This is not a global warming thread, let’s leave that out.
For some reason the issue of energy became very black and white, if you believe in CAGW, you have to be anti-oil and pro-renewable energy. Alternately, those of us who don’t subscribe to the Catastrophic, or Anthropogenic adjectives, automatically are presumed to be anti-environment, anti-progress and pro-oil.
Well, I for one believe there is a convincing case for the need for sustainable energy without invoking the dreaded climate change. I don’t say renewable, because an energy source can be renewable without being sustainable( think whale oil) or sustainable without being renewable ( think Thorium or other abundant minerals, assuming the waste processing is sustainable). I use the word sustainable, because the word alternative is a nonsense PC feel good word that doesn’t mean anything, much like alternative lifestyle.
First off, I greatly appreciate all the benefits of fossil fuels; energy dense, cheap to obtain and process, portable, indefinitely storable, large reserves, one only needs to look at the progress human kind has made since harnessing fossil fuels to appreciate their value. I’ve often said they could be 10 times their current price and still be dirt cheap compared to anything that came before them. But, as the name fossil indicates, they are not renewable on any reasonable time frame. Given growth rates of energy consumption, even if we were to double known reserves tomorrow, it would hardly gain another generation worth of supply. While recent discovery and extraction techniques may make fossil fuels appear limitless once again, so is our demand for energy, at some point the sad reality that we have consumed hundreds of millions of years’ worth of stored solar energy in just a few generations, and left very little for the next generation will hit home. Then, at the time when we need energy the most, to adapt, to research, to retrofit, and to build the infrastructure for whatever will replace it, we will have the least quantity, and economically viable energy to do it.
Next justification is that extracting, processing and burning fossil fuels does create a host of really nasty by-products. While it is true that the advances in standard of living and health care afforded by this energy fuelled society have more than outweighed the side effects on our health, as indicated by increasing life spans et al., but imagine how much healthier we could be when our world is not full of: Carcinogenic diesel fuel exhaust, carcinogenic gasoline, lead lingering in everything from decades of leaded fuel, mercury and other heavy metals, Benzene( ever wondered why full serve gas stations are disappearing, the fumes from one fuel up far exceed the occupational limit for benzenes, it is very serious stuff) and a host of other inevitable toxins that permeate the air we breathe, water we drink and food we eat. Much of this stuff will be with us for generations to come, even if we stopped producing it today, lead is a perfect example. Regardless of emissions controls, these things are inevitable by-products, or the products themselves, we are doing a much better job of minimizing their release, but they will still exist at some point in the processing or combustion process, or need to be stored indefinitely.
The modern oil and gas industry in the western world is beyond paranoid about their environmental footprint, although the same cannot always be said for all regions or historical production. The legacy of those will be with us for generations to come. If we let it reach the point where we are trying to recover every last drop regardless of cost, there will no longer be the profit, nor the surplus energy to safely decommission the existing infrastructure, corrosion, and tectonics will wreak havoc, we need an exit plan while we still have excess energy and resources.
We will likely still need fossil fuels for some uses, even after something better has replaced it for our everyday uses. If you need to store vast amounts of energy for backup power in the arctic, and need to fly it in, fossil fuel may still fit the bill, but if we extract all of the economic reserves before looking for something better, that would not be feasible.
Industry will continue to need lubricants long after the internal combustion engine is extinct. Currently 6% of oil ends up as lubricants.
Asphalt, I can’t think of a scenario where asphalt from hydro carbons won’t be necessary, even if we all fly our own personal flying machines everywhere, they will still need to park, land, and take off.
Long after we don’t need oil for energy, we will most likely continue to need it feedstock for most synthetic products, possibly even for sustenance. Our grandkids might think we were recklessly insane to be burning this resource in our cars at sickeningly low efficiencies when they need it to create the necessities of life.
So, back to looking for sustainable solutions. So far, human progress has been fueled by progressively better energy sources, cheaper, denser, safer, easier, more reliable etc. We are currently contemplating and experimenting with the first giant step backwards in progress since we first harnessed energy. Currently according to our governments and many academics, the best we can look forward to is replacing fossil fuel with much more expensive and unreliable wind and solar (so far). As much as I believe we need to ration our use of fossil fuels for the reasons I listed above (and many more), I truly hope that we can find solutions that also work on a calm December day in northern Canada while also being cheaper, denser, safer etc. than fossil fuels.
Continued in next post.
For some reason the issue of energy became very black and white, if you believe in CAGW, you have to be anti-oil and pro-renewable energy. Alternately, those of us who don’t subscribe to the Catastrophic, or Anthropogenic adjectives, automatically are presumed to be anti-environment, anti-progress and pro-oil.
Well, I for one believe there is a convincing case for the need for sustainable energy without invoking the dreaded climate change. I don’t say renewable, because an energy source can be renewable without being sustainable( think whale oil) or sustainable without being renewable ( think Thorium or other abundant minerals, assuming the waste processing is sustainable). I use the word sustainable, because the word alternative is a nonsense PC feel good word that doesn’t mean anything, much like alternative lifestyle.
First off, I greatly appreciate all the benefits of fossil fuels; energy dense, cheap to obtain and process, portable, indefinitely storable, large reserves, one only needs to look at the progress human kind has made since harnessing fossil fuels to appreciate their value. I’ve often said they could be 10 times their current price and still be dirt cheap compared to anything that came before them. But, as the name fossil indicates, they are not renewable on any reasonable time frame. Given growth rates of energy consumption, even if we were to double known reserves tomorrow, it would hardly gain another generation worth of supply. While recent discovery and extraction techniques may make fossil fuels appear limitless once again, so is our demand for energy, at some point the sad reality that we have consumed hundreds of millions of years’ worth of stored solar energy in just a few generations, and left very little for the next generation will hit home. Then, at the time when we need energy the most, to adapt, to research, to retrofit, and to build the infrastructure for whatever will replace it, we will have the least quantity, and economically viable energy to do it.
Next justification is that extracting, processing and burning fossil fuels does create a host of really nasty by-products. While it is true that the advances in standard of living and health care afforded by this energy fuelled society have more than outweighed the side effects on our health, as indicated by increasing life spans et al., but imagine how much healthier we could be when our world is not full of: Carcinogenic diesel fuel exhaust, carcinogenic gasoline, lead lingering in everything from decades of leaded fuel, mercury and other heavy metals, Benzene( ever wondered why full serve gas stations are disappearing, the fumes from one fuel up far exceed the occupational limit for benzenes, it is very serious stuff) and a host of other inevitable toxins that permeate the air we breathe, water we drink and food we eat. Much of this stuff will be with us for generations to come, even if we stopped producing it today, lead is a perfect example. Regardless of emissions controls, these things are inevitable by-products, or the products themselves, we are doing a much better job of minimizing their release, but they will still exist at some point in the processing or combustion process, or need to be stored indefinitely.
The modern oil and gas industry in the western world is beyond paranoid about their environmental footprint, although the same cannot always be said for all regions or historical production. The legacy of those will be with us for generations to come. If we let it reach the point where we are trying to recover every last drop regardless of cost, there will no longer be the profit, nor the surplus energy to safely decommission the existing infrastructure, corrosion, and tectonics will wreak havoc, we need an exit plan while we still have excess energy and resources.
We will likely still need fossil fuels for some uses, even after something better has replaced it for our everyday uses. If you need to store vast amounts of energy for backup power in the arctic, and need to fly it in, fossil fuel may still fit the bill, but if we extract all of the economic reserves before looking for something better, that would not be feasible.
Industry will continue to need lubricants long after the internal combustion engine is extinct. Currently 6% of oil ends up as lubricants.
Asphalt, I can’t think of a scenario where asphalt from hydro carbons won’t be necessary, even if we all fly our own personal flying machines everywhere, they will still need to park, land, and take off.
Long after we don’t need oil for energy, we will most likely continue to need it feedstock for most synthetic products, possibly even for sustenance. Our grandkids might think we were recklessly insane to be burning this resource in our cars at sickeningly low efficiencies when they need it to create the necessities of life.
So, back to looking for sustainable solutions. So far, human progress has been fueled by progressively better energy sources, cheaper, denser, safer, easier, more reliable etc. We are currently contemplating and experimenting with the first giant step backwards in progress since we first harnessed energy. Currently according to our governments and many academics, the best we can look forward to is replacing fossil fuel with much more expensive and unreliable wind and solar (so far). As much as I believe we need to ration our use of fossil fuels for the reasons I listed above (and many more), I truly hope that we can find solutions that also work on a calm December day in northern Canada while also being cheaper, denser, safer etc. than fossil fuels.
Continued in next post.
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