6/18/2008 8:29:18 AM
vote republican in your congressional and senate races too.
6/18/2008 8:30:34 AM
^ Like Elizabeth Dole is worth a rat's ass. Name one thing she's done as senator other than run the National Republican Senatorial Committee in the ground in 2006.[Edited on June 18, 2008 at 8:40 AM. Reason : /]
6/18/2008 8:39:12 AM
I'm just telling you how we can get to drilling our own fields.
6/18/2008 8:40:18 AM
^ We are drilling our own fields! We're producing 5.1 billion barrels of oil per day in this country per our own government statistics at the link I provided, http://www.eia.doe.gov . Why are we exporting 1.8 billion barrels of oil per day, a third of our daily production, to other countries if we want energy independence? Cause for every barrel we ship out, that's another barrel we have to ship here. So there's 1.8 billion barrels of oil per day, a little more than 10% of our country's daily use, we could use that for free and we don't have to worry about Middle Eastern politics or falling Mexican production or Nigerian oil worker strikes with it.And then there's all the old oil derricks still lying around with concrete caps on them. This country used to be Saudi Arabia with all the oil we produced. The international price of oil for a long time was set by the Texas Railroad Commission. The price of oil was set by them for a long time at 5 cents per barrel of oil. They had a meeting one night and decided "we're doubling the price of oil, it's now 10 cents per barrel of oil". That's how much power this country had due to our oil, we were OPEC before OPEC existed, and our OPEC was the Texas Railroad Commission. The reason all those derricks were shut down was cause the oil production at those derricks was not profitable at $10 or $15 per barrel of oil. They most definitely are at $100+. Those derricks are still approved for oil production, their licenses were never rescinded. So their owners can open them up. This is happening in Los Angeles County of all places. Why isn't this happening more widespread across the country? You can look at the production numbers and see it's not.Are you one of these people that when presented with facts ignore them if they don't fit your argument?Now if you're going to ignore all this and say, "no, McCain just needs to approve more drilling." The only way this will happen is to remove people's right to oppose something or have any voice. You're arguing for autocracy and not democracy. So get out your gun and shoot liberals, and install conservatives in power forever while making liberals the subservient class. I'll get out a bag of popcorn and watch. (And for the record, everything LoneShark wrote regarding sweet crude vs. sour crude is 100% true. A lot of our refineries can only refine the sweet.)[Edited on June 18, 2008 at 9:04 AM. Reason : /]
6/18/2008 9:02:23 AM
Dude, doing anything to prohibit oil exports from the US would be fucking SUICIDE.There are a lot of countries right now eying their oil fields and thinking "it would be a popular move to decree this only for domestic consumption". Or at least sell it domestically what what it takes to produce, and not what it sells at in the market. Lots of places are already doing that. Everyone one that does so hurts the prices that we're paying. I mean, one of the best things we can expect for the price of oil is for the the big Indian oil company to bankrupt itself thereby being forced to remove the subsidies.Make no mistake, giving away 'your' oil for lower than the market price for a domestic market is the exact same as subsidizing oil. Subsidizing oil means the government paying for someone's gas. This is a bad idea, and it is the only way you can get rid of that 1/3rd of our oil production - which is only 40% of the amount of oil we use in the first place.If the United States started hoarding its oil, you would see an international panic. I can't even imagine. I know it's hard to think about, but it is very important to allow that amount to continue to be exported. If we export 2 zigs while at the same time import 2 zigs from somewhere else, believe me, one way or the other the market has a reason for it.
6/18/2008 10:04:53 AM
worldwide oil production is only 85m barrels a day.
6/18/2008 10:11:30 AM
6/18/2008 10:13:56 AM
6/18/2008 10:20:39 AM
I'm sure that people who import the oil from us will love that. In fact, wouldn't this just be a great way to piss off BOTH our allies and our enemies, not to mention create relative sweet/sour oil local shortages and drive the price of oil up even more!That would seriously aggravate the one big problem that we're faced with to solve another problem that's not really all that much of a problem.
6/18/2008 10:33:23 AM
If it was that easy, the people that control this stuff would have done it along time ago.Smarter people are handling the issues.
6/18/2008 11:07:31 AM
I apologize if this has already been covered, but how in the hell is this a "short term solution" to anything? Or, put another way, what kind of definition of "short term" are we talking about?Throwing up an offshore drilling site isn't something you do in a weekend. It's a fairly substantial construction project which then requires its own complex infrastructure to be useful. There'd be a lot of months of $4/gal gas before the things were even online.Not that it will necessarily matter much when that happens. I've not read anything to suggest that we have sufficient oil resources, offshore or otherwise, to make ourselves anywhere near self-sufficient. Meaning that OPEC and the rest still has us by the short 'n curlies.Even if, by some divine miracle, we had enough oil to keep ourselves running cheaply along, it would start going overseas, where it would be selling for more. So we're still getting screwed, except now we're getting screwed exclusively by good old fashioned American oil companies, and don't even have Arabs and Hugo Chavez to blame for it.Look, I've got no problem with offshore drilling, let's go ahead and do it. But let's not convince ourselves it's a solution to much of anything.
6/18/2008 12:17:42 PM
6/18/2008 12:18:30 PM
6/18/2008 1:14:55 PM
6/18/2008 1:43:42 PM
I pointed it out first
6/18/2008 1:52:33 PM
6/18/2008 1:57:36 PM
Do you realize what it takes to get oil from oil shale? It's like strip mining but with more CO2 emissions. We'd be better off drilling in Alaska and off shores.
6/18/2008 2:18:51 PM
READ THE AL GORE THREAD. THIS SHIT IS A HOAX. HE'S MAKING A SHIT TON OF MONEY AND SPENDING CARBON CARELESSLY WHILE SCARING THE BEJESUS OUT OF PEOPLE LIKE YOU INTO NOT DRILLING OUR OWN OIL.
6/18/2008 2:21:08 PM
^ whoa, salisburyboy flashback there.
6/18/2008 2:22:04 PM
except i'm not offering a conspiracy theory. I'm showing you a direct link between hysteria and Al Gore's bank account, except you refuse to see it.
6/18/2008 2:25:36 PM
Al Gore is the only one bringing up the topic of global warming.FACT.
6/18/2008 2:28:59 PM
so he must be alone in order to create a hysteria that he profits from?
6/18/2008 2:29:29 PM
6/18/2008 2:33:11 PM
stupidity is awarding a con artist with a nobel prize.
6/18/2008 2:53:35 PM
i did a race that promotes awareness of breast cancer last weekend.true story.
6/18/2008 3:06:38 PM
6/18/2008 3:30:38 PM
Prawn Star:Well, fair enough. Of course, I (and the OP) was talking about oil which can be drilled, and not "funny rocks that we have to dig up that don't actually contain any fucking oil."But moving past that, from what I'm reading on wikipedia, "Shale oil does not contain the full range of hydrocarbons used in modern gasoline production, and could only be used to produce middle-distillates such as kerosene, jet fuel, and diesel fuel."So does your quote mean that our shale oil can meet our demand for those middle-distillates for the next 110 years? I mean, that's swell and all, but my car runs on gas and the only thing I use kerosene for is starting fires. And yeah, I get that using shale for all those things would free up more regular crude for gasoline, but...that still leaves the question of what precisely your 110 year figure refers to.Actually, using the search, I can't find any part of your quote anywhere in that article.[Edited on June 18, 2008 at 4:09 PM. Reason : ]
6/18/2008 4:06:49 PM
6/18/2008 4:13:24 PM
6/18/2008 4:17:36 PM
^^^ Good catch. My quote actually came from this wiki page, under US oil reserves:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oil_reserves
6/18/2008 4:25:10 PM
We are not going to get off the Saudi oil anytime soon. It is far too cheap for us not to import and much better for us to be invested in their reserves rather than China.
6/18/2008 4:32:42 PM
6/18/2008 4:34:36 PM
6/18/2008 5:51:29 PM
Offshore drilling was prohibited in 1981.Bush was never "against" offshore drilling. He just never pushed for it. At $2.00 per gallon, it's a political loser. At $4.00, it gains traction. Unfortunately, we needed to lift the ban 5 years ago in order for it to have an impact now. Poor planning is a reality of politics (and to a lesser extent, free markets).[Edited on June 18, 2008 at 6:06 PM. Reason : 2]
6/18/2008 6:04:48 PM
I find it odd that no one seems to be advocating a decrease in energy consumption but rather where we are going to get our next oil crack fix.
6/18/2008 6:54:47 PM
because we want to be able to live our lives in effectively the same way, ie drive to and from work every morning and evening, be able to overnight a package a few states away, go to a restaurant and eat something that was flown in, fly to visit relatives on holidays, etc...the idea is to hopefully come up with multiple sources of cleaner energy that allow us to maintain our current ways of life while emitting less co2
6/18/2008 7:00:03 PM
There are ways that we can do those things but at a higher efficiency which itself is a resource. Think about what the price of oil would be if we just consumed even 90% of what we do now but maintain our standard of living by changing our consuming habits and demanding more efficient products.
6/18/2008 7:09:12 PM
well if you decreased the demand for oil the supply would go up and prices should drop...but what about the people who use public transportation because the gas prices are high? I'll use Charlotte as an example...ridership on the light rail line has gone up a good bit over the last 6 months or so as gas prices have skyrocketed...now the light rail is only a year or so old anyway so we don't have great data about ridership over the long term but it makes sense that people might say "you know what, these gas prices are just too high, i'm going to drive to the park and ride and take the train to save money"...then when gas prices go back down if we can somehow decrease the demand that much, i think many of those people would go back to drivingi mean, if you have an exam and cant be late for it, you dont necessarily want to rely on the wolfline being on schedule...people love their cars]
6/18/2008 7:12:39 PM
It's not just cars, which can be made a LOT more efficient, but the whole scope of energy consumption and waste generation. People have this over spend and over consume mentality and have been taught never to think of the long term consequences. Don't confuse this with any call to regulate consumption or anything but more along the lines of a change in thinking. Think about what we buy, where we buy it and where it comes from.
6/18/2008 7:19:37 PM
6/18/2008 8:26:19 PM
Well, when it comes to investment, smart people with a lot of money try to predict future winners in the market. And there has been over $10 billion invested in R&D of oil shale, showing that at least some people believe it holds a lot of promise. Exxon, Chevron and Shell are all working on projects to see if they can make it work.And with respect to mining the stuff, the key here is "in-situ retorting", which is basically heating the shit up underground until the oil separates from the rock and you can pump it out.
6/18/2008 8:49:05 PM
6/19/2008 12:56:58 AM
I appreciate the clarification and wholeheartedly agree with your sentiment. Now you have the real challenge of convincing the oil crack addict wingnuts that run rampant in this thread.
6/19/2008 7:13:06 AM
you know what happens when you spill this right?nothing.
6/19/2008 9:15:21 AM
^Do you know how many states have the right climate for that? The east coast is too humid for solar POWER PLANTS (yes, we can and should use solar hot water heaters here).here's where I found the image:http://www1.eere.energy.gov/solar/pv_cell_light.html[Edited on June 19, 2008 at 10:05 AM. Reason : .]
6/19/2008 10:04:19 AM
I agree with FitchNCSU, drilling in ANWR makes far more sense to me. Pollution from drilling and transportation are far easier contained on land than in seas which are frequented by hurricanes. Annoying a few elk will seem insignificant compared to the carnage when drilling platforms get broken loose by a hurricane.
6/19/2008 10:11:02 AM
This has probably been posted already, but what the hell, I'll post it again.
6/19/2008 4:30:20 PM
6/19/2008 4:59:57 PM
that is a picture of solar though correct? do you know what the basic power able to be produced at one of those in relation to the surface area of solar panels?
6/19/2008 5:03:07 PM