Title: Chapter 10 Fossil Fuels
1Chapter 10 Fossil Fuels
- Fossil fuels name derived from the deriva-tion
of coal and petroleum products from organic
sources. - Most fossil fuels meet the definition of as
Nonrenewable resources. Coal takes millions of
years to form and mature. Small amounts of
methane form within landfills/ repositories of
human/animal waste in short time periods, but
large quantities require more time. Crude oil is
thought to require at least 1 million years to
form.
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- Collectively, coal and hydrocarbons (oil gas)
form in areas suitable for large scale biomass
accumulation and preservation. - On land, long-persisting terrestrial ecosys-tems
of high productivity, e.g., Mississippi Delta
swamps, Everglades, Okefenokee Swamp modern
analogues for coal and methane accumulation.
Slow movement of water through these ecosystems
results in anoxic (anaerobic, stagnant)
conditions. The oxygen-poor, sulfidic (sulfur
retaining) conditions are acidic and unfavorable
to most bacteria resulting in slow decay rates
preservation of organics.
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Gulf of Mexico as a favorable site for
pre-sent biomass accumulation future fossil
fuel generation.
Terrestrial or-ganics in delta sediments. Marine
organics preserved in deep water. Re-striction
of cur-rents between Cuba Yucatan, Cuba
Florida, depth of Gulf anoxic bottom?
From http//www.gulfbase.org/facts.php
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- In marine ecosystems, restricted basins with
poor bottom circulation preserved marine snow
as organic rich shales. Shallow, back-reef areas
restricted shallow basins in warm climates may
yield organic rich limestones. - Black Sea largest example of an anoxic sea,
6,000 feet deep, normal ecosystem in upper 300
to 450 feet. Straits of Bosporus shallow,
narrow seaway to Mediterranean Sea, little water
exchange. - http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Sea
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- After burial by subsequent layers, heat
pressure cook the organics, producing a wide
variety of hydrocarbon molecules, ranging from
heavy tar to methane. Some-times methane is
formed by heat crack-ing larger petroleum
molecules and sometimes it is formed directly
from degraded plants. - Usually, organic-rich source rocks are too
fine-grained to serve as reservoir rocks. After
the maturation process, if path-ways are
available, oil will move from areas of high
pressure to low pressure.
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Pathways may be fractures or pore spaces
between sedimentary grains. Shallower depths
less pressure. Oil Gas are lighter than water,
rise until trapped by a cap-rock. In this
case, this is an anticline (a structural trap).
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- Coal Most common fossil fuel. Formed from
thick accumulations of plant material. Grades of
coal are deter-mined by chemistry of deposition
heat/ pressure history after burial compaction.
Anoxic conditions preserve organics, but also
facilitate deposition of sulfur com-pounds
uranium compounds. - Table 10.1 lists different grades ranging from
Lignite (poorest quality) to Anthracite (best
quality). Anthracite is often difficult to mine
as it generally in deformed meta-morphic rocks.
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- Surface mining, accounting for 60 of US coal
production, is usually utilized if coal seam
(bed) is w/in 100 feet of surface. Surface
mining allows for more complete coal removal, but
is more disturbing to land surface, produces more
rock waste water pollution. Organic rich
shales assoc. with coal may also contain sulfur
compounds (commonly minute grains of pyrite),
which degrade easily upon exposure to water,
producing sulfur acids. Acids may release other
trace elements from shale debris. This provides
major challenges to reclamation (p. 215).
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- Mountain-top removal is a very controver-sial
form of surface mining (see pp. 214 216).
Exempted from Surface Mining Control and
Reclamation Act. 1999 and 2002 court decisions
limited mountaintop removal because valley
disposal of waste rock was burying streams in
violation of the Clean Water Act. - Underground mining is less disruptive, but is
more expensive dangerous. Accounts for 40 of
US production.
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- Concerns about burning coal
- Release of sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides,
mercury, uranium, particulates, Disposal of ash - Controversy exists as to the actual extent of
acid rainfall related to coal burning. 10-year,
540 million NAPAP study produced evidence that
acidity of Northeastern US lakes was due to
soil/vegetation condi-tions. Study attributed NC
tree damage (Fig. 10.7) to insects. Conclusion
was that acid precipitation was a nuisance, not a
crisis. http//www.detnews.com/EDITPAGE/0004/03/ed
it1/edit1.htm - http//www.sepp.org/controv/epavskrug.html -
NAPAP Study Info
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- Strategies for cleaning coal emissions
- Scrubbers, Fluidized-bed combustion, coal
gasification, liquefaction (see pp. 217 218).
Will likely remain an important energy source for
power production, World has 200 year reserves at
current use levels (p. 213). - Oil Natural Gas 63 of US Energy Use, cleaner
than coal, easier to transport. Drilling is
generally a less disruptive method of retrieving
energy from oil/ natural gas than coal mining
methods.
12When oil companies drill deep wells,
expen-ditures may reach several million dollars
before well completion occurs. Large rigs like
this one can drill holes 30,000 feet deep.
Deepest US wells are generally gas wells in the
Anadarko Basin (SW Oklahoma).
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8,000 foot wells near Shattuck, OK take about
3 weeks (24/7) to drill. On Christmas Eve, 2002,
drilling continued during 110 F, blowing snow.
Technology improve-ments yield more successful
wells.
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- Among the improvements are directional
drilling, allowing multiple wells per plat-form
horizontal screen zone within pay zone oil
reservoir more production. - Other future improvements will allow deeper
off-shore drilling on Gulf and Atlantic Coasts. - In Late 1980s Wildcat well success was 10,
now about 50. Wildcat wells are drilled more
than ¼ mile from existing wells.
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Crude oil needs refinement before use,
primarily to separate different petroleum
products (see Fig. 10.10, p. 219). Differen-tial
boiling points used to separate frac-tions in
the fractionation tower. Some times greater heat
is used to crack larger molecules into smaller
molecules. Problems with US refinery system. No
new refineries since 1976, system running at 96
capacity, no slack in case 1 or more refineries
are out of commission. Regulations, lawsuits,
NIMBY philosophy make new refineries difficult to
build.
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- Factors affecting gasoline prices
- World crude oil prices Supply vs. Demand
- Concerns over terrorist threats to supplies
- Growth of China, India, US
- Taxes
- Regulations affecting gasoline blends
- Regulations affecting land access for drilling
- Weather issues affecting transport, off-loading
of ships - Conditions affecting refinery system
17- Future supplies
- Are We Running out of Oil?
- Gulf of Mexico Jack Prospect
- Canada's Oil Reserves
- America's Oil Shale Prospects
- The Case for ANWR Development
- Development considerations
- Constantly improving technology has greatly
reduced the footprint of Arctic oil development.
If Prudhoe Bay were built today, facility designs
show the footprint would be 64 smaller. - Prudhoe Bay gas reserves are 30.9 trillion cubic
feet. No pipeline yet, being re-injected.
18Concerns over ANWR development are related to
past and present accidents. Exxon Valdez 1989
260,000 bbls, shallow water spill affected
shoreline shallow marine organisms. 1991 Gulf
War Iraq blew up 700 wells, deliberately
spilled 6,000,000 bbls into Persian Gulf. Other
Major Oil Spills
19- How Petroleum affects the Development of
Alternative Energy Sources - High Crude Oil/High Gasoline Prices Promote
Conservation, Recycling of Lubricants,
Development of Alternatives. - Gradually rising prices may be accommo-dated by
economy. - A vibrant economy fosters innovation (new
products, processes, energy sources, improvements
in solar photovoltaics, battery technology,) - Gasoline taxes do force conservation, but they
hurt poor people the most, remove funds from the
private sector, hurting the economy.
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