So heres the math!Cubic feet of oil in one barrel=5.61120 million barrels a day (close to current use However is much higher than was in past but will still be used in my calculation)assume 150 years at 120 million barrels a day have been used of oil. THIS IS much much higher than the actual amount however for simplicity i will keep it at this.150*365=#of days=54750 days54750*120,000,000=6.57e12 barrels6.57e12*5.61=3.68577e13 cubic feet of oil used in human history3.68577/5280^3 (cubic miles of oil used in human history)=250 cubic milesRaleigh is 110 square miles. so 2 miles deep in raleigh about opinionsShortage??? i think not[Edited on September 21, 2006 at 10:26 PM. Reason : asdf]
9/21/2006 10:09:45 PM
the question is how easy/ecoomical is it to extract that oil. we've tapped out most of the easy oil i think.
9/21/2006 10:53:42 PM
Yeah, this sort of math doesn't really give or take anything at all.
9/21/2006 11:03:05 PM
9/22/2006 12:40:14 AM
once again, i feel the need to advocate a return to whale oilare all of you too blind to see it?
9/22/2006 12:41:49 AM
^^links to back any of that up?
9/22/2006 3:26:53 AM
I wouldn't use any of it in an academic paper if that's what you're asking, the numbers came from wikipedia or a blog titled "Peal Oil Debunked" or were based upon my own calculations.If it had good foundations I would have said what they were. So take them with a huge grain of salt and feel free to dispute them. [Edited on September 22, 2006 at 8:48 AM. Reason : .,.]
9/22/2006 8:45:34 AM
if you took all of the diamonds ever mined by mankind, they would fit in a cubic mile.thus diamonds aren't a precious stone.
9/22/2006 11:28:03 AM
Until the wizards at DeBeers use the magic of Capitalism to make them so.
9/22/2006 2:44:41 PM
http://www.wtrg.com/prices.htmhistory and analysis of crude oil priceswhat causes spikes and what causes dropsOPEC = higher price
9/25/2006 12:35:42 PM
9/25/2006 6:47:57 PM
9/25/2006 10:01:30 PM
9/25/2006 10:39:51 PM
It doesn't end there. kwsmith2, I am offering to sell you an oil well in Kansas that is rediculously expensive to drill and pump, or $15 a barrel. Regretfully, there is a 50% chance the well is dry. Regretfully, it will not produce a drop of oil for 5 years. Oh, and using history as a guide, in 5 years times the price of oil will probably be back down to $30. So, to produce a million barrels in 5 years you must spend $15 million dollars today. You can get 10% by investing in the stock market, so this $15 million in 5 years is an opportunity cost of $24 million at that time (if, instead, you bought stock). Ok, this million sells for $30 million, a profit of $6 million. Of course, this ignores the discount that the oil well might be friggin' dry and you lose everything.
9/25/2006 11:02:20 PM