea, and has sent hundreds of advisors to the Caribbean; all in pursuit of energy security.
One of the PRCs latest targets is the frozen continent of Antarctica, where an international accord reached in 1959 prohibits mining and military activity. But [Chinese President Xi Jinpings visit to a south Australian port last autumn] was another sign that China is positioning itself to take advantage of the continents resource potential when the treaty expires in 2048, The Times reported, or in the event that it is ripped up before, Chinese and Australian experts say.
And the stakes are high for China and every other nation interested in exploiting the resources beneath Antarctica. If the accord does expire, Antarctica could become the next major source of hydrocarbons on earth. The region is believed to have an approximate 200 billion barrels of oil, in addition to being the largest single repository of fresh water on the planet, Business insider reported.
Thats right. 200. Billion. Barrels of oil. And over 90 percent of the worlds freshwater ice mass.
The very existence of the southern continent undermines virtually every apocalyptic climate change argument ever made.
The document, released Thursday, is a kind of road map of hazards meant to help U.S. intelligence agencies decide which of the worlds biggest problems to study most intensively over the next four years, Foreign Policy reported last year. Water shortages, as well as fierce competition for food and energy, will continue to bedevil leaders in the United States and abroad, the document concludes.
But necessity is the mother of invention, and the imperative of having access to fresh water is the mother of all necessity.
As for the thoroughly debunked concept of peak oil, that theory fell out of favor when hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling technology revolutionized the energy exploitation industry. As a result of the discovery of a vast reserve of crude under Antarctica, that hypothesis should now be dead and buried. It is, however, instructive to revisit the doomsday predictions associated with that theory, too.
In 2005, The New York Times noted that American regularity agencies were warning that the irreversible depletion of the worlds oil reserves was imminent:
One of the starkest warnings came in a February report commissioned by the United States Department of Energys National Energy Technology Laboratory. Because oil prices have been relatively high for the past decade, oil companies have conducted extensive exploration over that period, but their results have been disappointing, stated the report, assembled by Science Applications International, a research company that works on security and energy issues. If recent trends hold, there is little reason to expect that exploration success will dramatically improve in the future. . . . The image is one of a world moving from a long period in which reserves additions were much greater than consumption to an era in which annual additions are falling increasingly short of annual consumption. This is but one of a number of trends that suggest the world is fast approaching the inevitable peaking of conventional world oil production.
In fact, the only argument that the self-described scientific community can muster in order to preserve the viability of these and other nightmare scenarios is by erecting still more nightmare scenarios about what would happen if these resources were exploited. Many will resent being held accountable for their predictions that never materialized, but those who claim they are purely empirical shouldnt be spared from being exposed to the evidence against them. While the so-called scientific community will attempt to shame those who read their past work into keeping quiet about it, it would be irresponsible to fail to remind the most apocalyptic voices around us of their dubious track records.
Google Dr Thomas Gold and “deep hot biosphere”.
But don’t worry - climate scientologists will explain why we all have to sit in the dark, freezing and starving.
Just got my Ted Cruz news letter in my email.
Oh and forget about oil, somebody somewhere said we would run out 20 years ago :)
Concur. Empirical evidence supports the Soviet theory.
Looks like while be using internal combustion engines as far into the future that anyone can see.
Thanks.
In my opinion, the 'abiotic' theory of crude oil's origin makes a lot more sense than the dino theory ever did.
I'm willing to bet that, in the not-so-distant future, we'll discover oil on other planets and moons that have always been devoid of life.
I don’t see how Antarctica as a fresh water source makes any sense. Far cheaper to desalinate seawater than capture and transport ice/freshwater from the bottom of the Earth.
There was an idea some years ago to drag icebergs here from the arctic, but I don’t think it went through.
If you recall the annoying Dassault Systemes ad that was on TV last year or so, they showed that they had done the math on towing icebergs.
I looked up the paper on that. Turns out that you can drag icebergs, but they melt really quickly when you get them into warmer water (who knew?). If you double the horsepower (2 tugs), you can move it a tiny bit faster. It also melts faster. If you can encase the whole thing in an insulator, you might be able to get some water to your equatorial desert destination.
But the enviro's might object to your use of a square mile of Styrofoam.
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