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SUBMAN1
05-16-08, 10:44 AM
Why isn't this happening faster? You can make synth fuel for less than half of what normal barrels of sulfer rich hard to refine oil costs today.

-S

Air Force seems to be leading the charge:
http://www.redorbit.com/news/business/1308384/air_force_eyes_coaltoliquids_plant_in_montana/

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2004315533_coalpower30.html

Montana can make superior fuel/gas than natural oil can for $55 a barrel:
http://neo-natura.blogspot.com/2008/04/synthetic-fuel-corporation.html

http://www.free-eco.org/articleDisplay.php?id=475

This article is spot on - Suicidal Superpower:
http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/04/24/beck.oil.prices/

Kapitan
05-17-08, 12:43 PM
All the busses use this fuel in my area i spoke to one of the engineers the big problem with it is the bio diesel stuff once it heats up it turns to sludge in the tank so the bus will break down and also it can ruin the engine.

STEED
05-17-08, 12:59 PM
Oil is Money and Money is Power and Power is Control. ;)

SUBMAN1
05-17-08, 02:19 PM
All the busses use this fuel in my area i spoke to one of the engineers the big problem with it is the bio diesel stuff once it heats up it turns to sludge in the tank so the bus will break down and also it can ruin the engine.This is not Biofuel (which we all know is a pathetic excuse for a fuel). This is Synthetic fuel made from Natural gas or Coal. Superior to even gas from natural oil - lacking contaminates such as arsenic.

-S

joea
05-17-08, 03:22 PM
Don't coal reserves dwarf oil reserves if I am not mistaken??

SUBMAN1
05-17-08, 03:30 PM
Don't coal reserves dwarf oil reserves if I am not mistaken??Yep - to the tune that coal converted to gas from the reserves in this country alone could run this country at it's current level of consumption for 250 more years. Basically, long enough to design clean and efficient alternative power sources before it even came close to running out.

Jimbuna
05-17-08, 03:39 PM
It makes me wonder just how many alternative power sources have been invented but bought by the oil giants and locked away in a safe. (so the theory goes)

SUBMAN1
05-17-08, 03:43 PM
It makes me wonder just how many alternative power sources have been invented but bought by the oil giants and locked away in a safe. (so the theory goes)This one was designed by the Germans in WWII. It was improved upon in the 1980's, but around 1988, OPEC got scared of it and lowered barrel prices on oil from about $20 a barrel to about $6 a barrel, effectively killing off the project due to the simple fact that it wasn't economically feesable anymore when you can buy $6 barrels of oil. So they bought and paid for it alright, through lowered profits.

-S

Jimbuna
05-17-08, 04:24 PM
It makes me wonder just how many alternative power sources have been invented but bought by the oil giants and locked away in a safe. (so the theory goes)This one was designed by the Germans in WWII. It was improved upon in the 1980's, but around 1988, OPEC got scared of it and lowered barrel prices on oil from about $20 a barrel to about $6 a barrel, effectively killing off the project due to the simple fact that it wasn't economically feesable anymore when you can buy $6 barrels of oil. So they bought and paid for it alright, through lowered profits.

-S

It doesn't suprise me :nope:

I wonder what they've bought and paid for since.....knowing full well that it's the western nations that actually pay in the long run :hmm:

PeriscopeDepth
05-17-08, 05:38 PM
Oil is Money and Money is Power and Power is Control. ;)
QFT.

PD

August
06-18-08, 05:01 PM
Another article on Synthetic fuel. Commercial startup.

http://www.dailytech.com/Startup+Uses+Bacteria+to+Make+Synthetic+Gas+Could+ Knock+Off+Ethanol/article12108.htm

VipertheSniper
06-18-08, 07:33 PM
Don't coal reserves dwarf oil reserves if I am not mistaken??Yep - to the tune that coal converted to gas from the reserves in this country alone could run this country at it's current level of consumption for 250 more years. Basically, long enough to design clean and efficient alternative power sources before it even came close to running out.

That's just not true, current coal reserves last, according to the American Coal Foundation, 245 years, if consumption stays the same. The Fischer-Trops synthesis gives a yield of about 50% gas. The yearly demand of fuel per capita in the USA in the year 2005 was 604 gallons, which is about 1,7 tons of fuel. Given the 50% yield of the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis you would need 3,4 tons of coal to produce that fuel, given that current coal consumption per capita per year is 3,8 tons of coal that is nearly doubling the demand of coal per capita per year.... how should that last for 250 years? Just doesn't add up. Even if the synthesis process has been refined, how much does it yield? I've searched hard and haven't found anthing on it, but even if it were 100% which is impossible, it would still drive the demand up by 1,7 tons per capita per year which would nearly be a 50% increase in demand for coal, which cuts the 245 years down to roughly 165 years (and the truth probably lies somewhere in the middle between that and 130 years)... Still long enough to design clean and efficient alternative power sources, but not nearly as long as you say.

SUBMAN1
06-18-08, 07:43 PM
Don't coal reserves dwarf oil reserves if I am not mistaken??Yep - to the tune that coal converted to gas from the reserves in this country alone could run this country at it's current level of consumption for 250 more years. Basically, long enough to design clean and efficient alternative power sources before it even came close to running out.
That's just not true, current coal reserves last, according to the American Coal Foundation, 245 years, if consumption stays the same. The Fischer-Trops synthesis gives a yield of about 50% gas. The yearly demand of fuel per capita in the USA in the year 2005 was 604 gallons, which is about 1,7 tons of fuel. Given the 50% yield of the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis you would need 3,4 tons of coal to produce that fuel, given that current coal consumption per capita per year is 3,8 tons of coal that is nearly doubling the demand of coal per capita per year.... how should that last for 250 years? Just doesn't add up. Even if the synthesis process has been refined, how much does it yield? I've searched hard and haven't found anthing on it, but even if it were 100% which is impossible, it would still drive the demand up by 1,7 tons per capita per year which would nearly be a 50% increase in demand for coal, which cuts the 245 years down to roughly 165 years (and the truth probably lies somewhere in the middle between that and 130 years)... Still long enough to design clean and efficient alternative power sources, but not nearly as long as you say.Not the same sources I have seen, but at 165 years, do I really care? Add the Oil Shale from Utah (more oil than Saudi Arabia has), and you have a total of 215 years. Add in the tar sands, the oil from AK, the oil from the Atlantic to the Gulf and does it really matter? You are 2.5x to 3 x my life span if I live 100 years! More than long enough to make power from water permanently.

-S

Sailor Steve
06-18-08, 07:47 PM
Add the Oil Shale from Utah (more oil than Saudi Arabia has), and you have a total of 215 years.
Some of here were pretty upset when Ol' Bill signed off on protecting that land. It's not too far from some nice canyonlands, but it's basically desert, and Utah was pretty much all for developing it.:sunny:

VipertheSniper
06-18-08, 08:31 PM
Don't coal reserves dwarf oil reserves if I am not mistaken??Yep - to the tune that coal converted to gas from the reserves in this country alone could run this country at it's current level of consumption for 250 more years. Basically, long enough to design clean and efficient alternative power sources before it even came close to running out.
That's just not true, current coal reserves last, according to the American Coal Foundation, 245 years, if consumption stays the same. The Fischer-Trops synthesis gives a yield of about 50% gas. The yearly demand of fuel per capita in the USA in the year 2005 was 604 gallons, which is about 1,7 tons of fuel. Given the 50% yield of the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis you would need 3,4 tons of coal to produce that fuel, given that current coal consumption per capita per year is 3,8 tons of coal that is nearly doubling the demand of coal per capita per year.... how should that last for 250 years? Just doesn't add up. Even if the synthesis process has been refined, how much does it yield? I've searched hard and haven't found anthing on it, but even if it were 100% which is impossible, it would still drive the demand up by 1,7 tons per capita per year which would nearly be a 50% increase in demand for coal, which cuts the 245 years down to roughly 165 years (and the truth probably lies somewhere in the middle between that and 130 years)... Still long enough to design clean and efficient alternative power sources, but not nearly as long as you say.Not the same sources I have seen, but at 165 years, do I really care? Add the Oil Shale from Utah (more oil than Saudi Arabia has), and you have a total of 215 years. Add in the tar sands, the oil from AK, the oil from the Atlantic to the Gulf and does it really matter? You are 2.5x to 3 x my life span if I live 100 years! More than long enough to make power from water permanently.

-S

The thing is, the equation here is made, without the additional energy that is needed to crack up the coal to gasoline, you won't get that from thin air, and atm about half of the electricity in the USA is made using coal. Lets say you go the nuclear route, then you're polluting the earth with nuclear waste that will radiate for millenias to come, all for 250 years of fuel supply... I think time is running out, if we don't make the push for efficient alternative non-fossil energy sources now, rather than delaying the inevitable.

SUBMAN1
06-18-08, 08:43 PM
The thing is, the equation here is made, without the additional energy that is needed to crack up the coal to gasoline, you won't get that from thin air, and atm about half of the electricity in the USA is made using coal. Lets say you go the nuclear route, then you're polluting the earth with nuclear waste that will radiate for millenias to come, all for 250 years of fuel supply... I think time is running out, if we don't make the push for efficient alternative non-fossil energy sources now, rather than delaying the inevitable.Thats an ignorant view of how things really are. We have plenty of hydrocarbon based fuels left. problem is, the Tree Huggers left us needing, not wanting.

For your info, Nuclear energy is the least polluting energy maker on the planet. Nothing comes close. Nothing even comes close to its energy output. Only one thing in the entire world could match a reactor for energy output - Grand Coulle Dam. No other energy producer, not coal, nor hydro, nor nothing comes close. With nukes, there is no emmisions, nothing. Just basic waste, and very little of it. as for clean energy, nothing will ever come close except maybe a fusion reactor or anti matter reactor. Two techonologies we need to push for.

-S

August
06-18-08, 10:02 PM
I see coal based fuels as just another fossil fuel source. Fine to exploit while it lasts but will eventually run out.

The link i just posted talks about a renewable long term solution:

LS9 has created special genetically engineered yeast and E. Coli bacteria. These friendly microbes can take biowaste and weeds (instead of sugar) and use "previously undiscovered metabolic pathways" to convert the sugar components of cellulose into long chain hydrocarbons, resembling crude oil.

bookworm_020
06-19-08, 01:46 AM
There was a story on oil sand / oil shale mining here in australia on the 60 minutes program. It is possible to produce oil and do so at a cost less than the current price of oil, but what about the damage to the area they dig up to get at it? Not to mention all the waste that is produced (more CO2 than producing a standard barrell of oil.

As one of the figures that was put up was in all the time of oil sand mining in the U.S. less than 1 km2 has been rehabilitated back to the natural state.

Time to start thinking out side the box for energy production.:yep:

Stealth Hunter
06-19-08, 01:50 AM
Oil is Money and Money is Power and Power is Control. ;)

And so long as there is money in oil, invested shall the government stay in oil.

SUBMAN1
06-19-08, 08:40 AM
There was a story on oil sand / oil shale mining here in australia on the 60 minutes program. It is possible to produce oil and do so at a cost less than the current price of oil, but what about the damage to the area they dig up to get at it? Not to mention all the waste that is produced (more CO2 than producing a standard barrell of oil.

As one of the figures that was put up was in all the time of oil sand mining in the U.S. less than 1 km2 has been rehabilitated back to the natural state.

Time to start thinking out side the box for energy production.:yep:Actually BP was allowed to test in Utah and found a way to extract it for less money than normal oil at the time, and this was back in 2000.

They did some form of chemical process that made it easy.

-S

August
06-19-08, 09:04 AM
Y'all ought to check the thread title. Oil shale and sand are NOT synthetic fuel sources.