by donshan » Sun 30 Oct 2005, 15:31:37
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Anonymous', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('EnviroEngr', '[')size=125]MicroHydro[/size]
Joined: Apr 10, 2005
Posts: 20
... posted this review:
"I have purchased the book and just read it too. This is a work narrowly focused on energy geology with only minimal discussion of possible social, economic, and geopolitical consequences. This is not a criticism, it is a very good petroleum geology book for the lay reader with a nice historical perspective. Technical issues in exploration and secondary recovery are well addressed. "
I too just purchased and read this book. I found it one of those books, I could not put down until I finished it. The first 3 chapters are an outstanding summary of petroleum geology and and an understandable explanation of Hubbert's Peak math to anyone who understands the basics of high school algebra. Chapters 2 and 3 alone are worth the price of the book if you want a simple, easy understanding of Hubbert's Peak. The math point to a peak date of "late 2005 or the first months of 2006" Picking Thanksgiving is clearly symbolic. Don't dismiss his date until you do the math too.
However it goes far beyond just petroleum, which is why I am adding this post. The subtitle is "The view from Hubbert's Peak". It is a book about "fuels from the earth". The objective is to discuss many of the so called "solutions" to a declining supply of conventional oil by using other sources,
Chapt 4- Mostly Gas
Chapt 5 Consider Coal
Chap 6 Tar Sands, Heavy oil
Chap 7 Oil Shale
Chap 8 Uranium
Chap 9 Hydrogen
Chap 10 The Big picture.
After the first 3 oil chapters he applies the same introductions to all these other energy sources too. I ended knowing a lot more about their geological origins and the difficulties we face in using any of them to replace oil. These are not new energy sources, and Deffeyes gives many examples of the numerous commercial attempts to exploit these sources, with numerous commercial failures.
Deffeyes points out in Chap 7 that there may be 1,500 billion barrels of oil in the US Green River oil shale vs. remaining reserves of 400 billion barrels of oil in all the Mid East. But then he explains why the amount of this oil that is "commercial" is zero. It is a rebuttal to all those who use these oil shale reserves to debunk Hubbert. Knowing the facts Deffeyes provides will help debunk oil shale enthusiasts.
Deffeyes starts off with a provocative question with reference to the oil companies that are loaded with cash, but are not investing in new drilling, new refineries, new oil tankers saying "What is going on, Why don't higher prices and increasing demand encourage investment?" He answers, " If as I claim, world oil production is about to decline,there is no point in adding refineries, or increasing the size of the tanker fleet".
An outstanding read, written by an expert who spent is lifetime working in the industry!