by Strummer » Tue 05 Nov 2013, 05:38:58
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('John_A', 'N')obody cares about how much energy goes into producing hydrates, only how much money. If it costs more to find, develop, distribute and sell than it does to get it, you lose. Otherwise, you win! Energy doesn't come into play other than as a cost you use to do the work necessary to get it.
Yeah, but money is just a number, showing the costs of the physical inputs (raw resources, tools, labour, energy...) that go into the physical process of extraction. Do you have a breakdown of those costs for the methane hydrates, and can you show which of those inputs you expect to come down in price drastically?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('John_A', 'I')n millions of drilled wells, tens of thousands of oil and gas fields, hundreds of thousands of oil and gas development projects, going all the way back to 1859 and Drake, there has not been a single decision to do ANY of this stuff based on the energy input. Not one.
. Those are two completely separate things. You can make a decision based on your expectation, throwing endless amnounts of money at it, and still fail catastrophically. If energy extraction were just a matter of money and decisions, then this guy would be the richest man on earth right now:
amount of sunken cost for the other hundreds of thousands of development projects between 1859 and today, those that went nowhere. Maybe that number would show that they actually should have looked at the energy inputs, instead of just money.