by Flow » Sat 12 Nov 2005, 02:49:18
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('GreyZone', 'T')his is hysterical. Flow is using fundamentalist creationists who are pushing abiotic nonsense at worldnetdaily.com as his authoritative sources. That's so rich!
Did anyone actually read the article Flow linked? The author belittles modern geology by setting up a strawman that some of the Brazilian fields couldn't have come from dead dinosaurs. Sheesh. Since oil never came from dinosaurs anyway, that's a gigantic red herring intended purely for scientifically illiterates who frequent that web site.
Flow, worldnetdaily.com has zero credibility. If this is the quality of your "data" then no wonder your conclusions are what they are. This is how you "prove" you are right and others are wrong, even when your own calculations have serious and identifiable mathematical errors?
I didn't reference this "oil find" anywhere in my data. I just replied to a comment about "No New Discoveries made" and wanted to show that was not the case.
Take the Brazil oil out of the picture.
1) We still have 1.278 Trillion barrels of proven reserves in the world.
2) We still have over 1 trillion tons of coal that can be converted to oil (in WW2, the Germans were able to make 2 to 4 barrels of oil from each ton of coal, so assuming that technology has NOT increased since then - very unlikely - we can get 2 to 4 trillion barrels of oil from coal).
3) EIA estimates put the amount of unconventional oil reserves between 3 to 5 trillion barrels of oil.
So right there, we are talking about 5 to 10 trillion barrels of oil from THREE sources. Let's not forget about Biodiesel, Ethanal, oil from thermal Depolarizaion (should the technology ever be developed to something better than it is now). How about reduced demand due to higher efficent cars/trucks/semis.
I understand that these conventional oils are not widely used today, but does that mean they cannot be used more in the future? The reason they are not used today is because there is an ample supply of conventional oil that can be used. Of course, a very large part of the reason it is not widely used is due to the increased cost of producing these types of oil (need to sell for $30 a barrel to be feasible).
As we need to rely more and more of these types of oils, does it not hold up to logic that the cost of production will come down. Does it not hold up to logic that the technologies to extract these types of fuels will increase and more and more will be able to be extracted? This is why proven oil reserves continue to grow with conventional oils is it not? So why could the same thing not hold true for unconventional oils?