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That had to be the best damn Video I've seen in a long time!!!DRILL - BABY - DRILL!! :nuts:
DRILL - BABY - DRILL!! :nuts:
That's old now, Left and Right coasts open. U.S. still only has 3% of the world's reserves of oil. We HAVE to STOP only looking at oil.
I wanna talk about Natural Gas!
We have one of the world's largest reserves of natural gas, and it is even found in places oil's not. Can we talk about Natural Gas Cars now? Have they gotten around the need for Pallidum or Platinum for the gas tanks, since again Platium/Pallidium reserves are found mostly in unfriendly (like Russia) countries?
Good points SBird..Just don't lose sight of the fact that like the VIDEO said and CB said..UNTIL we as a nation become self sufficient on those future alternative energy means..we still have millions of cars and vehicles in the air(not cars), on the roads, over the seas..all using OIL or oil derivatives...so we have to keep those rolling till then...But yes, CNG is a good stop gap for now and the future...UPS here all run on it, Shwann's trucks all run on it (they are the home produce/meat/ice cream delvery company), etc. ...We have the means of making it too..some cattle and cattle associated production companies are already powered solely by the methane the livestock produces...So Our direction is in the right way, but let's not hold up the drilling another minute.That's old now, Left and Right coasts open. U.S. still only has 3% of the world's reserves of oil. We HAVE to STOP only looking at oil.
I wanna talk about Natural Gas!
We have one of the world's largest reserves of natural gas, and it is even found in places oil's not. Can we talk about Natural Gas Cars now? Have they gotten around the need for Pallidum or Platinum for the gas tanks, since again Platium/Pallidium reserves are found mostly in unfriendly (like Russia) countries?
Again you are making sense..(I think I'm getting a crush on youIf we moved cars away from the oil-based gas, I think we would be able to serve our own market with the 3% reserves. That's why I asked about cars only.
The reason why I say I think we can serve other transportation with our own reserves doesn't have to do with the volume, it has to do with the "cracking" of oil - some components are only good for tar, some good for tar and plastics - and one part is good enough for jet fuel. All I know is we would have quite a bit for the petrochemicals (we aren't getting rid of plastics, new petro materials, asphalt....).
CB:
1. Distribution is still an issue. Costs about 50 to 60K for a single dispensing device. Even though NG may be in an area, it still has to be high-compressed. Profit margin is small, so there is the 60K per pump cost to figure out how to make worthwhile.
2. NG is also a fossile fuel, and does CO2 just as gasoline does.
3. There is a finite amount of NG. Once it is gone, it's gone.
There is lots of discussion about getting NG as one part of a transition process before we get to a renewable fuel in this nation- which is where we have to end up eventually- one of the questions now being debated is do we invest the 60K per pump (or, like 250K per station if there are multiple pumps) to refit existing stations, or do we instead work to build ethanol infrastucture (8K per station, and 5K per pump), and have a renewable source in place at the completion of that.
That's part of the debate the country has been doing, and will be doing for the next couple years.
P.S.- My money is on ethanol for the majority of energy needs that cannot be accomplished with solar/wind/renewable electric in the years ahead. NG will be helpful in areas where ehtanol can't economically reach, but is just one part of the big picture to get us free of oil.
Well, only a certain percentage of the components in a barrel of crude oil can be used for jet fuels and gasoline. I'm not sure what that percentage is. Petrochemicals/plastics are on the whole less picky or use by-products that are not gasoline-grade ; asphalt you use the %age no good for anything else.Again you are making sense..(I think I'm getting a crush on you)
But yes...Plastics are made or being made synthetically, engine oils and other lubricants (some intimate and some industrial) are Synthetic..so good point..it takes the burden off the barrel of oil, so it can be used for the GASOLINE and JET fuel and Diesel fuels to keep the current vehicles rolling..and Cheaply!
Well, only a certain percentage of the components in a barrel of crude oil can be used for jet fuels and gasoline. I'm not sure what that percentage is. Petrochemicals/plastics are on the whole less picky or use by-products that are not gasoline-grade ; asphalt you use the %age no good for anything else.
:embarrest: Saw that too. That's how I knew anything about "cracking" oilThe History Channel ran a show last month called "The Secrets of Oil". It not only gave the history of oil, but it went thru the entire cracking process and based on the specific gravity of the oil, various products are pulled from defferent levels of the cracking chamber. Only about 50% of a barrel of oil goes to fuel for the combustion engine. It was a fantastic show, but I don't know when or if it'll be on again.
CB