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#31
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Private wrote:
I just found this on another forum, facts not verified, Why not? Got time to forward something without caring if it's true or not? Interesting view of responsibility. I'm just sayin'. |
#32
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"P" == Private writes:
P I just found this on another forum, facts not verified, no P commentary made. Huge Dakota oil pool could change energy P climate debate Then let's get some facts. The USGS just released a new assessment of the Bakken. "3 to 4.3 Billion Barrels of Technically Recoverable Oil Assessed in North Dakota and Montana's Bakken Formation--25 Times More Than 1995 Estimate" http://www.usgs.gov/newsroom/article.asp?ID=1911 See also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakken_Formation. Apparently the Bakken formation has been known for decades, but its potential usable oil estimates not so well known. As for changing the climate debate, that will happen only among republicans, religionists, and rednecks. Science continues without regard to politics of greed and convenience. -- I prayed for twenty years but received no answer until I prayed with my legs. ~ Frederick Douglass, escaped slave |
#33
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote Both parties are to blame for the energy mess we're in. Neither party offers any answers. We *need* a third political party in the U.S. I'm not so sure that would help, until you get rid of the special interest group lobby on the politicians. -- Jim in NC |
#34
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Jay Honeck wrote:
http://tinyurl.com/54rp3x Whoops! Another utopian idea reinforced.... ;-) My clues that it's nothing to pop champagne corks over just yet, from the article referenced: 1. "may have discovered..." 2. "did not provide any details about... his information, except to say it came from "nonofficial, non-confirmed sources." 3. "Oil prices were unaffected by the news." It could be confirmed, but so far the leading indicators, as economists like to say, don't look very fired up about the claim. I'd applaud as warmly as any if we found a humongous source of new energy, though it sure would be nice if we weren't arguing over cleaner sources not being worth developing. That's just giving a free ride to oil-baron press releases. |
#35
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![]() "Private" wrote in message ... I just found this on another forum, facts not verified, no commentary made. Huge Dakota oil pool could change energy climate debate By Dennis T. Avery web posted April 14, 2008 And an announcement today from Brazil. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080414/...NIYFQAZQSAsnsA |
#36
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In article Stella Starr writes:
Eh. I lived around there, had friends who went off to work in the North Dakota oil fields a time or two. Every time petroleum goes through the roof in price, someone reopens the oil shale fields, which require an astronomical amount of work and expenditure to wring oil from the rock. Back when oil was getting close to $30/barrel, an article on cnn.com commented that there was a huge amount of oil in oil shale, but it would not be economical to extract unless oil got to $40/barrel. Well, at $100 per barrel, it seems that the oil companies are hoping for even more profit when they finally decide to get it. Alan |
#37
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![]() "Private" wrote in message ... "Private" wrote in message ... I just found this on another forum, facts not verified, no commentary made. Huge Dakota oil pool could change energy climate debate By Dennis T. Avery web posted April 14, 2008 And an announcement today from Brazil. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080414/...NIYFQAZQSAsnsA That is potentially a very good find. But keep in mind that only about 35% of an oil reservoir can be economically extracted. (Less hope future advances are made). So if the world uses 85M barrel a day ....... So about 135 days of world's supply. |
#38
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On 2008-04-15, Jay Honeck wrote:
Whether it's 4 billion, or 400 billion barrels -- who cares? It's *ours*. Well, actually, it's not; it belongs to the companies that extract it. It will be therefore traded on the world market along with all the other oil. Oil companies, like any other firm, want to maximise their profits and so will sell the oil where it's most profitable to sell it. So it'll barely change oil prices. To make it "your" oil, you would have to take the socialist step of making it a nationalised industry. To make it lower the cost of oil in the United States, you'd also have to make it a nationalised industry selling below market price. The country 50 miles to the right of me is a net exporter of oil (the UK). That's where Brent sweet crude comes from, one of the benchmark prices. Their oil price goes up and down with the global market just like everyone else's. Being an oil producing country does not get you a price break from the global oil market. -- From the sunny Isle of Man. Yes, the Reply-To email address is valid. |
#39
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On Apr 14, 11:00 pm, "Jay Honeck" wrote:
If I am not mistaken, current world consumption is about 85 million barrels per day. The 4 billion barrels will last 50 days. I don't understand the reason for celebration. When you're addicted to something, even a tiny amount is cause for celebration. Whether it's 4 billion, or 400 billion barrels -- who cares? It's *ours*. Develop those fields now, and it's *that* much less oil we have to import from the Arabs. This is what's called a "good thing" no matter how you cut it. -- There is 30 horsepower of solar radiation falling on a Cessna 172's wing that we are simply throwing away. The challenge is extracting the full solar spectrum and storing it. But there are no fundamental scientific reasons why this is not achievable. Even if we discover some large oil reserve, it is only going to prolong the eventual demise of oil. |
#40
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Andrew Sarangan wrote:
On Apr 14, 11:00 pm, "Jay Honeck" wrote: If I am not mistaken, current world consumption is about 85 million barrels per day. The 4 billion barrels will last 50 days. I don't understand the reason for celebration. When you're addicted to something, even a tiny amount is cause for celebration. Whether it's 4 billion, or 400 billion barrels -- who cares? It's *ours*. Develop those fields now, and it's *that* much less oil we have to import from the Arabs. This is what's called a "good thing" no matter how you cut it. -- There is 30 horsepower of solar radiation falling on a Cessna 172's wing that we are simply throwing away. The challenge is extracting the full solar spectrum and storing it. But there are no fundamental scientific reasons why this is not achievable. Even if we discover some large oil reserve, it is only going to prolong the eventual demise of oil. I'm FAR from being any kind of an expert on these matters, but I can't help but wonder, considering the fact that the world's economies are so completely dependent on oil for survival, that the world has waited WAY too long on this issue and that we have already passed the point where the changes necessary and either implemented or discovered, can no longer be made in time to make any difference in the inevitable outcome; .......a self made dooms day scenario so to speak. -- Dudley Henriques |
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