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How much time would extra heavy crude refining give us?

General discussions of the systemic, societal and civilisational effects of depletion.

How much time would extra heavy crude refining give us?

Unread postby SoothSayer » Fri 14 Jul 2006, 04:40:28

The world apparently has excess heavy crude supplies.

Are we talking about significant amounts of this oil grade ... and can we successfully refine this stuff?

If so, and if we build (more) refineries for this oil grade, how many extra years of excess oil supplies would we have?

Would this push Peak Oil back decades?

Would oil from these refineries be more expensive?

[I am NOT including tar sands or Venezuelan gloop as heavy oil!]
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Re: How much tme would extra heavy crude refining give us?

Unread postby Doly » Fri 14 Jul 2006, 05:15:49

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('SoothSayer', '
')If so, and if we build (more) refineries for this oil grade, how many extra years of excess oil supplies would we have?

Would this push Peak Oil back decades?


Campbell has studied this, and people often forget that his date for peak oil is INCLUDING heavy oil. Excluding heavy oil, peak oil happened in 2005 according to ASPO. Including heavy oil, LNG, deepwater and polar, peak oil will happen in 2010.

What people often forget is that at the time around the peak is when most of the oil is produced. So even huge increases in the available amount of oil don't push back the date of peak oil a lot.
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Re: How much time would extra heavy crude refining give us?

Unread postby SoothSayer » Fri 14 Jul 2006, 05:18:47

Thanks doly ... a clean precise answer! Makes a change ... :-D
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Re: How much time would extra heavy crude refining give us?

Unread postby Heineken » Fri 14 Jul 2006, 10:06:09

The real question is what the refined product would cost. Lots, lots more.

Economics is what's really going to drive this issue to the edge.
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Re: How much time would extra heavy crude refining give us?

Unread postby fireplaceguy » Fri 14 Jul 2006, 10:27:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'T')he real question is what the refined product would cost. Lots, lots more.

Economics is what's really going to drive this issue to the edge.
Agreed, and a large factor in cost is yield. What do you get from a barrel of this heavy crude?

Would you get as much of the lighter grades (lighter lubricants, gasoline, kerosene, etc..) as you do from a barrel of light sweet or would it yield a lot more heavy stuff like tar and asphalt? Anyone?
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Re: How much time would extra heavy crude refining give us?

Unread postby aahala » Fri 14 Jul 2006, 10:53:04

It seems to me the more refinery capacity, the sooner rather than
the later peak will occur.

Humans will consume all the oil available and the more available
the more rapid the consumption.
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Re: How much time would extra heavy crude refining give us?

Unread postby SoothSayer » Fri 14 Jul 2006, 11:10:26

I found an interesting thread on heavy crudes: here.

The marginal refining capacity in the world cannot process heavy, sour crudes at all, let alone process these crudes into light, sweet products. Converting existing refining capacity to process heavy, sour crudes to produce light, sweet products is expensive and time-consuming. In the U.S., the conversion (for the refiners who are converting) is a multi-year, multi-billion-dollar project. Some refiners have elected to produce light, sweet products only from light, sweet crudes. Others have elected to retire refining capacity. In parts of the world that supply markets with only higher sulfur products or that have dropped out of the market to supply low-sulfur products, little or no conversion will take place and the demand will continue for the diminishing fraction of light, sweet crudes.

Acording to the posters there, refineries CAN be built to process heavy crude ... but ...
* More energy is needed to crack the heavy crude
* Heavy crude viscosity limits flow rates
* Heavy crude refineries need huge capital investment & time
* It is not worth building smal refineries
* Sulphur removal is an extra problem / cost
* Heavy crude is more effective to produce diesel - but demand is for gasoline
* Heavy crude will peak soon thus threatening refinery investments
* Oil companies aren't building refineries for two reasons. First, historically, refineries haven't made a lot of money. The return on investment isn't that great. Second, with the price of crude going up, investing in exploration and production has a significantly higher return. When you compete for investment dollars inside an oil company, E&P wins over refining.
* Sour crude can contain H2S which leads to safety system costs
* Attempting to process heavy crude in light refineries causes production bottlenecks.

So I suppose we need to build a HUGE refinery for heavy & sour crudes, without fussing too much about sulphur extraction or H2S safety, and focus on producing diesel for countries who have weak emissions rules.

If we could persude China to take this diesel then the West could keep the clean oils for itself.

Problem solved. Everyone happy.
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Re: How much time would extra heavy crude refining give us?

Unread postby NTBKtrader » Fri 14 Jul 2006, 11:11:51

We need gradual demand destruction...
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Re: How much time would extra heavy crude refining give us?

Unread postby Zardoz » Sat 15 Jul 2006, 12:54:35

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('SoothSayer', '.')..Venezuelan gloop...

Does that stuff have any use at all, or is it essentially worthless?
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Re: How much time would extra heavy crude refining give us?

Unread postby Pablo2079 » Mon 17 Jul 2006, 14:32:05

Isn't Saudi Arabia building some refineries (or a refinery) for it's sour crude? I remember reading that they were going to start exporting more refined product.

I need to find that article.....
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Re: How much time would extra heavy crude refining give us?

Unread postby SoothSayer » Mon 17 Jul 2006, 15:29:39

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Zardoz', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('SoothSayer', '.')..Venezuelan gloop...

Does that stuff have any use at all, or is it essentially worthless?


Emulsified with water it can be used as a boiler fuel called Orimulsion.

Sadly this is stinky polluting stuff so nobody wants it.

(I suppose we could use it for roads in view of the current asphalt shortage)

However in say 20 years time this toxic gloop might be being burned everywhere!

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Re: How much time would extra heavy crude refining give us?

Unread postby nth » Thu 27 Jul 2006, 12:48:11

heavy crude as defined above does not really change PO.
It does change the price of oil.

Right now, we have shortage of heavy crude refining capacity. There are about 2-3mbpd of known capacity that is being shut in due to price difference of crude prices. Most of this is Saudi Arabia. US has about 30kbpd of shut in. If there are any large fields being shut in due to quality of crude outside of OPEC, then I have not heard of it. Only Iran and Saudi Arabia have significant amounts held back as far as I can tell from various news sources.

As refineries and products, heavy crude can be refined to gasoline or almost any other type of fuel. It is not diesel only. Yields are lower than sweet crude, so 1mb of heavy does not equal 1mb of sweet. Also, it does not have to produce more toxic air pollution. It does need to produce more sulphur, but it can be trapped. Yes, it is a lot more expensive. For a sweet crude refinery to be modified to sour heavy crude, it requires major rerouting the pipeline structure and adding additional equipment. That is why you get quotes like it is easier to built a new refinery than retrofit existing one.

Venezuela heavy crude can be and is being made into gasoline and other refined products. The boiler fuel was done in the past when oil prices were $10 and they were looking for new markets. Venezuela right now is trying to get out of that business. Venezuela's problem with this heavy crude is not refining, but production. Chevron uses steam injection. This has been the most successful method so far. With the new tax system in place, it is impossible for Venezuela to boost production of the Orinco Belt faster than currently plan. Actually, significant slower as investments from the Majors have stopped.
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Re: How much time would extra heavy crude refining give us?

Unread postby nth » Thu 27 Jul 2006, 12:57:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pablo2079', 'I')sn't Saudi Arabia building some refineries (or a refinery) for it's sour crude? I remember reading that they were going to start exporting more refined product.

I need to find that article.....


Yes, they are planning to add lots of new capacity in Saudi Arabia and also in China. Yes, these are targeting to use Saudi's heavy oil blend.

Also, it is worth noting that Saudi Arabia is bringing online sweet crude oil production in the next few years. They had some sour crude oil fields brought online that were shutin, but those don't seem to have any buyers.
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Re: How much time would extra heavy crude refining give us?

Unread postby Tyler_JC » Thu 27 Jul 2006, 14:23:20

The key problem is the time delay between deciding to utilize the large deposits of heavy crude and that oil reaching the Shell station.

If Peak Oil is going to happen in the next few years, heavy crude will help to lower the rate of decline in global oil production (for a while, anyway) but won't bring global oil production over the top output reached in say 2007.

However, we will never see $40 oil again. Most of these heavy crude oil projects only look profitable with oil trading in the 60+ range, that's why they weren't considered untill now.

Many countries have large deposits of low grade oil-like resources. The reserves of Canada's tar sands, America's oil shale, Venezuela's oil shale, etc. could potentially number in the hundreds of billions of barrels of extractable oil.

Pretending for the moment that all of these oil-like resources are actually extractable and could be extracted at reasonable prices and at any rate we choose. (:roll:). How much time would we get?

Let's say we have 300 Billion barrels of this heavy oil that we can suck out of the ground. (a fairly generous estimate)

What do the production numbers look like?

We currently use/produce 30 billion barrels a year.

If demand increases 2.5% a year and supply from conventional sources drops 2.5%, how long can we keep up the game with heavy oil?

Not long.

Assuming we can magically increase heavy oil production ignoring geology...we get 20 years. Granted, that's a lot of time, but it's not a real number because it relies on several dozen laughable assumptions. The real number is closer to 5-10 years.

By 2026 we would be using 48 billion barrels a year.
Conventional oil production would be down to 18.5 billion barrels
Heavy oil would be forced to make up for 30 billion barrels of missing oil production.

Funny, that is exactly the amount of oil we use right now!

And the next year, heavy oil production would drop to 0...

With 2/3 of our oil production gone in one year, the Mad Max biker gangs would surely come out of the woodwork.

Conclusion?

Heavy oil will buy us a few years, but it's not a long term solution. (Or frankly, even a middle term solution)
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Re: How much time would extra heavy crude refining give us?

Unread postby nth » Thu 27 Jul 2006, 14:56:38

Tyler_JC,

If you are going to lump Canadian, US, and Venezuelan and any other carbon rich sources, then you can push out PO for many many years.

In reality, these resources will only be exploited heavily after PO, assuming PO before 2020. Only Canada has accelerated investment. US and Venezuela have only minimal investments. US due to technological barriers and Venezuela due to tax and politics.

As you pointed out, these things don't flow like water. There is no way we can ramp these up to produce a lot of oil if measured by production/reserve ratio. Huge reserves with small production that will last many years.
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Re: How much time would extra heavy crude refining give us?

Unread postby Tanada » Thu 27 Jul 2006, 21:30:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Zardoz', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('SoothSayer', '.')..Venezuelan gloop...

Does that stuff have any use at all, or is it essentially worthless?


It all depends on your POV. Mixed with some water and a little detergent you get Orimulsion, which burns about like Bunker D grade oil in large boilers but has a heavy sulfur content. Alternatively you can use it as feedstock for petrochemicals, or in a coal to liquids plant (it has more hydrogen than coal so it is easier to upgrade into light oils).

Finally the folks at Carthage, MO claim you can use these asphaltenes as feedstock for the anything to oil process and net 84% diesel 4 from 100% asphaltene/water mix. If those claims are true Venazuala will be the richest of the OPEC nations in a decade.
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Re: How much time would extra heavy crude refining give us?

Unread postby nth » Fri 28 Jul 2006, 12:32:11

Tanada,

There are a couple of projects refining this into higher quality oil for refinery. You make it sound like it is no good for gasoline, etc....
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Re: How much time would extra heavy crude refining give us?

Unread postby RdSnt » Fri 28 Jul 2006, 12:45:27

As the shift is more and more towards heavier crudes and tar sands and shales, the decline of petroleum supplies will accelerate.

This is primarily due to the inevitable rapid decline in EROEI and our foolish way of measuring the success of development in dollars spent and gained (profit) as apposed to energy expended.

Prudhoe Bay had a negative EROEI thoroughout it's entire production history, yet becuase the company elites made fat bonuses and good profits the project was deemed a success.
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