As read on Rush today


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jimpeel
August 15, 2003, 10:13 PM
This guy nails the petroleum issue. The enviro whackos, the naysayers, the politically correct, and the politicians who keep this issue at the forefront year after year. He esposes the outright lies and tells it like it is onn how petroleum changed America into the global giant it is today.

Without petroleum, WWII would have been a toss as to whether this writing would be in German or Japanese. The fact that we had it and they had to go get it turned the tide and thank God -- can I say God -- for it.

http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/20030814-081343-4351r.htm

Petroleum age is just beginning


By David Deming

It is hard to imagine how our grandparents and great-grandparents lived at the end of the 19th century. The United States was still largely a rural society, and the amenities we take for granted today were unknown then.

Most people lived on farms. Few Americans had running water, bathtubs, hot water, or flush toilets. Central heating, electricity and telephones were rare. There were no antibiotics. Infant mortality was high, and life expectancy was 30 years lower than it is today. For most people, educational opportunities were very limited. In 1890, only 5 percent of the eligible population attended high school.

In the year 1900, there were only about 8,000 automobiles in the entire country. Horseless carriages, like yachts, were a toy for the rich to enjoy. People knew there would never be enough gasoline to power a nation of automobiles because the output of the Pennsylvanian oil fields had been declining for years.

The seminal event that transformed the United States into an industrial and technological powerhouse occurred on the morning of Jan. 10, 1901, near Beaumont, Texas. A wildcat oil well on a location named Spindletop erupted into a geyser 100 feet high. It was the greatest oil well ever seen in the United States.

Over the next year, production from the Spindletop well equaled the production of 37,000 typical oil wells in the eastern U.S. Overnight, the price of oil dropped to 3 cents a barrel, recovering to 83 cents a barrel 21/2 years later. The cheap energy provided by abundant oil allowed the U.S. to transform itself from a rural, agrarian country into an urban, industrialized nation. Along the way, the prosperity of our society increased manyfold.

Petroleum continues to be the lifeblood of our technological civilization. Our entire way of life depends on the energy provided by the oil industry. Oil and natural gas are by far the most important energy sources for the world. Their combustion also generates far less pollution than the third most-relied-upon energy source — coal.

The best news is that the age of petroleum has only just begun. For more than 80 years, geological estimates of the world's endowment of oil have risen faster than humanity can pump it out of the ground. In 1920, the U.S. Geological Survey estimated the total amount of oil remaining in the world amounted to only 20 billion barrels. By the year 2000, the estimate had grown to 3,000 billion barrels.

Geologists are continually forced to revise their estimates upward, because every year technological advances make it possible to draw upon petroleum resources whose extraction were once unthinkable. We can now drill wells up to 30,000 feet deep. The amount of oil that can be recovered from a single well has been enhanced by a technology that allows multiple horizontal shafts to be branched off from one vertical borehole. The ability to drill offshore in water depths of up to 9,000 feet has opened up the vast petroleum resources of the world's submerged continental margins.

The world also contains immense amounts of unconventional oil resources that we have not yet begun to tap. For example, tar sands found in Canada and South America contain 600 billion barrels of oil, enough to supply the U.S. with 84 years of oil at the current consumption rate. Worldwide, the amount of oil that can be extracted from oil shales could be as large as 14,000 billion barrels — enough to supply the world for 500 years.

Oil is by far the cheapest, most abundant, and cleanest source of energy we have. Nearly every advantage we enjoy today can be traced back to the energy provided by the petroleum industry. Yet the men and women who make our civilization possible are too often treated as pariahs who are damaging the environment. This is a shame. The environmental impacts of petroleum exploration and production are virtually negligible in comparison to the benefits they provide.

We all want to preserve and protect the natural environment, but much of the modern environmental movement is based upon the myth of a primitive harmony with nature that has never existed. Life without oil and technology is a life that is short, dark and impoverished. Let us give thanks that we have been lifted out of darkness and poverty.

David Deming is an adjunct scholar with the National Center for Policy Analysis (NCPA) and associate professor of geology and geophysics at the University of Oklahoma.

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agricola
August 16, 2003, 02:10 PM
(wipes away tear from corner of eye)

God bless Oil!

Moparmike
August 16, 2003, 02:31 PM
Cool! Nice to know that all those greens wont go unchallenged. Now all we need to do is get oil down to $.83 a barrel again, and...

El Tejon
August 16, 2003, 02:45 PM
The motivation of the "greens" is not to save the planet; it is to control us.

If the socialistic poltroons inside the enviromental movement wanted an alternative to oil, they could get PhDs in chemistry or engineering instead of journalism and folklore. However, it is not about oil; it is about freedom.

Moparmike
August 16, 2003, 02:53 PM
The cool thing about oil is that it can be created out of other things. There was an article in the June or July issue of Scientific American or Discover where a process for creating type2 heating oil was created, for 1/3 the cost even with a healthy profit per barrel (read $10-12 per barrel total price). I thought it was a really cool idea. (goes and looks up link...) Ok, it was the May issue of Discover.

http://www.discover.com/may_03/featoil.html

It is really cool, and may infact prolong oil reserves for quite some time. Check it out.

Chuck Dye
August 16, 2003, 03:23 PM
Oil in the ground does not have a shelf life relevant to the lives of nations, much less businesses, political stances, or individuals. Why must we exhaust our resources NOW?

Sodbuster
August 16, 2003, 03:37 PM
God bless Oil!
So succinct. So true. So funny. So sad.

KC
August 16, 2003, 04:34 PM
Oh, come on.
Oil stinks. Nuclear is Nifty. Yes, the Sierra Club, Ralph Nader and other Luddites run screaming, but nuclear fission for generating electricty is hard to beat wether it be acquiring fuel, fallout from generating electricty, or left over byproducts.


KC

AJ Dual
August 16, 2003, 04:50 PM
The cool thing about oil is that it can be created out of other things. There was an article in the June or July issue of Scientific American or Discover where a process for creating type2 heating oil was created, for 1/3 the cost even with a healthy profit per barrel (read $10-12 per barrel total price). I thought it was a really cool idea. (goes and looks up link...) Ok, it was the May issue of Discover.

http://www.discover.com/may_03/featoil.html

It is really cool, and may infact prolong oil reserves for quite some time. Check it out.

Yes this is beauceaup cool. And may well be the salvation of human civilization, at least until we progress to workable fusion, or orbital solar power. :D

We've known since before WWII that hydrocarbon fuels can be produced out of almost any organic rawstocks, but the process was an energy loser since it took more heat and fuel than the process produced to drive the water out of the material before the chemical transformations took place.

This new process uses the water to it's advantage, keeping it in as steam which helps break the material down even better, then when released, instantly flashes out of the sludge, and is distilled clean, and can be dumped with no environmental impact other than as pure clean water. It also produces enough methane to heat the plant once it's started. :cool:

The implications for waste managment, and fuel production are staggering. This process can even take toxic waste and biohazard waste and sterilize it while producing useable fuel. :eek: The only kind of waste it looks like this process can't rid us of is radioactive.

Besides eating up wood, chicken guts, old tires, and yard waste, plastic, or almost any other non mineral or non metal waste, this new process will also take currently unusable waste sludge and tars from the oil industry and re-crack it into even more useable fuel.

The other listed benifit is that by using surface carbon in the form of trash and plant and other organic material is that the burned fuel will supposedly have zero net impact on global carbon dioxide levels, since it's "surface carbon" that's allready here, whereas, fossil fuel carbon is reintroducing carbon that's been hidden away from the atmosphere underground for millions of years.

(Although frankly, I find myself idly wondering if global warming isn't fighting off the next ice age, and isn't to some degree a "good thing".)

Moparmike
August 16, 2003, 05:27 PM
I am waiting for the next mob-operated factory like that for hits. All that would be left is oil and non-bio wastes. Wouldnt even be able to tell the results from turkey guts.:eek:

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