Posted on 07/31/2004 1:48:26 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
Chief among the pessimists is the Association for the Study of Peak Oil, a group of European scientists who estimate that maximum oil production around the globe will peak in 2008 as demand rises from developing economies such as China... Others believe, like Maugeri, that the number of glasses is virtually limitless. John Felmy, chief economist at the American Petroleum Institute, argues that peak oil- production estimates are so far off that for all practical purposes we might as well act as if oil will flow forever. "Ever since oil was first harvested in the 1800s, people have said we'd run out of the stuff," Felmy says. In the 1880s a Standard Oil executive sold off shares in the company out of fear that its reserves were close to drying up. The Club of Rome, a nonprofit global think tank, said in the 1970s that we'd hit peak oil in 2003. It didn't happen.
(Excerpt) Read more at popsci.com ...
You pessimist you! : )
How long? Just a little shorter than that of the "Self Contained Cartridge."
In an ideal world, the members of the Association for the Study of Peak Oil would be laughed out of every serious discussion on any topic beginning in 2009. But they never are. And they never have the common courtesy to say, "What the heck do I know..."
Not exactly. My interest is more economic. Rockets and astronauts flying between planets and cities floating in space with no apparent purpose are interesting enough but don't make for a successful business. Resource extraction is the key, just like with the oil resource.
I want to know why we aren't generating electricity using the Fission age.
Afterall, it's good enough for the French.
Everybody knows already. Some may not have heard that a new permit is being applied for, and if the permit process works it could mean many new permits coming soon. Soon being 5 years in that industry.
I'm surprised that no one has chimed in yet with the theory that oil is a geologic process as opposed to rotten dinosaur.
Or the 'Anything into Oil' article that was all over about a year ago.
The Deep, Hot Biosphere
by Thomas Gold
foreword by Freeman Dyson
1992 paper
We are NOT going to run out of oil.
What we are going to run out of in America is oil that is easily obtained from areas which are environmentally approved for drilling.
To quote Jack Bruce, when it happens, "She's gone but I don't worry, for I am sitting on top of the world"!
You pessimist you! : )Heh... just call me Doctor Doom. ;')
The deal is that oil has just hit a new all time high per barrel, and that was without any special world events. So we are consuming 5 billion years of geological process in a few centuries. No big deal, we'll just burn this oil and then wait a billion years, then do it again.
Blame Haliburton greedy Exec's and Prez. Bush...
System converts smokestack heat to electricityThe key to the efficiency of the heat-scavenging system is that it uses propane vapour rather than steam to turn a turbine and drive an electricity generator. This allows it to be driven by low-temperature waste heat. When steam is used to turn a generator, it must be pressurised and raised to around 650 °C. Below 450 °C, the process no longer operates efficiently because the steam pressure drops too low. This means that the heat in flue gases below 450 °C cannot be used to generate electricity, and so is lost to the atmosphere... This is one of the reasons why fossil-fuel-powered generating stations have an overall efficiency of only around 35 per cent... Daniel Stinger, a turbine engineer, and Farouk Mian, a petroleum engineer, have developed a surprisingly simple way to harness almost all this waste heat. They calculate that a second turbine, driven by the waste heat from the first, would capture almost all the remaining energy. The first turbine's waste heat would vaporise and pressurise still more propane to drive the second... The pair calculate that flue gases will then emerge at a relatively cool 55 °C... Promising as it sounds, Wow Energy's scheme, called a cascading closed loop cycle (CCLC), remains untested... CCLC also has another potential advantage. Because it cools smokestack emissions to about 55 °C, many pollutants that enter the atmosphere today, such as mercury oxide and cadmium oxide, would instead condense inside the stack, from where they could be disposed of safely through chemical treatment.
by Bob Holmes
May 04 2004
Pentagate by Thierry Meyssan |
9/11: The Big Lie by Thierry Meyssan |
Here's what I would do instead of trying to beam energy down. I would move the metal smelting industries into space, mine a few carefully chosen asteroids for iron and aluminum, and thereby eliminate about a third of the draw on the surface power grid. It's a side benefit. The main reason for space mining is that it can be done cheaper than earth mining and can be expanded to meet future demand such as we see with China and India coming on line.
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