Title: Peak Oil and Global Warming: Issues related by solutions
1Peak Oil and Global Warming Issues related by
solutions?
2Quick Definitions
- Peak Oil (PO) when demand for oil exceeds
maximum production rate - Global Warming (GW) increase in Earths average
air temperature over a period of several
centuries - Anthropogenic Global Warming (AGW) proportion
of GW caused by human interference in Geocycles - 0 ? 100 ? 30 ? 70 ? .?
3What happens to the inside of your car on sunny
day when you have the windows shut?
4The Greenhouse Effect!
5Greenhouse Effect
- Sunlight passes through clear atmosphere with
little interference, it hits Earths surface,
then
6Greenhouse Effect
- A portion of it is reflected back (albedo
reflectivity of a surface), passes back through
atmosphere and into space, but
7Greenhouse Effect
- The rest is absorbed, which warms the surface and
this heat is given off as infrared radiation (IR)
8Greenhouse Effect
- Some of the IR doesnt pass through the
atmosphere back into space but instead gets
scattered by Greenhouse gases, which then warms
the atmosphere
9The Greenhouse Effect
- Is a good thing
- Life as we know it couldnt survive without it!
- Earths average temp 15 oC 59 oF
- Earths black body temp -18 oC 0 oF
10But too much of good thing is a bad thing
- An enhanced Greenhouse Effect caused by excess
Greenhouse gases (GG) - We need to leave the windows cracked at bit! ?
11Water Vapor
- Is the most abundant Greenhouse Gas (GG)
- But
- Carbon Dioxide
- is the most abundant variable GG that human
activities can influence - Humans also add methane, ozone, and CFCs, but
their effect is smaller than CO2
12Global Climate Change has occurred over Earths
History
- Some of this change is secular, and some is cyclic
13Last 600 Ma Long cycles
14Last 100 Ma Secular Cooling
15Last six million years Cyclical warm-cool
patterns with overall secular cooling
16Last million years Cyclical Pattern with Ice
Ages lt---gt Warm Periods
- Note Were in a warm interglacial now
17What causes these cyclic changes in temperature?
- Milankovic Cycles 10s of thousands of years
time frame - Solar output variation
- Shorter cycles 11 years and 100 or so years
- Evidenced by Sunspot activity
- Very long term secular warming
- Theres a lot to still be learned - scientists
dont everything about everything, and
uncertainty is always part of the game - but
this doesnt mean theyre making it up!
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20Solar Variance last 400 years
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23Correlation of CO2
24Deep Time CO2 Levels
25The last several hundred thousand years
26Annual Layers in Ice Cores Like Tree Rings
- This is from the Greenland ice sheet and records
38 years about 16 Ka ago - Air bubbles are also trapped in the layers ? can
analyze ancient atmospheric gases
27Correlation of CO2 with Ice Ages and Warm Periods
geology chemistry
28Recent CO2 changes
29CO2 can lag temperature as wellLittle Ice Age
1600s
30Very Recent CO2 Data
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32Climate change can also be rapid a warning
for us?
- The Younger Dryas event 12,000 years ago - a
very rapid global cooling over 1,300 years - 27 oC drop in average temp
33Other indicators that GW is occurring
- Measurements and observations, rather than
computer models
34Excess Greenland Seasonal Melt
35Surface Temperature Anomalies
36Large Storm Systems
37IPCC Computer Models
- Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
- These models are controversial and vary greatly,
but their estimates for global warming in this
century are - Minimum 1.1 oC
- Maximum 6.4 oC
38What Human activities might increase atmospheric
CO2 (and thus cause AGW) ?
- Among other things
- Burning fossil carbon and
- Destroying ecosystems that absorb CO2
39Is Human Activity contributing to this recent
increase in atmospheric CO2 ?
- Is AGW significant???
- If so, what should we do about it?
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41Reducing Carbon fuel use is part of the AGW
solution
- But this fits perfectly with another nasty (and
more imminent) problem Peak Oil!
42Peak Oil
- What is it?
- What does it have to do with Global Warming?
43Oil News from the past year
- In January 2008, Bush asked (in vain) for OPEC to
increase production when oil was 90 per barrel - With falling prices, in December 2008 OPEC
decided to cut production - Whats production?
- OPEC accounts for 40 of oil production
44Theres always more
- Isnt there?
- Conservation Psychology
- Dr. Seely, April 8
45What is Oil?
- Also know as crude oil or Petroleum, rock oil
- Its a type of fossil fuel
- A non-renewable resource
46Terminology
- Resource
- Renewable, Potentially Renewable, Non-Renewable
- Oil is non-renewable
- Reserves
- Discovery
- Production
47Reserves
- Natural resources have reserves that is the
amount that is available for extraction with
current technology at a profit - For oil, profit also means both a monetary profit
and an energy profit
48Economic issues are involved in reserves
- Two types of ROI (Return On Investment)
- Monetary ROI (do you make a profit?)
- EROEI (Energy Return on Energy Invested)
- Oil averages about 5 to 1 right now
- Corn alcohol is about 1.6 to 1
49Discovery of a resource
- Definition is pretty obvious
50Discovery of a resource
- Requires investment in exploration
- Unless youre Jed Clampett
51Production
- Amount of resource extracted from Earth, per day
or per year - Oil is measured in barrels (bbl)
- 1 bbl 42 gallons
- Global oil production was 82.5 million bbl per
day in 2005 - 63 million in 1980
- 65.5 million in 1990
- 76 million in 2000
52How Oil Forms
53How oil forms
- Dead plankton accumulate on the ocean floor
during times when the oceanic circulation stops
and the bottom of the ocean goes anoxic - Thousands of feet of this material accumulates
- Then it is buried by other sediments
- From a Web forum posting by Glenn Morton
54How oil forms
- As the sediment is buried deeper, the temperature
rises cooking the organic rich shales, like the
oil shales in the Rockies - This cooking releases oil from the rock
55How oil forms
- Pressure fractures the source rock allowing the
oil to float up because oil is less dense than
water - The oil will float up until it hits a place where
some impermeable upper rock layer or cap won't
let it pass the overall structure is called a
trap.
56Geology of a typical oil deposit
57M. King Hubbert
- He was a geophysicist who in the 1950s
- Predicted an absolute maximum or peak in oil
production around 2004-2008 often referred to
as Hubberts Peak - Heres his model
58Hubberts Production Peak
59Peak Oil
- Occurs when the demand (consumption) for oil
equals or exceeds peak production
60Oily Facts
- Global oil consumption was 85.9 million barrels
per day in 2007 - 20 million bbl/day in 1960
- 60 mbbl/day in 1980
- 84 mbbl/day in 2005
- At 2000-07 rate of increase, will be 120 million
in 2020 - So far, production has been able to meet demand
can this continue???
61Global Oil Production
- Will eventually reach a maximum
- At which time, demand for oil will equal
production rate ( Peak Oil) - The result?
- Very high prices, and even more importantly
- Shortages
- Ultimately this will lead to economic recession
62The four most productive oil fields
- Al Ghawar, Saudi Arabia 4.5 million barrels/day
(5 global total) - Cantarell, Mexico 2.1 million (2)
- Burgan, Kuwait 1 million (1)
- Da Qing, China 1 million (1)
- Only one of these was discovered after 1960 ---
Cantarell in 1976
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64New Oil exploration?
- The annual exploration cost for the 10 companies
as a group exceeded the estimated value of annual
new discoveries made in both 2001 and 2002 a
reversal from previous years - In spite of high prices, Big Oil companies have
cut their exploration budgets - This would be bizarre from a pure business
standpoint, UNLESS they thought there was little
chance of finding large deposits
65Oil found by exploration drill bit (billions of
barrels)
- 1997 4.5
- 1998 5.8
- 1999 9.5
- 2000 13.05
- 2001 4.02
- 2002 3.34
- Bear in mind that we consume (demand) over 30
billion per year!
66Discovery Trends
67Is ANWR the solution?
68Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
- Has been a political football for over a decade
- Should its oil supply be exploited or not?
- Environmental damage vs. U.S oil independence
Environmentalists vs. the Economy Ye Olde
Warfare model
69ANWRs Reserve Estimates
- Low estimate 4.3 billion barrels (95
probability) - High estimate 11.8 billion barrels (5
probability) - The high estimate is a bit more than the U.S.
consumes in one year! - Well, its nice that its there, but it doesnt
seem to be a long-term solution to U.S. energy
independence
70Peak Oil Analogy
- Production Rate and Inheriting a Fortune
71Analogy
- Suppose you were given a billion dollars in
special bank account, but - Could withdraw only 100 a day indefinitely
- Would you still be a billionaire?
- Analogous to oil --- maybe a trillion barrels of
molecules left in ground (resource), but - Theres a maximum rate that it can be withdrawn
(produced)
72What about the last year?
- Global economic recession
- Leads to lower demand
- Oil demand is (temporarily) below Peak
- Wont last long!
- And when demand returns, the situation will
likely be worse
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77Epilogue page 1
- The oil crisis and AGW have a similar solution
replacing carbon fuels with potentially renewable
energy resources
78Even if you are skeptical about AGW, many of the
solutions in any sensible scheme are shared with
reducing use of oil/energy and with reducing
pollution in cities.
79Epilogue page 2
- This solution will entail some compromises,
including personal energy conservation and even
(shudder) nuclear fission which is the only
energy source that can replace the sheer amount
of energy of oil in the short term
80Epilogue page 3
- Ultimately, we need to mimic the way the Sun
makes its energy - Hydrogen fusion - At the present there is no technology to do this,
and maybe there will never be - And Hydrogen bombs dont count, remember Core 5
81Websites
- Energy Information Administration
- www.oilcrisis.com/summary.htm
- www.theoildrum.com
- The most comprehensive source for the Peak Oil
issue - Glenn Mortons pages