Old, but discuss;http://www.usgs.gov/newsroom/article.asp?ID=1911Basically sitting on a metric shitton of oil reserves in CO and SD/ND, people are bitchin saying we need to tap it to bring down gas prices.Its enough oil to last 30-40 years at the current consumption with no foreign oil, i say we keep things how they are, bleed the middle east dry, continue working on renewable resources, and in 15-20 years we will be sitting on oil worth more then diamonds.
9/3/2008 5:45:04 PM
http://www.theoildrum.com/node/3868
9/3/2008 5:53:18 PM
9/3/2008 5:56:24 PM
These conclusions do a pretty good job of reducing 30-45 minutes of reading to all you really need to know
9/3/2008 6:02:31 PM
all that oil?its only 4.3 billion barrels.....
9/3/2008 6:11:14 PM
There's enough shale oil in the world (mostly in N. America) to last hundreds of years.kkthx
9/3/2008 6:14:14 PM
^^ currently recoverable, between that and the colorado reserve, theres over 800 billion barrelshttp://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5424033[Edited on September 3, 2008 at 6:16 PM. Reason : ]
9/3/2008 6:15:49 PM
ok great. where's that article?4.3 billion barrels is nothing[Edited on September 3, 2008 at 6:18 PM. Reason : thanks]
9/3/2008 6:17:59 PM
9/3/2008 6:18:52 PM
^^^^ Too bad it's even dirtier than conventional fossil fuels.kkthx. (but no thanks)[Edited on September 3, 2008 at 6:20 PM. Reason : .]
9/3/2008 6:20:19 PM
I'm wonder how much it would cost today to produce that same barrel of oil he was referring to in May 2006?
9/3/2008 6:22:07 PM
9/3/2008 6:23:37 PM
^^^I'm sure we have the technology (or can develop it) to extract that shale oil in a cleaner way. But its besides the point, coal gasification is where our energy future lies.Oil/gasoline isn't going anywhere! bwah
9/3/2008 6:28:53 PM
http://www.theoildrum.com/story/2006/6/15/20621/7880
9/3/2008 6:29:53 PM
9/3/2008 6:45:54 PM
great threadi say run the middle east dry and slowly start tapping our own
9/3/2008 7:03:57 PM
Yeah, I've posted this several times. We're like the Saudi Arabia of coal and shale oil reserves. People have no idea that there are trillions of barrels of oil and billions of tons of coal out in the Green River basin. Of course, getting that shit out of the ground is a dirty, water-and-energy-intensive business. Alberta, with their oil sands, has shown that it can be done at a profit, but also at a pretty big environmental cost.
9/3/2008 7:04:42 PM
[Edited on September 3, 2008 at 8:02 PM. Reason : nm]
9/3/2008 8:01:49 PM
9/3/2008 9:36:15 PM
theoildumb is focused on energythe usgs and npr dont have an agenda, they just reporttheoildumb tries to promote other energy sources without national and world considering socio/polital/economical/environmental impact[Edited on September 3, 2008 at 9:40 PM. Reason : ]
9/3/2008 9:39:18 PM
9/3/2008 9:45:34 PM
drill your ass offBut band-aids are not "energy independence"
9/3/2008 9:53:26 PM
long as it lasts till i kick the bucket
9/3/2008 10:05:47 PM
9/3/2008 10:14:23 PM
9/3/2008 10:22:05 PM
9/3/2008 10:44:52 PM
I know rite,supply has absolutely no effect on the price. where do they think up this shit????
9/4/2008 10:23:48 AM
Supply != production costs
9/4/2008 10:48:27 AM
^^ swing and a miss for csharp.
9/4/2008 11:14:25 AM
^^^^A couple things:1: The trading price of a barrel of oil has very little to do with how much it costs to produce.2: If they produced it at $20/barrel, they would still sell it at market value. Same as if it were produced at $100/barrel.3: Canadian companies are producing oil in the Tar Sands of Alberta at a cost of approximately $40/barrel now. Oil shale is frequently compared to the Alberta oil sands in terms of production methods and difficulties. $20/barrel is probably not realistic, but $40/barrel might be.4: The obstacle to this project is the same one that stalls many large projects: Investors hold off on committing large sums of money to a risky investment like this until they are sure that prices are gonna stay high. Investors thought that the high oil prices of the 70's would stay high. Then in the 80's the floor fell out of that market and investors in unconventional projects like this one got burned. [Edited on September 4, 2008 at 11:29 AM. Reason : 1]
9/4/2008 11:25:13 AM
I have a real problem with those that dont think producing more domestically will help, just as I have a real problem with those that want to drill and not push conservation and efficiency. The supply demand margin is razor thin at the moment. That means that small disruptions can have dramatic effects on crude pricing. We can mitigate some of those pricing disruptions by increasing domestically produced oil and at the same time cutting back our consumption. Doing only one of each will not provide the best impact.We need to really start diversifying our energy sources, and this includes alternative forms of transportation energy (plug in hybrids being my favorite). What I fear is that oil could retreat to a point that makes people want to take up SUVs once more, then all the alternatives that are just beginning to come online will wither away. If/When we get tight on the supply/demand front, there will be less investment available for a repeat adventure. I consider switching to alternatives for our transportation needs a short term pain to produce long term results. Drilling and increasing supply will allow our economy to have oil 'cheap enough' to prosper, so people can actually afford to buy the alternatives when they do come out (and have a premium price tag). I do not think oil being priced at $200+, and a worldwide economic collapse with mass poverty, is the only way to get people to switch over to alternatives.One comment from above about cost to produce heavier/non traditional crude.... Pricing WILL come down for these methods. I do not think they will ever be as cheap a light sweet crude, since this crude requires much less effort to produce, but pricing will come down. An example is Petrobras and their salt flat oil wells. These offshore wells are over 17,000 feet deep. There were costing over $200 million for each well. These wells now cost about $60 million due to technology improvements. You will see this industry wide across many production methods as above ground improvements increase production at a lower cost per unit energy.[Edited on September 4, 2008 at 11:35 AM. Reason : .]
9/4/2008 11:29:51 AM
^solid post. Our government's interference in the market to try to keep oil prices low only adds to the volatility in prices. And the fact that we pay billions in "energy security" costs to keep oil flowing throughout the world only further increases the gap between the social and marginal costs of gasoline. Oil (or gasoline) should be taxed to reflect the true externalities of the fuel, and some of those tax revenues should go towards diversifying our energy sources and infrastructure.[Edited on September 4, 2008 at 11:40 AM. Reason : 2]
9/4/2008 11:39:06 AM
9/4/2008 12:59:05 PM
9/4/2008 1:09:03 PM
Releasing oil from our reserve will do nothing to lower gas prices until the very long run.Store owners raise prices based on how much they have to pay for the fuel. Hence when oil prices rise, so do gas prices.When the fuel they buy lowers in price, the only driving force for the stores to lower prices is competition. Thats why on the downside of this oil price spike, oil is at just over 100 bucks a barrel and gas prices are fairly high. If you remember, on the upside of this rise in oil price, we were paying a much lower price for a gallon of gas. Basically competition has not had a chance to return the gas prices to where they were before.
9/4/2008 3:14:23 PM
9/4/2008 4:41:56 PM