Peak Oil Headlines - 8 September, 2005
by Staff
Click on the headline (link) for the full text. Many more articles are available through the Energy Bulletin homepage
But far more important than any of these is the impact of Katrina on the global oil supply and the resulting increase in US dependence on foreign petroleum. To appreciate the significance of all this, it is first necessary to conduct a quick review of the pre- and post-Katrina oil situation, both in this country and abroad. ... And then came Katrina. In the course of a few hours, the United States lost one-fifth of its domestic petroleum output. Some of this is expected to come back on stream in the weeks ahead, but it is doubtful that all of the offshore rigs in the Gulf itself will ever be operational again. On top of this, most of the refineries in the Gulf Coast area are shut down, and imports of oil have been hampered by the damage to oil ports and unloading facilities. How quickly all of these installations can be repaired is not currently known. With no idle facilities elsewhere in the nation to replace lost Gulf capacity, supplies are likely to remain sparse (and prices high) for months to come. But it is not the short-term picture that we should worry about the most; it is the long-term situation. This is so because the Gulf was the only area of the United States that showed any promise of compensating for the decline of older onshore fields and thus of dampening, to some degree, the nation's thirst for imported oil. There has been much discussion about the potential for drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) in Alaska, but energy professionals scoff at the prospects of obtaining significant amounts of crude there; instead, all of their attention has been on the deep waters of the Gulf. Spurred by the Bush Administration's energy plan, which calls for massive investment in deep-water fields, the big oil firms have poured billions of dollars into new offshore drilling facilities in the Gulf. Before Katrina, these facilities were expected to supply more than 12 percent of America's Lower 48 petroleum output by the end of 2005, and a much larger share in the years thereafter. ...
I am doing a big geography project at school on saving energy and recycling. My part is to comment on what will happen if we keep wasting energy. I know the basic information, but I am not sure what to write, as it is to be given out to adults (and I'm only 12!). Please send me some useful information because I am really stuck! Laura / Heartfordshire, U.K. Dearest Laura, There are a few things that happen as we keep wasting energy. One, we will run out. Two, energy makes a mess, so the more we use the messier the world gets. And three, we just plain waste a useful resource...
Professor Heinberg rapidly outlined the problem, with which most of HopeDance’s readers are all too familiar: the demand for petroleum, indeed modern society’s overwhelming dependence on this substance, is about to meet an ever-increasing reduction in supply, as producers dip into the less-desirable second half of the planet’s resources. At times, the issue of denial captured the group’s attention: how to present the magnitude of the problem and the severity of the consequences in a way that people currently unaffected could absorb it. Heinberg admitted that when he took time from his work to go outside and do ordinary household tasks, he himself fell into the illusion of normality and some of his sense of urgency dissipated
Humanity is on a collision course with the resource limitations of the planet we live on. Where we are headed and why is the most necessary truth to be told. When Saudi Arabia announces that its supergiant Ghawar oil field is declining in output every year [1], it is stating that it is beginning to undergo the same crisis of production that shocked the US economy three decades ago. Saudi oil is the keystone of world production, and Ghawar supplies nearly half of Saudi output. Everyone knows that the Middle East has lots of oil, but if we can’t pump it out of the ground as fast as we use it, we are in for a tumultuous decade.
In the wake of Katrina, however, the deranged chorus that suggests markets don't work, and that we may be on the brink of a new energy Dark Age, is being given way too respectful a hearing. ... |
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