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  • Oil Supermajors' Resources Might Be Drying Up [View article]
    Good read, thanks for the info. Is the Bakken field in North Dakota/Montana considered an EOR? It's a pretty rich field from what I hear, but requires horizontal drilling in a narrow layer fairly deep down.
    Nov 30 18:04 pm |Rating: +2 0 |Link to Comment
  • The Oil Casino: SEC Heading for Monte Carlo, Part I [View article]
    Good information Alan! Lots of stuff to digest here, but the first question is, is the general industry going to follow the SEC definitions for 'proved reserves' or are we going to have two standards floating around?
    Nov 20 18:25 pm |Rating: +2 -1 |Link to Comment
  • The Global Oil Scam: 50 Times Bigger than Madoff [View article]
    Interesting stuff, interesting responses.
    Even if higher prices are the result of manipulation and not the evaporation of the excess oil supply (see chart near end of actual article), this manipulation only works if we keep buying gasoline and other oil byproducts at high rates. O/w the volume of sales go down and the producers won't be happy.

    If we worked to reduce our gallons of gasoline consumed and developed functional alternatives (including nat. gas powered vehicles), this wouldn't happen. We don't have the capability to drill enough of our own oil - off-shore and ANWR both will add about 3% of our needs a decade after being green-lighted, hardly an end-all solution. Oil shale won't be productive as it has an EROEI of about 1:1 (same as corn-based ethanol). Hydrogen fuel cells are still way too expensive, but all other solutions need to be pushed thru, for our national security. (If I was president, this would include removing large SUVs from people commuting to desk jobs).
    It will take a decade or more for real change to occur, and by then we'll really be in peak oil, so it's best for our economy to get used to high prices now.
    Nov 12 18:36 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • International Oil Companies: The Challenges Ahead [View article]
    Interesting read, although I'm not sure what the recycle ratio is. I heard on the news radio this morning about the EIA overstating future supply in recent years due to political pressure. Big surprise there.
    Nov 10 10:30 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Crude Oil Supply and the Future: Putting Arguments in Proper Perspective [View article]
    Dennis Atuanya, thanks for laying out the facts and pointing out the speculations. Whether or not a person accepts all of the peak oil scenarios, it is clear we have seen the end of cheap oil

    Jer13xxx - Why bring that up? Climate models are not part of this discussion. Energy security is, and relying on petroleum supply staying like it has will surely lead to economic/national security problems. It would be interesting to see how cap & tax would affect that.
    Aug 11 11:44 am |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
  • How High Will the Price of Oil Go? [View article]
    Thanks for the feedback.
    Range doesn't concern me so much. Most people commute less than 40 miles a day, and electric vehicles easily go double that distance. Recharge conveniently at home for pennies per mile (but upfront costs are more significant, as you mention). Have a hybrid or rent a car for your long trips & save money overall.
    Tata is also experimenting with making an electric version of their small car, or a car powered by compressed air (probably noisy to refill). But the Nano is just too small and too slow for common American tastes, a used small car would be more attractive.
    Fuel-cell vehicles (hydrogen) are a complete boondoggle, at this time, IMO.

    Some of the established manufacturer's EV plans:
    www.bloomberg.com/apps...
    In China, Chery is an automaker to watch (may actually partner with Chevy), they have a proposed $15K electric car. Some more about China's auto plans:
    evworld.com/news.cfm?n...

    Living4Dividends wrote:
    "I am not impressed by the US's lineup of EV. All are expensive like the Volt. I don't know about China's EV offering. Still 20,000 seems like a lot of money for a vehicle that only goes a short distance. The Tata Nano is $2500 for the fully loaded Indian version. Let's say the world model, with airbags & western safety features costs $5000. That is an inefficient car with superb gas mileage. "
    Jun 10 11:20 am |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
  • How High Will the Price of Oil Go? [View article]
    The $40K Chevy Volt is not the single face of our EV future. Many other companies (many small new ones, some new faces from China and elsewhere) are coming up with new innovative ideas for half the price of a Volt. The tricky part is getting past the safety crash test hurdles (several million dollars that a startup doesn't have), so more than a few are designed with 3 wheels to be classified as motorcycles. In 2011-2012 there will be a real change in options to the consumer, and the big car companies may never be the same, if they survive that long.
    Jun 08 18:08 pm |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
  • How High Will the Price of Oil Go? [View article]
    I'm not so optimistic about oil substitutes. They'll take years to come online, and any disruption (like a 6-month slump in oil prices) will likely derail investments & cause the process to start over again. Ethanol was going to be the savior, but people became fixated on corn, which is the worst source of ethanol. Our green options are natural gas (a la Picken's plan), cellulosic ethanol, & electric vehicles (which can be charged overnight on the existing power grid for the first few million vehicles, after that we need to do something).
    Coal unfortunately will be part of our future because it is there and it's cheap (as long as mountaintop removal and stream dumping is legal), but it's the worst option environmentally.
    Geothermal (for electric grid, EVs) is an overlooked opportunity - green power, available 24/7 (for certain parts of the country). California could have all the EVs they want if they expand geothermal. That frees up natural gas for long-haul transportation.

    But oil itself has a limited lifespan as a transportation fuel. I think we've already seen the peak in production. OPEC couldn't increase production in the first half of 2008 because they were at max production. With $60/barrel in a recession, when the economy starts coming back the price of oil will increase even faster. $100/barrel will be the low end in 2010, and it only goes up from there, only tempered by its braking effect on the economic recovery.
    Jun 08 18:03 pm |Rating: +4 0 |Link to Comment
  • Geopolitical Energy: Centered on the Caspian Sea (Part 2 of 2) [View article]
    Fitzman, I haven't read the book, altho it definitely sounds interesting, so I don't know the timeline of talks with the Taliban. I'm sure funding for Afghanistan dropped significantly after the Russia pull-out however, and we couldn't ignore the terrorist aspect after 9/11. For the years in between I need more information.

    WRT Iranian nukes, it's probably a combination of motivations. Close neighbors (including Israel and Shiite-run countries) are definitely part of it, but upsetting the U.S. would be a good side-affect for them.

    Mythbuster - We will still use fossil fuels in the future, but the idea that the U.S. can support its current rate of use by North American supplies (let alone just U.S. supplies) is a dangerous fallacy. Efficiency and conservation are the first two steps we should take for immediate improvement, then renewables, including geothermal and improving the grid to handle varying loads of wind power. Recharge electric cars overnight. Battery R&D. These are things to improve the American economy, not thinking that drilling is our only solution.
    Jan 08 12:58 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Geopolitical Energy: Centered on the Caspian Sea (Part 2 of 2) [View article]
    Good article, good food for thought. But I disagree on the Talibans - I think they were considered our friends while they were fighting Russia (there is the line of thought that the bankruptcy of U.S.S.R. from low oil prices during the Reagan years and their military defeat in Afghanistan is what allowed Poland and the Communist Bloc countries to break free of Russia). Once we no longer needed the Taliban to fight Russia, we lost interest (see Charlie Wilson's war), in the subsequent vacuum they joined up with Al Qaeda and bin Laden. They always treated their women and history badly, but only after 9/11 did we agree they were really terrorists and actually enemies.
    Jan 05 16:36 pm |Rating: 0 -2 |Link to Comment
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