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Gold/Mining/Energy : PEAK OIL - The New Y2K or The Beginning of the Real End?

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From: Doug R4/15/2005 7:35:08 PM
   of 1183
 
Obstacles to The Energy Revolution

This post deals with the bureaucratic obstacles that will delay The Energy Revolution. More importantly these delays will no doubt increase the economic cost of the revolution and heighten the reduction of standard of living that will occur while we are undergoing this process. Under existing procedures it could easily take 10-15 years to build a major energy facility. To transition through the revolution it will required to build thousands of such facilities. Other countries could build such facilities in much less time, with far less bureaucratic obstacles and less concern for impact on the environment. This would result in further requirements for costly imports, rather than us becoming an exporter of products for which we have abundant natural resources.

The ideas and suggestions put forth in this post may not be popular in some camps. The urgency of aggressively resolving the problems that will occur during The Energy Revolution cannot be emphasized too much, we are facing a revolution with possible consequence as great as a war and it must be treated as such. If we do not our society may have to revert to a lifestyle more typical of 19th century agrarian communities. Is that what you want?

I must credit Hirsch, p46 for all of the ideas put forth in this post.

"Not-in-my-back-yard" (NIMBY) and "build-absolutely-nothing-anywhere-near-anything" (BANANA) attitudes have become standard obstacles for any large construction project. The siting process for such projects is a nightmare to builders because the opponents, who certainly have the right to be heard, can drag out this process almost indefinitely. Hirsch uses the example of the permitting process for small distributed energy systems requiring 18 steps, requiring approval from four federal agencies, 11 state government agencies and 11 local government agencies. "For the U.S. to attain a lower level of dependence on liquid fuel imports after the advent of world oil peaking, a major paradigm shift will be required in the current approach to the construction of capital-intensive energy facilities. Federal and state governments will have to adopt legislation allowing the acceleration of the development of substitute fuel projects from the current decade time-scales."

In his summary and concluding remarks he states: "Intervention by governments will be required, because the economic and social implications of oil peaking would otherwise be chaotic. ..... Expediency may require major changes to existing administrative and regulatory procedures such as length environmental review and length public environment."

Despite all the negative aspects of oil peaking, many opportunities could also arise. Quoting from Hirsch "The U.S. could emerge as the world's largest producer of substituted liquid fuels, if it were to undertake a massive program to construct substitute fuel production facilities on a timely basis." Because we have the world's largest coal reserves, combined with our financial and technological resources we have the basis to implement such a program. The major powers in the far east also have the ability to build and operate such facilities, but they lack the coal to sustain such an operation over a very long time frame. We could end up having to import substitute fuels as well as our share of the remaining conventional oil resources.

This the last of seven major posts that serve as an overview for The Energy Revolution. I hope they are of benefit to some. All of these posts can be found by selecting the overview category. Future posts will examine details of the technology involved and news events tin the energy field.

thefraserdomain.typepad.com

"As a retired engineer with a strong interest in energy I began researching the subject of peak oil and found the subject much more contoversial than I had anticipated. I wanted to share the results of my research, which led to this blog. The Energy Blog is designed to be a place where all energy topics are presented and form the basis for discussion. I hope that this site can eventually be a useful reference for those that wish to find information about the energy revolution."

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DOE Biomass Program
Ethanol from Cellulose: Too Good To Be True?
GAVE (Dutch) biofuels website
Lave, NCEP forum, 6/13/2003 Could the U.S. Produce Sufficient Ethanol from Energy Crops to Fuel it Light Duty Vehicle Fleet?
Nouriel Roubini's Oil Crisis
Nouriel Roubini's Oil Crisis
Production and Properties of Biodiesels
Renewable Fuels Association
Coal Power
DOE, 10/21/04Southern Company, FL Clean Coal Project
DOE, 10/26/04, Mesaba Energy Project, MN
DOE, 12/14/04, FutureGen - Tomorrow's Pollution-Free Power Plant
International Energy Outlook 2004 - Coal
Fuel Cells
Ballard Power Systems
DOE Fuel Cell program home Page
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The Hydrogen Economy
Batteries/Hybrid Vehicles
Green Car Congress
Mixed Power.com
Natural Gas and LNG
DOE, 12/04, LNG Risks Over Water
Nuclear Energy
Schwartz and Reiss, Wired, 2/05 , Nuclear Now!
World Nuclear Association, Energy for the World - Why Uranium
World Nuclear Association, Nuclear Energy Made Simple
Overview and Statistics
BP Statistical Review of World Energy 2004
DOE National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) Home Page
Energy Information Administration (EIA) Index to Energy Information
International Energy Outlook 2004
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National Commission on Energy Policy
USGS World Petroleum Assesment 2000
World Oil Outlook 2005 - Global output struggles to meet demand
World Population to 2300
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Beyond Peak OIl
Campbell, 2002 "Oil Depletion - Updated through 2001"
Campbell, 7/2002, "Forcasting Global Oil Supply 2000-2050"
Hatfield, 1997, "Has the World entered a Permanent Oil Crisis?"
Hirsch, SAIC, 3/7/05, World Oil Production: Impact, Mitigation & Risk Management
Hood, EIA/DOE, 8/18/04 Long-Term World Oil Supply Scenarios
Kovarik, 2003, "The Oil Reserve Fallacy"
Laherrere, 3/22/05, Fossil fuels future production
McKillop, 10/10/04, Andrew McKillop: Energy transition and final energy crisis
Oil Crises, 11/16/04 "New Oil Projects Cannot Meet World Needs This Decade"
PFC Energy’s Global Crude Oil
Proceedings of The First U.S. Conference on Peak Oil and Community Solutions, 10/12-10/14/05
Simmons, 2/8/05, The Status of Future Energy Sources
Stelzer, Standarad Press, 10/5/04, "The World at $50 per Barrel"
Solar Energy
Aitken, Int'l Solar Energy Society, 11/21/04, Transitioning to a Renewable Energy Future
Unconventional Energy
Barbajosa, China Daily, 2/21/05, Shell, Exxon Tap 'High Cost' Oil Sands, Gas as Reserves Dwindle
Snyder, World Oil, 8/04, "Oil shale back in the picture"
Wind Power
AWEA Wind Power Tutorial
Milborrow, Windpower Monthly, 1/04 Becoming Respectable in Serious Circles
NREL National Wind Technology Center

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