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-   -   Saudis to pump oil at record levels (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=138195)

MothBalls 06-16-08 01:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SUBMAN1
What you are listening to is speculators. They are hyping the cost of oil again.

Exactly. It's the trading system in general that is causing this, especially in the US.

First they ran up the tech bubble, overinflated everything, and caused a disaster. Then they did the same thing to the credit/housing markets. Now they are working over the energy sector. I wouldn't be surprised to see the energy "bubble" pop in the near future.

Question is, what market sector will they assault next?

PeriscopeDepth 06-16-08 01:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SUBMAN1
Quote:

Originally Posted by PeriscopeDepth
That site I quoted from also said 38% of future demand growth worldwide will be Chinese. That is not small at all.

PD

See my edited above post. By the way, i see 17% increase in America's use as enormous. China and a 17% increase is no where close to the same scale. That is what I mean.

-S

You hear what you want to hear.

They have revised it to 1.8%. And that figure is an ANNUAL increase. See these two documents:
http://www.iea.org/Textbase/npsum/WEO2007SUM.pdf
http://www.iea.org/textbase/papers/2007/fs_china.pdf

Some selected points:
-Shortly after 2010, China will surpass the United States as the largest energy consumer.
- Around 2015, more new vehicle sales will occur in China than the United States.
- Energy demand will have grown some 55% worldwide by 2030.
- Before 2025, India will overtake Japan as the third largest importer of oil.

Also, keep in mind, these were written when $75/barrel was considered "relatively high".

PD

SUBMAN1 06-16-08 01:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PeriscopeDepth
You hear what you want to hear.

They have revised it to 1.8%. And that figure is an ANNUAL increase. See these two documents:
http://www.iea.org/Textbase/npsum/WEO2007SUM.pdf
http://www.iea.org/textbase/papers/2007/fs_china.pdf

Some selected points:
-Shortly after 2010, China will surpass the United States as the largest energy consumer.
- Around 2015, more new vehicle sales will occur in China than the United States.
- Energy demand will have grown some 55% by 2030.
- Before 2025, India will overtake Japan as the third largest importer of oil.

Also, keep in mind, these were written when $75/barrel was considered "relatively high".

PD

1.8% is still, less than 2% a year. Still though, you are right. If what you are saying is true, then China is not as 'small' as I envisioned. Thanks for the info.

-S

PeriscopeDepth 06-16-08 01:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SUBMAN1
Quote:

Originally Posted by PeriscopeDepth
You hear what you want to hear.

They have revised it to 1.8%. And that figure is an ANNUAL increase. See these two documents:
http://www.iea.org/Textbase/npsum/WEO2007SUM.pdf
http://www.iea.org/textbase/papers/2007/fs_china.pdf

Some selected points:
-Shortly after 2010, China will surpass the United States as the largest energy consumer.
- Around 2015, more new vehicle sales will occur in China than the United States.
- Energy demand will have grown some 55% by 2030.
- Before 2025, India will overtake Japan as the third largest importer of oil.

Also, keep in mind, these were written when $75/barrel was considered "relatively high".

PD

1.8% is still, less than 2% a year. Still though, you are right. If what you are saying is true, then China is not as 'small' as I envisioned. Thanks for the info.

-S

They are rapidly becoming less "slave labor peasant economy". And when you have a population four times the size of the US that is going to want to own a car the same way US families do now (not to mention other energy demands)... If people think Iraq right now is bad, there are some wicked things to come.

PD

Blacklight 06-16-08 02:35 PM

Quote:

The Saudis are our bestest friends ever.

PD
:rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl:

Seriously. I don't expect the prices to change at all except to go further up. They're going to milk the price gouging as much as they can... and they can milk it quite a bit given a lot of countries' absolute dependence on oil like here in the US. They're going to continue to gouge and gouge.... And get richer and richer..:nope:

Stealth Hunter 06-16-08 04:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Officerpuppy
Wonder if Mars has oil, forget finding traces of water, lets send up a drill and start drilling :rotfl:

You can bet your life they would if they did find that it had oil.:roll:

SUBMAN1 06-16-08 04:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Stealth Hunter
Quote:

Originally Posted by Officerpuppy
Wonder if Mars has oil, forget finding traces of water, lets send up a drill and start drilling :rotfl:

You can bet your life they would if they did find that it had oil.:roll:

Lets see! Nope! Doubt it! return on investment sucks big time! Especially since coal to gasoline can be made for $50 a barrel, and we have enough of it to make gas for the next 250 years!

Now if the place were litttered with heavy metals like gold and platinum, or Uranium, might be a different story.

-S

Skybird 06-16-08 05:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TDK1044
The same is true for Anwar. By one federal estimate, the refuge holds more than 4 billion barrels of oil ready for the taking. The USA consumes roughly 20 million barrels of oil a day.

4 billion (reservoir) divided by 20 million (consummation per day) is 200 days.

Quote:

The argument against drilling in Anwar has been the disruption to wildlife. Yet we're talking about drilling in an area the size of a large city, when the Anwar region is the size of three States.
And we already have seen repeatedly what damage one tanker alone can do to an area as big as half a state. Biotopes are compley and sensitively balanced systems that do not need catastrophic impacts but small ticks to the baance in order to already disbalance the system. Now, I do not want to say anything pro or contra Anwar drilling, since I do not know it, I just want to show that your argument for Anwar is not really helpful.

Quote:

I think Americans have to ease up about things like not wanting to see oil rigs off the Florida coast as an excuse for not drilling there. If we want to continue to drive what we want when we want then there is a price to pay for that luxury.
The problem is that oil fields are not being sucked empty until no drop is left, because there is a threshhold beyond which it is no more profitable for companies to suck out the oil from the earth. The less oil there is, the more difficult it becomes, and the more investements and technological efforts must be taken to win less and lesser oil. For many fields in the world, this treshhold level is around 30-50%. I am simplifying, but it is not that there are only subterranean caves filled with an ocean of liquid oil, only some part of an oil field is made of this. The greater part of the substance is stored inside sediments and porous rock holding it like a stone-sponge. you can imagine the difference when remembering the difference between drinking a glass of water with a straw, and needing to suck it out with effort from a piece of hard rubber-sponge, or needing to suck it out of a hard fruit. to get the most out of it, you sooner than later need technical kitchen helpers, fi you do not want to eat the fruit all together . When the most obvious reservoir of liquid oil is being sucked out, then it becomes difficult and less and lesser profitable to suck out the remaining oil hidden in the seidment and porous rock. Theoretically, there is plenty of oil left. but our economic system currently is not equipped for getting it, from an economical/financial perspective, because the investements are higher than the profits. That's the reason why many fields are given up when being depleted to around let's say 40-50%.

SUBMAN1 06-16-08 05:59 PM

Skybird - they said the same things about the Alaskan pipeline - oh its gonna disrupt the wildlife! The end result is, the wildlife loves it since even the damn caribou's huddle up to the pipeline for warmth during the winter!

Biggest farce on the planet! Actually, I take that back, Global Warming is, but still.

And the oil there is probably much larger, but no one knows until they go take a look!

-S

Ducimus 06-16-08 06:21 PM

Oil, shmoil, all i know is i wish this really existed:

http://www.futurehi.net/images/mrfusion.jpg

http://journeyhomeburke.files.wordpr.../mr-fusion.jpg

:rotfl: :rotfl:

Extra oil pumped? Won't do squat.

FAdmiral 06-16-08 08:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ducimus
Oil, shmoil, all i know is i wish this really existed:

http://www.futurehi.net/images/mrfusion.jpg

http://journeyhomeburke.files.wordpr.../mr-fusion.jpg

:rotfl: :rotfl:

Extra oil pumped? Won't do squat.

This may be a lot closer than anyone knows. Cold Fusion may have already been
discovered (look under the oil industry rug)

Here's another bit of info that is not being released to the general public????

"There may be more and better oil under the Dakotas then in the entire middle
east !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


JIM

Blacklight 06-16-08 09:05 PM

Quote:

I am simplifying, but it is not that there are only subterranean caves filled with an ocean of liquid oil, only some part of an oil field is made of this. The greater part of the substance is stored inside sediments and porous rock holding it like a stone-sponge. you can imagine the difference when remembering the difference between drinking a glass of water with a straw, and needing to suck it out with effort from a piece of hard rubber-sponge, or needing to suck it out of a hard fruit. to get the most out of it, you sooner than later need technical kitchen helpers, fi you do not want to eat the fruit all together .
Technically the way they handle the situation when the oil is in sediment and porous rock is not to suck it out. What they do is drill two holes and then pump water down one. The water seeps through the rock and because oil floats on top of the water, the water pushes the oil up through the seccond hole so they are actually replacing the oil field with a water field. It's actually a very efficient way to get the oil out.

FIREWALL 06-16-08 09:30 PM

The Saudies are pumping something at record levels.:p

Skybird 06-17-08 05:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Blacklight
Quote:

I am simplifying, but it is not that there are only subterranean caves filled with an ocean of liquid oil, only some part of an oil field is made of this. The greater part of the substance is stored inside sediments and porous rock holding it like a stone-sponge. you can imagine the difference when remembering the difference between drinking a glass of water with a straw, and needing to suck it out with effort from a piece of hard rubber-sponge, or needing to suck it out of a hard fruit. to get the most out of it, you sooner than later need technical kitchen helpers, fi you do not want to eat the fruit all together .
Technically the way they handle the situation when the oil is in sediment and porous rock is not to suck it out. What they do is drill two holes and then pump water down one. The water seeps through the rock and because oil floats on top of the water, the water pushes the oil up through the seccond hole so they are actually replacing the oil field with a water field. It's actually a very efficient way to get the oil out.

Yes indeed, as I said, I was simplyfying. the problem is the pressure needed once the most obvious holes and caves are empty of oil. Like your blood pressure rises when your capillars tighten, it is with pil winning as well when you need to free it from the finer and finer granulated? porous? layers of sediment and rock.

If they would not pump water into the reservoirs, some emptied caves would simply collapse. Its comparable in stabilizing like flooding old mines.


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