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Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright. Chapter 12. Energy from Fossil Fuels PPT by Clark E. Adams. Energy from Fossil Fuels. Energy sources and uses Exploiting crude oil Other fossil fuels Fossil fuels and energy security. The Fossil Fuel Dilemma.
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Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable FutureRichard T. Wright Chapter 12 Energy from Fossil Fuels PPT by Clark E. Adams
Energy from Fossil Fuels • Energy sources and uses • Exploiting crude oil • Other fossil fuels • Fossil fuels and energy security
The Fossil Fuel Dilemma • Primary source of energy for transportation • Supports a drill, spill, and kill legacy • More sustainable alternatives are available
Energy Sources and Uses • Harnessing energy sources: an overview • Electrical power production • Matching sources to uses
Harnessing Energy Sources: An Overview • Slaves • Domestic animals • Wind and water • Steam (ships and locomotives) • Gasoline (internal combustion followed by turbine engine) • Nuclear
Energy Consumption in the United States • Sequence of use • Wood • Water (steam) • Coal • Natural gas • Oil • Nuclear power 3, 4, and 5 = 83.5% of U.S. energy consumption
Electrical Power Production: The Beginning Michael Faraday 1831
oil-based fuels natural gas coal nuclear power transportation industrial processes space heating and cooling generation of electrical power Match Dominant Primary (Left) with Secondary (Right) Energy Sources
Exploiting Crude Oil • How fossil fuels are formed • Crude-oil reserves versus production • Declining U.S. reserves and increasing importation • Problems of growing U.S. dependency on foreign oil
Crude-Oil Reserves versus Production • Estimated reserves: educated guesses about the location and size of oil or natural gas deposits • Proven reserves: how much oil can be economically obtained from the oil field • Production: withdrawal of oil or gas from the oil field
Increased or Decreased since the 1970s? • Consumption of fuels derived from oil • Discoveries of new oil in the United States • Production of oil in the United States • The gap between production and consumption • United States dependence on foreign oil
Increased or Decreased because of Higher Cost of Oil Imports? • Rate of exploratory drilling and discovery of oil • Renewed production from old oil fields • Efforts toward fuel conservation • Consumption • Development of alternative energy sources • Dependence on foreign oil
Increased or Decreased because of Collapse in Oil Prices? • Rate of exploratory drilling and discovery of oil • Renewed production from old oil fields • Efforts toward fuel conservation • Consumption • Development of alternative energy sources • Dependence on foreign oil
Consumption, Domestic Production, and Imports of Petroleum Products
What a Barrel of Persian Gulf Oil Really Costs U.S. Consumers • $30 in initial costs • + $61 for military support services • = $91 per barrel of oil
Problems from Foreign Oil Dependency • Variations in cost of purchases • Threat of supply disruptions • Limitations of nonrenewable resource
Impacts of Foreign Oil Dependence • Trade imbalances • Military actions • Pollution of oceans • Coastal oil spills
Hubbert Curves of Oil Production Oil production follows a bell-shaped curve and will peak around 2010.
Hubbert Predictions • U.S. oil production would peak (1970s) • Dependence on OPEC oil will increase
Algeria Indonesia Iran Iraq Kuwait Libya Nigeria Qatar Saudi Arabia United Emirates Venezuela Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries: OPEC
Other Fossil Fuels • Natural gas – 50-year supply • Coal – 400-year supply • Oil shales and oil sands – complex extraction technologies
U.S. Coal Deposits http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/coal/reserves/coalres.pdf
Natural gas Coal Synfuels Oil shales Oil sands Air pollution Cost of extraction Proven reserves Greenhouse effect Habitat alteration Cost competition with current oil prices Which Fossil Fuel Ranks the Highest in the Following Categories?
Electrical Power from Burning Coal Advantages or Disadvantages? • Pollution from secondary energy source • Pollution from primary energy source • Habitat alterations • Environmental effects of mining • Conversion losses
Global Warming Acid Rain Smog Burning Coal = CO2 + SO + H20 + Ash + (CxHxSxOx) Light + Noise + Heat Primary and Secondary Effects from Burning Coal
Fossil Fuels and Energy Security • Security threats • Supply-side policies • Demand-side policies • Development of non-fossil-fuel energy sources
Security Threats • Oil dependence: relies too much on OPEC cartel and volatile Persian Gulf states • Energy infrastructure: vulnerable to terrorist attacks • Global climate change: greenhouse gas emissions
Supply or Demand-side Policies? • Opening ANWAR to oil and gas exploration and production • Strategies to satisfy energy needs with minimum expenditure of energy and environmental impacts
The Potential of the Conservation Reserve An oil field that has the potential production of 6 million barrels per day, is three times the size of the Alaskan oil field, and its exploitation will NOT adversely effect the environment.
The Elements of the Conservation Reserve • Increasing fuel efficiency in cars (CAFÉ) • Cogeneration (CHPs) • Use fluorescent lights • Increase home insulation