Author Topic: Energy Politics & Science  (Read 659049 times)

DougMacG

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Energy Politics: It's time to go nuclear on climate change
« Reply #650 on: January 16, 2018, 03:47:57 PM »
This article ends with "best bet to save the world", the author takes human caused climate change quite seriously.  If you believe excessive carbon emissions are serious, and everyone should to some extent, then nuclear energy is the answer.

Read this at the source to get the links that back up the points made. I post the text here to capture it on the forum.
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https://grist.org/article/its-time-to-go-nuclear-in-the-fight-against-climate-change/

It’s time to go nuclear in the fight against climate change
By Eric Holthaus on Jan 12, 2018

After holding steady for the past three years, global carbon emissions rose in 2017 by an estimated 2 percent. That increase comes amid the largest renewable energy boom in world history.

That irony points to what I see as an inescapable conclusion: The world probably can’t solve climate change without nuclear power.

Something big has to change, and fast, in order to prevent us from going over the climate cliff. Increasingly, that something appears to be a shift in our attitudes toward nuclear energy.

By nearly all accounts, nuclear is the most rapidly scalable form of carbon-free power invented. And, the technology is rapidly improving. But lingering concerns about waste and safety have kept nuclear power from staying competitive.

Solar power has grown at a whopping 68 percent average rate over the past 10 years, but still accounts for less than 2 percent of total U.S. electricity generation. The 99 reactors in the U.S. generate about 10 times that amount. Roughly 30 nuclear facilities are set to retire in the next few years because those plants have become economically infeasible. (California regulators voted unanimously Thursday to shutter Diablo Canyon, the state’s last remaining plant, in 2025.) That’s despite these facilities producing more than double the amount of electricity than all the solar panels in the United States combined.

“In 2016, renewables received about 100 times more in federal subsidies than nuclear plants,” Michael Shellenberger, founder of the Berkeley, California-based, pro-nuclear advocacy group Environmental Progress, wrote in an email to Grist. “If nuclear received a fraction of those subsidies, there would be no risk of nuclear plants closing in California or anywhere else.”

Jesse Jenkins, a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research, reveals in a preliminary scientific paper — meaning it’s still awaiting peer review — that the rapid decline in the cost of natural gas has been the driving factor in undercutting the electricity market in the U.S. Midwest and Mid-Atlantic. Those regions are home to a majority of the nuclear reactors now expected to go offline.

The take home? The advent of fracking — in addition to being the fastest-growing source of emissions in the U.S. — is also cannibalizing what is currently our biggest source of carbon-free electricity.

A similar story is playing out in Germany. The country’s nuclear power plants have been shuttered with only part of the capacity replaced by wind and solar. Dirty coal has filled the gaps. So it’s no surprise, German electricity sector emissions are actually rising slightly — and the country’s leaders are now considering scrapping an ambitious climate goal for 2020.

Jenkins wrote on Twitter that Germany’s shift in energy policy was misguided and resulted effectively in fossil fuels replacing much of the missing nuclear power — a pattern that’s playing out at home, as well. To get to a cleaner energy mix faster, you’d want to nix coal before nuclear.

Even if you believe 100% renewable energy is the end goal, if you think climate change is really an urgent existential threat, the order of operations is clearly phase our coal, then gas, then nuclear. Germany is doing opposite.

For once-and-future climate leaders like Germany and the United States to turn their backs on one of the best tools we have for rapidly decarbonizing the global economy is a short-sighted decision of international and multi-generational consequence. It’s also a climate story few people are talking about.

Historically, nuclear power has been the fastest way to decarbonize the global economy, Shellenberger argues, and it can be again. New reactor designs offer a generational leap in terms of cost and safety, but proponents have so far struggled to secure the billions of dollars in funding that renewables are getting.

Big name climate experts, like former NASA scientists James Hansen agree that a bias against nuclear is holding it back. He and Shellenberger see support for the industry as a tactic for attracting the Trump Administration’s attention on climate policy. (In September, the Trump administration made a conditional loan to help finish the construction of a languishing nuclear power project in Georgia.)

The sheer urgency of climate change demands an all-of-the-above approach to making carbon-free energy.

“If we discovered nuclear power today, we would be working like mad to make it as safe and cheap as possible,” Stanford University climate scientist Ken Caldeira tweeted last summer.

But resistance by mainstream environmental organizations has helped stymie that progress. And the most ardent supporter of climate change legislation in last year’s presidential election, Bernie Sanders, ran on an anti-nuclear platform. (In December, Shellenberger announced he is running for California governor as an explicitly pro-environment, pro-nuclear independent.)

The more the world feels the powerful effects of climate change and the longer we wait to reduce emissions the more attractive nuclear energy could become. On our current track, scientists are increasingly alarmed that multiple simultaneous weather and environmental disasters — like last year’s horrific hurricanes and wildfires — could ultimately bend society to the breaking point in our lifetimes.

If we were smart, we’d see nuclear power for what it is: A good bet to save the world.

ccp

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as far as I know cans like Ryan are for this
« Reply #651 on: March 13, 2018, 08:59:39 AM »
If only colleges would spend half the time figuring out how to lower their costs rather then dreaming big government agendas designed to soak more workers:

https://www.wired.com/story/thank-colleges-for-imminent-carbon-taxes-no-seriously-thank-them/

DougMacG

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Re: as far as I know cans like Ryan are for this
« Reply #652 on: March 13, 2018, 09:45:22 AM »
If only colleges would spend half the time figuring out how to lower their costs rather then dreaming big government agendas designed to soak more workers:

https://www.wired.com/story/thank-colleges-for-imminent-carbon-taxes-no-seriously-thank-them/

One problem with the carbon tax is that it is measured politically, not scientifically or mathematically.  So for one thing, solve that first.

"One degree Celsius" [adjusted data] is the entire warming since the start of the industrial age and we could be near the end of heavy carbon use.  [Do any of these people favor carbon-free nuclear?] This tiny, unmeasurable warming arguably saved lives and we know for certain that plants grow better.  The cost of this is ...

When conservatives support carbon tax, Ryan for example, they are supporting an imaginary revenue-neutral version that is not possible in our political world.  When you introduce a new tax like the Carbon tax or the "Fair" tax, the old taxes don't go away and also don't really go down in the long run even if it says they do in the original legislation.

If or when we prefer other taxes to an income-based tax system, repeal the 16th.  It's that simple.  Or cap the promised rates in the constitution.  

Propose and ratify percentage caps on spending and taxes right into the constitution.  For example, no federal spending budget above 20% of last year's actual GDP and no federal taxation on any legal economic activity above a 25% rate.  2/3 super-majority approval in both chambers required to go above caps, to deal with national emergencies.  

Within a framework limit written into the constitution I could see playing around with new or creative sources of revenue.  But if you want to grow government, grow the economy first, not the government's share of the economy.  We don't fix the climate or raise our standard of living by making government bigger.

Find a real pollutant to test the best way to tax pollution.
« Last Edit: March 13, 2018, 10:22:25 AM by DougMacG »

DougMacG

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Energy Politics & Science, Wind and Solar fail during storms
« Reply #653 on: April 17, 2018, 08:15:08 AM »
Do you want the power to go on and off with weather?  Eliminate thermal sources and the grid goes down during storms and during peak usage.

http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2018/04/which-energy-sources-are-actually-sustainable.php
https://www.americanexperiment.org/green-energy-fails/

During the harsh storm of December 27, 2017, to January 8, 2018...
Failure was prevented by coal-fired power plants increasing electrical generation by 63%, natural gas plants by 20%, nuclear by 5.3% and seldom used oil by 26% over planned generation.
-------------------------------
Both solar and wind fail during certain peak usage times.  Energy needs to be "dispatchable".

Nuclear is the cleanest, steady source of energy.  Fossil fuels are [still] the most dispatchable, can be dispatched when and where needed.  Wind and solar have natural and technical ups and downs that don't coincide with demand.

DougMacG

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Wind Energy Fails
« Reply #654 on: April 18, 2018, 08:41:43 AM »
https://www.americanexperiment.org/green-energy-fails/

The only thing we gained is higher electricity costs.

DougMacG

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Energy Politics & Science: Solar Value Eclipse
« Reply #655 on: July 12, 2018, 07:36:11 AM »

Crafty_Dog

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DougMacG

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Re: Solar over 6% is counterproductive
« Reply #657 on: July 12, 2018, 01:23:59 PM »
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=3&v=shq06IW2wwg

From the point of view of nuclear, fossil fuels or hydro power needed to power the grid around the clock, solar is the co-worker "who arrives late, does work that others could easily do, harms others’ productivity, and then skips out when they’re most needed"?

Crafty_Dog

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DougMacG

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Re: US CO2 lowest in 67 years
« Reply #659 on: July 13, 2018, 10:23:07 AM »
https://www.investors.com/politics/editorials/u-s-co2-levels-drop-again/

A source link for the above:  https://www.eia.gov/totalenergy/data/monthly/

Credit fracking.  Natural gas is far cleaner than coal.  Nuclear energy  is cleaner than both.  Solar and wind are distractions in terms of major energy sources.  Hopefully we re-build nuclear infrastructure and see CO2 emissions plummet further. 

The Paris Accord and government planners didn't have the solution.  The Obama administration opposed fracking right while it grew in the states, cutting our emissions and defunding the oil tyrants around the world.

Keep going with fracking, build nuclear capacity and free people will switch to clean and efficient, plug in, natural gas hybrids with no mandate required.

DougMacG

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Energy Politics: Mark Mills, stop subsidizing non-solutions
« Reply #660 on: November 01, 2018, 09:22:18 AM »
Putting this in two threads:

https://dogbrothers.com/phpBB2/index.php?topic=1098.msg103441#msg103441

Part 1:  Shale crushes Solar,  https://www.realclearenergy.org/articles/2017/04/26/energy_revolutions_hidden_in_plain_sight_part_1_of_3_--_shale_crushes_solar_110215.html

Part 2:  The Cloud crushes Electric Cars
https://www.realclearenergy.org/articles/2017/05/03/energy_revolutions_hidden_in_plain_sight_part_2_of_3_demand__the_cloud_crushes_electric_cars_110219.html

Part 3:  Policy
energy_revolutions_hidden_in_plain_sight_part_3_of_3_policy__110221

"government programs were not responsible for either the supply or demand revolutions"

"Last year solar panels supplied 0.3% of America’s energy; wind turbines supplied 2%... Most people think those sources make a 10-fold greater contribution."

"40% of America’s corn harvest is now turned into fuel—ethanol today displaces less than 4% of U.S. transportation fuel....100% of the nation’s crop would have de minimis relevance."

"powering an entire economy is not like putting a few men on the moon. It’s like putting everybody on earth on the moon—permanently. "

"the radical cost improvements in solar and wind are over." "the radical cost improvements in solar and wind are over. [Batteries too.]"  The improvement rate with shale is much greater: "Shale productivity has been improving by an average of at least 20% a year over the past half-dozen years. Output per rig is doubling every three years."

"To find energy revolutions we will need to make new discoveries in the underlying physical sciences. That can only emerge from basic research, not from subsidizing more of yesterdays’ technologies.  Put another way: The Internet didn’t emerge by subsidizing the dial-up phone; nor was the transistor inspired by subsidizing vacuum tubes, nor the automobile inspired by railroad subsidies."

"The world’s nearly 8 billion people and $80 trillion economy depend on hydrocarbons to supply 85% of global energy; oil itself fuels 98% of transportation. Only radically new science has any prospect for meaningfully changing those realities."

DougMacG

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Energy Politics, Colorado prop 112 failed to curtail urban fracking
« Reply #661 on: November 07, 2018, 07:26:34 AM »
I can't decode the politics here.  Colorado has gone full Democrat lately, flipping the Congressional delegation from 3-4 to 4-3 Dem and electing a gay, left wing Governor from Boulder.  The reason for the flip is that the new voters moved their politics in from elsewhere.  But they voted down the proposal to increase 5-fold the required setback for fracking from houses, businesses, schools. 

The truth in fracking is counter-intuitive.  This particular development of fossil fuels actually makes CO2 emissions decline and causes cleaner air because fracking enables the US to move a bit from coal to the far cleaner natural gas.  The front range has a long history of air quality issues.

I can't imagine the new liberal governor sided with the gas and oil business so people must have split their ticket between supporting this controversial economic sector and their left wing death wish to destroy the economy.  Colorado's real estate boom has peaked and the last thing they needed was the Prop 112 nail in the economic coffin.  Can anyone add local flavor or another view to the politics of this?

https://www.denverpost.com/2018/11/06/colorado-proposition-112-results/

ccp

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Re: Energy Politics & Science
« Reply #662 on: November 07, 2018, 07:49:14 AM »
Colorado has gone full Democrat lately

isn't this all due to immigrants ?

the Right should have stopped this 30 yrs ago when Reagan who I love granted amnesty.
What were they thinking ? that all these immigrants would be so thankful they will start voting for Republicans.


Crafty_Dog

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Stratfor: The Geopolitics of Liquid Natural Gas
« Reply #663 on: November 08, 2018, 10:19:39 PM »
Again I draw attention to the role of natural gas in geopolitics:

==============================================

U.S. LNG Exports Are About to Reshape the Global Market
Storage tanks for liquefied natural gas sit in a large oil-refinery plant
(COR LAFFRA/Shutterstock)
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Highlights

    By the end of 2019, the United States will become one of the world's three largest exporters of liquefied natural gas.
    Qatar, which has been the globe's biggest LNG producer until now, will begin implementing a more aggressive strategy next year in the face of competition from the United States and Australia.
    U.S. trading partners could promise to purchase American LNG as a way to reduce their trade surpluses.
    China is unlikely to purchase LNG from the United States because of their trade war, choosing instead to buy Russian gas from Siberia.
    The United States will ramp up its pressure on the European Union to buy more U.S. LNG and to improve its infrastructure so it can reduce the bloc's reliance on Russian energy.

Editor's Note: This assessment is part of a series of analyses supporting Stratfor's upcoming 2019 Annual Forecast. These assessments are designed to provide more context and in-depth analysis on key developments in the coming year.

The U.S. shale revolution has had a major impact at home, but its echoes have reverberated less elsewhere around the world, at least where natural gas is concerned. That, however, is about to change. By the end of 2018, the United States will launch nine liquefied natural gas export projects that will have a collective liquefaction capacity of 36.7 million tonnes per annum (mtpa). The expansion will boost the country's capacity to roughly 63 mtpa — a big step up from the mere 1.5 mtpa that existed before 2016.

It all adds up to a big year in 2019. And growth in U.S. LNG exports will continue beyond that because more processing and liquefaction facilities are expected to come online the following year. Producers are also considering additional final investment decisions to construct new facilities beyond that. The consequences of rising U.S. — as well as Australian — LNG exports have already begun to make waves throughout the market, meaning the geopolitical battle over LNG will be front and center next year, particularly among four countries: Qatar, China, Russia and the United States.
The Big Picture

While the U.S. shale revolution has had a major impact on global oil markets, its effects on global natural gas markets have been more muted. In 2019, however, the United States will finally reap the rewards of its investments in liquefied natural gas when gas exports are expected to increase significantly and have global ramifications.
See The Future of Energy
Qatar: Protecting Itself from the World

The United States and Australia are likely to be joined by others as countries around the world look for an increase in global natural gas demand in the 2020s. Last month, Royal Dutch/Shell and its partners made a final investment decision on its large LNG Canada project, which was its first such decision on a such a project in more than five years.

For years, Qatar has been the globe's LNG export leader. In 1997, the tiny Gulf state exported no LNG, but by 2011, it led the world, with an installed capacity of 77 mtpa. But in 2005, Doha implemented a moratorium on developing new parts of the North Field, the world's largest gas supply, due to concerns about oversupply and overproduction.

But increasing pressure from Australia (in parallel with U.S. growth, the country also hiked its LNG capacity by 62.3 mtpa from 2015 to 2018), the United States and elsewhere forced Doha to announce in April 2017 that it would lift that moratorium in an effort to boost its export capacity from 77 to 100 mtpa. But just two months later, three of Qatar's neighbors — Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain — imposed an economic blockade in anger over its independent streak in foreign policy. That diplomatic course was made possible by Doha's windfall from LNG, which gave it the economic freedom to politically distance itself from its neighbors, especially Riyadh.

Since 2017, pressure from its global LNG competitors and local political rivals has prompted Doha to become more aggressive in the energy sector and enact reforms to make it more nimble. Qatar's problem has never been that its LNG exports and natural gas developments are expensive; by contrast, production is relatively easy in the North Field. But Doha must take advantage of its comparatively cheap production costs to entice international oil and gas companies to invest in Qatar instead of more expensive markets, even if the latter includes more politically stable countries such as Australia and the United States. And in order to meet its new export growth targets, Qatar must find new destinations — and the conclusion of a number of long-term LNG contracts in the first half of the 2020s will compound its task.
Charts show the natural gas liquefaction capacity of the United States, Qatar and Australia.

The U.S. emergence has also kick-started a gradual shift in Asian LNG markets, as well as a more rapid trend toward short-term contracts and gas-on-gas pricing, in which contracts are based on spot natural gas prices, instead of traditional oil prices. This has forced Qatar to explore ways to reorganize its energy sector to compete. The all-important Qatar Petroleum merged its two natural gas companies — Qatargas and RasGas — earlier this year. And after a Cabinet reshuffling on Nov. 3, Qatar Petroleum CEO Saad al-Kaabi became the country's new energy minister and will oversee some of the changes he's been pushing. At the same time, Sheikh Abdullah bin Hamad al-Thani, the brother of Emir Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, has also become the new chair of Qatar Petroleum.
The World: Protecting Itself from Trump

One fly in the ointment for the U.S. LNG industry is the country's new trade wars. Before making final investment decisions on LNG export facilities — which can cost more than $10 billion and as much as $50 billion to $60 billion, in extreme cases — investors want a degree of certainty about long-term contract and destination opportunities. Washington's trade war with Beijing has made this more difficult, especially for LNG exporters, because China is the world's second largest LNG importer (trailing only Japan) and will be the major driver of LNG import growth over the next five to 10 years.

China imposed a 10 percent tariff on U.S. LNG in September after the United States slapped tariffs on $200 billion worth of imports on Chinese goods. And with the United States promising to levy tariffs on more goods, investors are growing skittish over how long the tariffs might remain in place; indeed, there is no guarantee that the United States and China will ever actually remove them. The uncertainty has already resulted in some delays to final investment decisions on U.S. LNG projects. On Oct. 29, LNG Ltd. announced that it would delay its decision on the Magnolia LNG export terminal in Louisiana until 2019 because of the trade spat, even though it had originally aimed to settle the matter by the end of this year. In the short term in 2019, China can easily ignore the U.S. LNG market because Russia is preparing to pump more natural gas to Asia through the new Power of Siberia pipeline. In the long term, China may need to turn to Qatar, or to more Russian natural gas, in order to avoid U.S. LNG exports.

Avoiding U.S. LNG, however, might not be so easy. As the United States embroils itself in trade wars, other countries are considering the purchase of more U.S. LNG as a means of appeasing U.S. President Donald Trump in their trade discussions. After all, given that 2019 is expected to be a bumper year for U.S. LNG, importing more of the resource from the United States offers the country's trading partners a quick, obvious and tangible way of reducing their trade surpluses. More than that, U.S. LNG represents a potential investment opportunity that could placate the United States. South Korea, Japan and even China — all countries that must import LNG — were mulling investments in the U.S. LNG industry even before experiencing pressure from the White House.

Avoiding U.S. LNG might not be easy. As the United States embroils itself in trade wars, other countries are considering purchasing more U.S. LNG as a way of appeasing President Donald Trump.

The U.S.: Protecting Europe from Russia

U.S. preparations to export large amounts of LNG will ratchet up the pressure on Russian natural gas exports — as well as Moscow's customers — in Europe. The United States views Europe's dependence on Russian natural gas as a strategic risk in Washington's global power competition with Moscow. As a result, the United States will turn up the pressure on European customers next year to purchase what it views as a politically safer alternative to Russian natural gas: American natural gas.

An abrupt switch to U.S. natural gas might not be a realistic option for many European countries, yet the Trump administration is still likely to press the argument, especially in two areas: Eastern Europe and Germany, which is Russia's largest European customer. The United States, along with Poland and other Eastern European countries, opposes the Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline, which is under construction. To the United States, the pipeline, along with a similar pipeline through Southern Europe called TurkStream, is a clear indication of Europe's increased reliance on Russian gas. Instead, Washington will pressure Berlin to build more LNG terminals. Amid the pressure, Germany has been playing both sides, launching construction on Nord Stream 2 earlier this year while also pledging financial support to domestic LNG import facilities.

2019 will also be crucial in the natural gas disputes surrounding Ukraine. For the United States, Nord Stream 2 will not only increase Berlin's dependence on Russian energy but also imperil Kiev, since Russia will be freer to turn off the tap to Ukraine for political reasons if there are no downstream markets in Central Europe that would otherwise suffer from a shut-off. Russia's Gazprom has argued that Nord Stream 2 makes more economic sense than rehabilitating the pipelines that traverse Ukraine due to the cost of modernizing Soviet-era pipelines. Moreover, Gazprom has noted that most of Russia's new natural gas developments are in the Arctic, which would put them closer to a pipeline in the Baltic Sea. Until this year, Germany had viewed the Nord Stream 2 pipeline in purely economic terms. Over the course of 2018, it has begun grappling with the political ramifications of the project, and Washington is certain to increase the political heat on Berlin over the project in 2019.

From competing with Russia in Europe and Qatar elsewhere to becoming a bone of contention in trade wars with China — as well as a few American allies — U.S. LNG exports are about to finally make their big splash on the global stage, more than five years after discussion first began about the impact that the U.S. resource would have on geopolitics. The U.S. shale gas revolution might have been slow in coming, but its impact might well shake the world in the year to come.

Crafty_Dog

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US CO2 Levels Drop Again
« Reply #664 on: November 08, 2018, 10:26:41 PM »

Crafty_Dog

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Sent to me by an MD from Colorado
« Reply #665 on: November 09, 2018, 08:17:32 AM »
« Last Edit: November 09, 2018, 08:19:54 AM by Crafty_Dog »

DougMacG

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Re: US CO2 Levels Drop Again
« Reply #666 on: November 09, 2018, 10:38:04 AM »
second post:
PS:  Remember this?
https://www.investors.com/politics/editorials/u-s-co2-levels-drop-again/

Yes.  Fracking success is the largest force currently bringing down CO2 emissions.  Not intermittent sources like wind and solar which without fracking require coal to fill in the rest of the demand over the clock and the calendar.

Pounds of CO2 emitted per million British thermal units (Btu) of energy for various fuels:
Coal (anthracite)   228.6
Coal (bituminous)   205.7
Coal (lignite)   215.4
Coal (subbituminous)   214.3
Diesel fuel and heating oil   161.3
Gasoline (without ethanol)  157.2
Propane   139.0
Natural gas   117.0
https://www.eia.gov/tools/faqs/faq.php?id=73&t=11

Nuclear:  0.00

We must act fast, atmospheric CO2 levels are already at zero parts per thousand.
« Last Edit: November 09, 2018, 10:41:24 AM by DougMacG »

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Energy Politics & Science
« Reply #667 on: November 09, 2018, 12:41:21 PM »
What about the endocrine disruption?

DougMacG

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Re: Sent to me by an MD from Colorado, endocrine disruption
« Reply #668 on: November 09, 2018, 04:06:47 PM »
"What about the endocrine disruption?"

I didn't realize what I wrote below hadn't posted yet.  In short, they don't seem to be alleging that any of this has happened.

https://endocrinedisruption.org/audio-and-video/oil-and-gas-basics

Dig into the O and G literature and science here: https://endocrinedisruption.org

May I ask, what is the point or conclusion of the person referring this information?

There is no doubt that poisons in the human body at unacceptable levels are harmful to glands and hormones.  

Is there evidence this is happening?  What levels cause health damage?  What levels are they finding?  How much of these chemicals is fracking emitting into human contact?  How does that compare with other risks?

The "peer-reviewed" articles I checked do not ask or answer the most basic questions such as, compared to what?  Is fracking more harmful than the coal it replaces?  Are the risk of spills and leakage worse than nuclear?  Or are they comparing this risk to an imaginary economy that runs on no energy at all? What industry doesn't have risk?   The studies talk about "risk" and "controversy" and I get that; we prefer no risk and no controversy.  Pollution implied needs to be measured and illnesses and deaths need to be counted.  The coal industry it replaces has deaths: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/coal-mine-deaths-surge-putting-feds-and-miners-at-odds/

From the website cited:
"HOW CAN WATER BE CONTAMINATED?
Groundwater can be contaminated by gas migrating from faulty well casing and cementing. Contamination of shallow aquifers and surface water has been linked to spills and leaks of fracking fluids and wastewater on the well pad."


Keywords: faults, leaks and spills, by implication they are saying that when things are working properly there are no emissions.  I think that's a big deal.  It's a VERY CLEAN source of energy even though I heard anecdotal evidence of a valve leak in North Dakota that was cleaned up quickly when discovered.

How often is this happening and how much is escaping the cleanup?  Can these leaks and spills be mostly stopped and avoided.  I think they already are.  In the case of the small North Dakota valve leak, it was either equipment or human error and hopefully learning takes place and corrections are made that make it safer everywhere going forward.  

Does a total ban on fracking put the population at less risk?  Not if you believe the climate change threat and know that fracking is the biggest development yet to curtail CO2 emissions.  What if all the world replaced all coal use with natural gas and cut the CO2 emissions in half?  Right now.  That is a big deal in climate and CO2 strategy.  I am pro-nuclear; why not cut most of that use to zero?

Colorado voters just voted on this exact issue and voted new restrictions down.  I would say Colo is one of the most environmentally conscious states anywhere.  Environmentally strong candidates (Democrats) won everything statewide while this measure failed.  I know the oil and gas industry spent more but the opponents of fracking did not make the case.

Dem Gov Hickenlooper under oath in congressional testimony:  "I drank the fracking fluid."  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyPUjXm4iBo

Done right, fracking has no drinking water contamination:  
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VY34PQUiwOQ
This is a highly regulated, highly engineered industry.  They aren't just spraying chemicals around (like agriculture, homeowners and golf courses do).

Coal usage emits sulfur dioxide.  Old nuclear plants are vulnerable to tsunamis and earthquake faults.  Wind turbines chops up birds and solar energy electrocutes careless homeowners and workers.  https://www.osha.gov/dep/greenjobs/solar.html  Which source has less risk, is safer and cleaner than fracking?  Perhaps nuclear but I think we need both.

If the risks are substantial, too bad the whole concept of "peer reviewed studies" lost credibility in the climate debacle. cf. Hide the decline, adjusted data, etc.  Did you see some of the spoof studies that passed peer review lately?  One side in energy versus health and safety debates makes the accusation that all energy industry funded studies are bunk and vice versa, the anti-energy industry is also  large and full of its own money incentives.  
« Last Edit: November 09, 2018, 04:26:35 PM by DougMacG »

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Energy Politics & Science
« Reply #669 on: November 10, 2018, 11:22:39 AM »
Thank you for the serious and thoughtful reply.

I find that of late I have been thinking about the implications of endocrine disruption. 

We mentioned it here on the SC&H forum a few years back but speaking for myself I hesitated from following through on the implications for fear of looking deranged-- but with Tucker Carlson making the point on his TV show and in his book (e.g. that under 40 male testosterone has declined 30% in the last 30 years) I have been inspired to find my courage to pursue the point.

I wonder how much of our current political decline is attributable to this? (feminism, hermaphroditism, RINO Reps, declining birth rates, etc)

DougMacG

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Re: Energy Politics & Science
« Reply #670 on: November 11, 2018, 08:43:43 AM »
"under 40 male testosterone has declined 30% in the last 30 years"

Extremely alarming if true and nationwide or worldwide, could literally lead to extinction in a short time at that rate.  If true, it appears we are chasing mostly the wrong shiny objects.

Does not sound like it correlates with fracking with less than a 10 year history, regionally isolated, mostly unpopulated areas and almost no incidence of leakage into drinking water.

Crafty_Dog

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DougMacG

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Re: Energy Politics & Science
« Reply #672 on: November 13, 2018, 07:29:06 AM »
"I remember when The Smartest President Ever told us that we couldn’t drill our way out of depending on our enemies for energy."
   - Glenn Reynolds at instapundit commenting on the new strength of the US to enforce sanctions on oil producers like Iran and Russia.

Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: Oil price drop Made in USA
« Reply #673 on: November 24, 2018, 09:51:19 AM »
In Oil’s Huge Drop, All Signs Say Made in the U.S.A.
Rising U.S. production and inventory, changing policies and a stronger dollar add to pressure on price of crude
Drilling site in the U.S.’s Permian Basin last March.
Drilling site in the U.S.’s Permian Basin last March. Photo: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg News
161 Comments
By Stephanie Yang and
Amrith Ramkumar
Nov. 23, 2018 3:03 p.m. ET

The downward spiral in oil prices is accelerating as a surge in crude production from a turbocharged U.S. petroleum industry runs into weaker global economic growth.

Crude prices slid 7.7% Friday, their largest one-day drop since July 2015, and are now down by nearly a third since the start of October. The U.S. benchmark, West Texas Intermediate futures, closed at $50.42 a barrel—its lowest level in over a year.

As economic growth outside the U.S. has flagged, producers and traders are beginning to worry that demand for crude will also decline. In export-dependent Germany, a purchasing managers index hit a four-year low, well below the level economists were expecting.The steepness of the drop has prompted Saudi Arabia and the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to consider a plan to quietly cut production to bolster prices, according to people familiar with the matter.

The idea would see the cartel retain the official output targets it set in 2016. But, because Saudi Arabia is overshooting those targets by nearly 1 million barrels a day, it would effectively be a cut. Such a move may help support prices without raising the ire of President Trump, who has been calling on OPEC to keep prices lower.

Investors remain skeptical that the OPEC meeting in Vienna on Dec. 6 will be able to turn the tide on oil supply enough to support prices.

A big reason why: the emergence of the U.S. oil industry as one of the world’s most important players. Ballooning shale production—American output has nearly doubled since the start of 2012—has made the U.S. a key supplier and exacerbated worries about a global glut of crude.

“I never thought I would hear these kinds of numbers coming out of the U.S.,” said Bob Yawger, director of the futures division at Mizuho Securities USA. “This is going to force OPEC’s hand.”

Power Play

The U.S. now exports more energy than it imports, by one measure.

U.S. energy trade balance, monthly

Natural gas

30 trillion British thermal units a day

Coal

Oil products

Total energy

trade balance

0

swung positive

in October

Crude oil

–30

–60

Negative figures

indicate imports

exceed exports

–90

’10

’15

’18

2006

Source: Bank of America Merrill Lynch

This summer, the U.S. surpassed Saudi Arabia and Russia as the largest crude-oil producer—a title it hadn’t held since 1973, according to the International Energy Agency. Monthly output in the U.S. was a record 11.65 million barrels a day in September and nearly the same amount in October, according to energy consulting firm Wood Mackenzie, while Saudi Arabia’s supply was nearly 11 million barrels a day last month and Russian production stood at 11.4 million a day.

“It used to be the world was divided into OPEC and non-OPEC,” said Daniel Yergin, vice chairman of IHS Markit, which projects the U.S. will be a net exporter of petroleum in the early 2020s. “Now it’s the world of the big three.”
On Top of the WorldSurging production has made the U.S. the world's largest oil supplier in recentmonths.Source: Wood MackenzieNote: Includes crude and condensate production
.million barrels a dayU.S.Russia
Saudi Arabia2015’16’17’189.09.510.010.511.011.512.0

In recent weeks, that has been reflected in a bumper amount of oil in storage. U.S. crude stockpiles have climbed for nine consecutive weeks. Inventories advanced by 4.9 million barrels in the week ended Nov. 16, and rose more than 10 million barrels the week before, the largest one-week increase since February 2017.

Bottlenecks in getting oil out of the prolific Permian basin in Texas have led to a big divergence in the benchmark prices of oil. The global benchmark, Brent crude, trades for roughly $9 more than West Texas Intermediate, which is harder to get to global markets.

However, the U.S. has continued to pump oil and many expect those hurdles to be cleared next year as new pipelines are built, unleashing even more crude on the rest of the world.

Uncertainty on the geopolitical front has also contributed to worries about oversupply.

Mr. Trump has signaled a willingness to look past the killing of a prominent U.S.-based journalist in his relations with Saudi Arabia. And the U.S., after months touting strict enforcement of sanctions on Iran, granted more generous waivers than expected for eight governments to buy Iranian oil. This could lead to higher-than-expected supply from the Islamic Republic.
One-Way StreetU.S. crude-oil futures have moved steadilylower in recent weeks after hitting theirhighest level since 2014.Source: SIXNote: Front-month contractAs of Nov. 23
.a barrel
Multiyear highJan. ’18AprilJulyOct.45505560657075$80

Saudi officials said Mr. Trump pressured their country into ramping up oil production to record levels ahead of the sanctions on Iran’s petroleum industry, the Journal has reported.

“They are trying to be as cooperative with us as possible,“ said Douglas Hepworth, chief operating officer at Gresham Investment Management LLC, a $7 billion commodities firm with about one-third of its assets in energy. “What triggered the whole thing was everybody in the world moving to full capacity to try and make the world safe for Iranian sanctions.”

The strength of global production now threatens to overwhelm demand. This could pressure OPEC and its allies such as Russia to cut back when the group meets next month in hopes of regaining more direct control of global supply.
Up, Up and AwayU.S. inventories have climbed steadily inrecent weeks with energy companiesboosting output.Weekly change in U.S. stockpilesSource: Energy Information Administration
.million barrels
Oct. ’18Nov.-50510

Such a combination helped rein in the last oil price rout two years ago—defying skeptics who previously warned OPEC’s grip on world markets had slipped thanks to U.S. shale. In 2016, the cartel teamed up with Russia and a group of like-minded, non-OPEC oil producers. They throttled back hard and stayed disciplined, slowly draining the world of the buildup of inventory that now is starting to slosh around the world again. The big question is whether they can pull off the same sort of deal now, and how long it might take to drain supply again.

Adding to the pressure on oil is a stronger U.S. dollar. Since crude is priced in dollars, it becomes more expensive for foreign buyers when the U.S. currency rises. On Nov. 12, the dollar jumped to its highest level since March 2017, bolstered by expectations of higher interest rates. This could start to hinder global demand, one of the initial drivers that underpinned the recovery in crude.

If the price of oil drops too far, too fast, that could also hurt U.S. producers, especially in the shale patch. Most shale drillers now maintain they can break even at $50 or lower. But the falling prices have begun to eat into their profitability, and some may be forced to curtail spending next year and reduce ambitious growth plans if prices decline much more.

Mr. Trump has expressed hope that oil prices will fall lower in tweets and comments this week. His remarks have upset some shale drillers, who say continued drops could hurt the U.S. fracking industry, and the Trump administration’s stated goals of American “energy dominance,” at a time when the country’s oil output is at all-time highs.

The U.S. broadly is reaping benefits. Consumers are enjoying lower prices at the gasoline pump. Higher oil production helped the U.S. lower its merchandise trade deficit by nearly $250 billion in 2017 from a decade earlier, according to a recent report from IHS Markit.

As the U.S. has exported more oil and natural gas, the country’s energy trade balance swung into surplus in October, according to data from Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

The fact that the U.S. is exporting more than it imports helps insulate the country from global price swings and raises the stakes for OPEC in its decision whether or not to cut production, analysts said.

“We’re rewriting the rules about how we think about global trade competition and market share,” said Michael Tran, energy strategist at RBC Capital Markets. “There’s no playbook or context given how quick growth has been in the U.S.”

DougMacG

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Re: Energy Politics & Science, solar, wind, pathological science
« Reply #674 on: November 26, 2018, 09:20:44 AM »
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2018/11/24/peter-foster-another-report-reluctantly-admits-that-green-energy-is-a-disastrous-flop/

Shocking!  :roll:

After all the hoopla and subsidies, solar and wind combine for 1% of global energy.  Even that is exaggerated because at crucial times in crucial places solar and wind energy production fall to zero.



Crafty_Dog

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Israel, Cyprus, and Greece to cut Turkey out of the loop?
« Reply #677 on: December 20, 2018, 10:29:55 PM »


y Nektaria Stamouli
Dec. 20, 2018 1:25 p.m. ET

Greece, Cyprus and Israel said on Thursday they are ready to proceed with a U.S.-backed pipeline project that would transfer natural gas from the Eastern Mediterranean to Europe.

The EastMed pipeline would bring gas from the sea between Israel and Cyprus to European Union markets via Greece. If construction goes ahead, it would spell the end for an alternative pipeline route for Israeli gas via Turkey. EastMed is expected to be 2,000 kilometers long.

After meeting in Be’er Sheva, Israel, the leaders of Greece, Cyprus and Israel said they were ready to sign an intergovernmental agreement on the pipeline project. It is expected to be signed in Greece in early 2019 after the project receives EU regulatory approval.

Gas reserves in the Eastern Mediterranean are estimated at 125 trillion cubic feet, according to energy consulting firm Wood Mackenzie. They could give the region an economic boost and help diversify Europe’s gas supply away from Russia. But the race to exploit the reserves is entangled with contested territorial claims and longstanding tensions between Cyprus and Turkey.

EastMed would be the longest and deepest underwater pipeline in the world, and would have the capacity to carry up to 20 billion cubic meters of gas annually. Construction is expected to take around six to seven years and to cost around $7 billion.

The shortest and fastest route to take gas from the Eastern Mediterranean to Europe would be through Turkey. But Ankara’s difficult relations with Israel, the EU and the U.S. have undermined support for that solution.

Turkey, which wants a share of Eastern Mediterranean reserves, objects to the EastMed project. It also strongly opposes any exploitation of gas reserves in Cyprus’s exclusive economic zone.

Turkey has occupied the northern part of Cyprus since 1974 and doesn’t recognize the government of Cyprus, an EU member, or its border agreements with its neighbors. Turkey has repeatedly threatened to mobilize its armed forces if Cyprus exploits gas around the island without its agreement.

Cyprus, Greece and Israel are hoping that U.S. support for the EastMed project will help it come to fruition. Officials from the three smaller countries said they are hoping U.S. companies will invest in the project, and that the U.S. will put diplomatic pressure on Turkey to accept the project.

U.S. ambassador to Israel David Friedman, who joined the meeting on Thursday, said the U.S. supports the EastMed pipeline, a project “of great importance for the stability and prosperity of the Middle East and Europe.” He urged all countries in the region to ensure its success.

U.S. energy giant Exxon Mobil Corp. is currently drilling for oil and gas off Cyprus. Turkey has called the company’s activity unilateral and destabilizing for the region, but hasn’t tried to stop it. Earlier this year, the Turkish navy blocked a drill ship owned by Italian oil-and-gas company Eni SpA from entering Cypriot waters shortly after Eni said it has discovered meaningful reserves.

ccp

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Bipartisan support for nuclear energy
« Reply #678 on: December 23, 2018, 01:16:46 PM »
https://www.westernjournal.com/lawmakers-overwhelmingly-vote-revitalize-nuclear-industry/

Time for Hollywood to come out with China syndrome 2 staring 80 yo Fonda

Crafty_Dog

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GPF: US production to equal Russia + Saudi Arabia by 2025
« Reply #679 on: December 24, 2018, 10:55:59 AM »

OPEC is losing power. In a statement provided to Turkey’s Anadolu Agency, the executive director of the International Energy Agency said that by 2025, U.S. oil production will equal Russia and Saudi Arabia’s combined output. The IEA anticipates that the production levels of OPEC+ countries will grow only modestly in the next five years, with U.S. production reaching an anticipated 17 million barrels per day by 2023. Meanwhile, the United Arab Emirates said that if the most recent OPEC+ cuts of 1.2 million barrels per day do not sufficiently boost oil prices, it would be willing to hold an extraordinary meeting to pursue more cuts.
« Last Edit: December 25, 2018, 06:56:42 AM by Crafty_Dog »

DougMacG

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Re: Bipartisan support for nuclear energy
« Reply #680 on: December 25, 2018, 06:06:02 AM »
ccp:
https://www.westernjournal.com/lawmakers-overwhelmingly-vote-revitalize-nuclear-industry/


Amazing development.  Is someone out there reading the forum?

ccp

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Re: Energy Politics & Science
« Reply #681 on: December 25, 2018, 06:31:37 AM »
***Amazing development.  Is someone out there reading the forum?***

Doug, you have been calling this for decades!  Finally they are taking your advice

ccp

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God help us : new nauseating Dem slogan "Green New Deal"
« Reply #682 on: December 25, 2018, 03:45:46 PM »
If I recall my college history , the "New Deal " did not help get us out of the depression .

The "Great Society" deal started us on the road to 22 trillion in debt.

New we have another "Green Monster" that will thrill the "I wanna be a revolutionary" millennial  crowd:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/powerpost/paloma/the-energy-202/2018/12/19/the-energy-202-lots-of-people-support-the-green-new-deal-so-what-is-it/5c1944641b326b2d6629d4e8/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.bf43cf2ddd08

Let's not make America great lets make us green and broken to a thirld world country

DougMacG

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Re: God help us : new nauseating Dem slogan "Green New Deal"
« Reply #683 on: December 27, 2018, 09:08:26 AM »
If I recall my college history , the "New Deal " did not help get us out of the depression .

The "Great Society" deal started us on the road to 22 trillion in debt.

New we have another "Green Monster" that will thrill the "I wanna be a revolutionary" millennial  crowd:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/powerpost/paloma/the-energy-202/2018/12/19/the-energy-202-lots-of-people-support-the-green-new-deal-so-what-is-it/5c1944641b326b2d6629d4e8/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.bf43cf2ddd08

Let's not make America great lets make us green and broken to a thirld world country

A wasted decade in America while Germany turned to Hitler and Nazism, I doubt if there was enough free market economic wisdom even when we were in college to teach how harmful and counterproductive the government programs were to the economy and the people.

Try Amity shlaes for a good look at it, https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Forgotten_Man:_A_New_History_of_the_Great_Depression

ccp

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Re: Energy Politics & Science
« Reply #684 on: December 27, 2018, 04:43:51 PM »
" On the other hand, The Forgotten Man and its key arguments have been criticized by liberal Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman, among others. Krugman wrote of "a whole intellectual industry, mainly operating out of right-wing think tanks, devoted to propagating the idea that FDR actually made the Depression worse...."

Krugman again

I remember my history class in mid 70s where it was made clear FDR did not help the depression.
This is not new.

Did Paul, the political hack, Krugman notice the book he  takes issue with lambasted Hoover - a Republican !!!

To Krugmen - go back to communist Russia where you must have come from .

Crafty_Dog

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Stratfor: Oil producers prepare for new era of low prices
« Reply #685 on: January 07, 2019, 10:34:01 AM »


The World's Oil Producers Prepare for a New Era of Low Prices
Highlights

    The oil market is likely to remain oversupplied in 2019, leading OPEC and non-OPEC countries to cut production to prevent another collapse in prices similar to 2014-15.
    Prices are likely to remain weaker than what many of major producers anticipated just three months ago.
    Venezuela will find itself in a most difficult spot because lower revenue will drive competition among the country's political elites, exacerbating its political crisis.
    For the United States, the domestic impacts will be both positive and negative, but Washington may now have the freedom to lean heavily on Iran's oil customers and force them to reduce those imports even further.
    Saudi Arabia will encounter difficulties because it must use state-led development — financed through oil revenue — to achieve Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's ambitious reforms.

 

Heading into 2019, oil producers are getting the feeling that they've seen this market before. That suspicion was reinforced last month when the price of global benchmark Brent crude briefly fell below $50 for the first time since June 2017. In addition, for the second time in five years, declining oil prices have forced global oil producers to stabilize the market by cutting production by 1.2 million barrels per day (bpd). And for the second time in those five years, producers will have to deal with the consequences of low prices, even if the pain might not be as bad this time around.

The Big Picture

Since the start of October, oil prices have fallen by roughly a third, raising concerns among the globe's oil producers. Many of them are continuing to deal with the aftereffects of the 2014-15 price collapse, which led them to make significant economic reforms. Those changes were slowed by some producers last year after an uptick in prices. Now, amid the latest drop in prices, Stratfor looks at some of the challenges that major oil producers are likely to face in 2019.

See A Crude Recovery

An Oil Market Under Pressure

Russia, Saudi Arabia and other members of OPEC may have been victims of their own success in 2018. After cutting oil production to start 2017, resulting in the slow rise in prices during 2017 and 2018, the coalition of OPEC and non-OPEC countries — the so-called OPEC+ — decided in June 2017 to relax some production curbs. But higher oil prices also spurred tight oil producers in North America — the nemesis of OPEC+ — to boost investment to accelerate production growth. As a result, U.S. production hit a record 11.5 million bpd in October 2018 — a nearly 2 million bpd increase over the previous year.

High growth in U.S. production, rising output from Saudi Arabia, sanctions waivers for the purchase of Iranian oil and a weak global economy due to the U.S. trade war, prompted oil markets to begin a sell-off. While prices are likely to rise in part because of Riyadh's decision to cut production again (U.S. President Donald Trump had pressured Saudi Arabia to increase production before the Iran sanctions took effect in November 2018), there is no escaping the simple truth: The oil market remains oversupplied, even with the cuts. What's more, U.S. output will likely provide all the growth — if not more — that is needed to satisfy the market in 2019. As a result, prices could remain at current lows for much of the year, with most estimates ranging from $40 to $75 per barrel.

The recent drop in prices resembles the fall seen in the second half of 2014. This time around, however, many oil producers won't have to make the same painstaking economic adjustments as they did in 2015. Most have already implemented long-term initiatives to alleviate the problems created by low prices. So what, precisely, is in store for some of the world's most important producers?

A chart shows the price of Brent crude oil from 2010 through 2018.

Saudi Arabia Unfazed

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman responded to falling oil prices by promising to reduce subsidies and institute significant austerity measures in 2015, when the country's budget deficit peaked at $97.9 billion. Riyadh also launched the Vision 2030 plan in April 2016 to increase the kingdom's revenue from non-oil streams, to boost the private sector and to diversify the economy away from a dependence on oil exports. Although Riyadh has seen success with some Vision 2030 goals (non-oil revenue rose from 115 billion riyals in 2014 to 287 billion riyals ($76.5 billion) in 2018), it has struggled to entice foreign investment and to jump-start the private sector. Both goals lie at the heart of Vision 2030.

To pick up the slack, Riyadh has had to fall back on its long-standing economic strategy: make the necessary investments on its own or resort to its sovereign wealth fund, the Public Investment Fund, to pay for domestic projects. Lower oil prices put the desert kingdom in a bind. It cannot make the necessary adjustments to quickly stimulate the private sector or attract investment, even though it must shore up its domestic economy since the crown prince remains under global pressure after the murder of dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi. Saudi Arabia's budget for 2019 aims to do the latter. Riyadh is planning not only to introduce its highest budget ever but also to boost capital spending by 20 percent, meaning it needs an oil price of about $90 per barrel to break even. But because the kingdom wishes to maintain its spending plans despite low oil prices, Riyadh will likely continue to rack up debt at a significant pace.

Russia's Many Headaches

Like Saudi Arabia, Russia suffered some significant pain in 2014 and 2015 as prices declined. Moreover, Moscow opted to continue floating the ruble on international currency markets, causing it to substantially weaken as oil prices fell. For Russia, this decision has had contrasting ramifications. While it did make imports more expensive and force the Kremlin to rely more on borrowing and reserve withdrawals to plug budget holes, it also boosted non-oil exports, since the weakened ruble made Russian agriculture and industrial goods more competitive. Moscow also adopted a wise approach to rising oil prices by avoiding the temptation to implement an expansionary budget; instead, it took any oil revenue above $40 per barrel and deposited it in a rainy-day fund or used it to reduce its deficit. It has also pursued more comprehensive reform efforts at home, increasing its value added tax from 18 percent to 20 percent for the 2019 budget and continuing austerity measures, which led to a small budget surplus last year.

A lower oil price will certainly result in a budget deficit for Russia, but low prices are just one of many concerns for its economy. Washington continues to expand its sanctions against the Kremlin in a number of fields, even threatening measures against Russian energy pipelines, such as Nord Stream 2, which would jeopardize aspects of Moscow's long-term economic strategy. For the past five years, Moscow has emphasized reducing its economic dependence on the West by expanding economic ties to Asia, but the move has ultimately provided Russia with little succor due to the downturn in Asian markets amid the U.S.-China trade war.

Iran's Worst Nightmare

Perhaps no country will feel the pinch from lower prices as much as Iran. The country's oil exports had already fallen by about 1 million bpd due to the U.S. decision to reintroduce sanctions after pulling out of the Iranian nuclear deal, but the low prices will only exacerbate the situation for the Islamic republic. The Trump administration granted 180-day waivers to eight countries to let them continue importing Iranian oil in part because of the October 2018 spike in oil prices. But if the market remains oversupplied by the time the waivers come up for renewal in May, Washington will have more room to press Tehran's customers to further reduce — or eliminate — those imports. For Iran, the prospect that it will lose most of its buyers is even more worrying than the decline in the price of oil itself, given that the knock-on economic effects are causing serious political repercussions at home.

Perhaps no country will feel the pinch from lower oil prices as much as Iran.

On Dec. 25, 2018, President Hassan Rouhani presented the country's 2019-20 budget, which envisions about 1 million to 1.5 million bpd of oil exports, as well as a price of $50 to $54 per barrel. But even if Iran attains that level of exports, it will suffer an economic recession due to the precipitous drop in oil exports and the increased cost of imports due to the rial's steep decline, as well as U.S. efforts to limit the country's access to hard currency. Politically, this will continue to weaken Rouhani to the benefit of Iran's conservatives and hard-liners, although the Islamic republic will, for the time being, achieve the bare minimum — avoiding an economic collapse.

Iraq Struggles to Dole out Its Oil Wealth

Iraq, now the world's fourth-largest oil producer, faced two major challenges during the last price dip in 2014. Not only did prices collapse, sending Baghdad into a financial tailspin, but the Islamic State also raced across western and northern Iraq, capturing key areas of production. And while the militant group is no longer capable of holding urban centers like Mosul, it remains a terrorist threat. What's more, Iraq can little afford the $88 billion price tag for the reconstruction of areas decimated by the Islamic State. So far, it has only received $30 billion for the rebuilding effort after an international donor conference last year in Kuwait, yet most of those funds are in the form of credits and loans that Baghdad must ultimately repay.

Rising oil prices in 2018 allowed Iraq to finally post a budget surplus, thanks to conservative price assumptions and deeply unpopular austerity measures implemented by former Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi. A continuation of this would allow Baghdad to use capital spending to help rebuild some of the damaged areas (indeed, the 2019 budget envisions a one-third increase in capital expenditures), but lower oil prices have put those plans in jeopardy. Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi has failed to form a Cabinet as political infighting between rival Shiite factions has prevented him from filling the critical posts of defense minister and interior minister. At the same time, Iraq's sectarian and ethnic composition will also tax its limited ability to rebuild the country and extend services to all citizens. Most of the areas destroyed by the Islamic State are predominantly Kurdish and Sunni, but Abdul-Mahdi will be reluctant to allocate a lot of money to such reconstruction projects, because residents of the country's oil capital, the southern Shiite city of Basra, have made strident demands for more jobs, more public services and better access to water. In the end, Iraq is likely to witness protests throughout 2019 as the country's leaders struggle to meet competing demands amid the decline in oil prices.

Venezuela's Slow-Burning Crisis

In Venezuela, the collapse of oil prices threw the country into a deep economic spiral that will fundamentally alter its economic activities for decades. After prices plunged in 2014, Caracas chose to fund its gaping deficit by expanding its monetary base, fanning hyperinflation. The government slashed imports and defaulted, or fell behind, on virtually all foreign debt payments — even those to crucial creditors such as China and Russia.

Now, Caracas is slowly moving away from decades of relying on oil production for virtually all of its export income. It's doing so out of necessity rather than choice. With the decline in oil revenue, the government of President Nicolas Maduro is looking for additional sources of funding to keep its political coalition intact with payouts and benefits. Oil production has declined by nearly 1 million bpd since the start of 2018, and other sources of revenue, such as illicit mining, will provide far less income than crude oil exports. This will drive greater competition between Venezuelan elites for revenue from illicit mining and other illegal activities, such as cocaine trafficking. In the long run, this instability will likely claim the Maduro government — and even persist into a new, opposition-led administration.

A U.S. of Winners and Losers

For most of the developed world, cheap oil is a good thing. After all, the European Union, Japan, China and South Korea are all significant net oil importers. And despite rising oil production at home, the United States also remains a large importer for now. More importantly, much of the U.S. economy consumes large amounts of oil, meaning low prices are a boon. At the same time, weaker prices also indicate a relatively sluggish global outlook, which hinders U.S. commercial activity worldwide.

Much of the U.S. economy consumes large amounts of oil, meaning low prices are a boon, yet weaker prices also indicate a relatively sluggish global outlook, which hinders U.S. commercial activity worldwide.

Lower prices in 2015 and 2016 halted North American growth in the production of tight oil; the present drop in oil prices could now lead companies that had been making investment plans when prices exceeded $70 per barrel to curtail those proposals. Already, several shale producers have canceled drilling rig additions in 2019. But many producers took out hedges when prices were high, and production break-even costs in some of the most productive U.S. shale plays in the Permian Basin are $45 to $50 per barrel. This means that while the oil patch could suffer some financial pain if prices remain low, it may not be enough to shut or reduce production overall.

No Guarantees

Three months ago, $90 per barrel of oil was not out of the question, as Brent spiked at $85 per barrel. Prices could quickly rise if there are changes in market conditions, such as the health of the global economy, but they could also remain low if conditions worsen or the U.S.-China trade war deepens. The OPEC+ countries most concerned about oil prices have decided to do whatever it takes to balance the market, including further cuts beyond the reduction they implemented on Jan. 1. Even if this does increase prices, OPEC+ will likely find itself in a similar position to what happened in 2017 and 2018 when prices rose: Higher prices stimulate more production growth in North America, obliging producers to make cuts permanent or deeper to offset strong growth elsewhere. Oil producers may be in for the rude awakening as $50 to $60 per barrel becomes the new normal, and anything outside that range will likely be a temporary blip. And whatever the new normal turns out to be, most countries now have little choice but to shape their economic and financial strategies with that $50-$60 range in mind.


DougMacG

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Don't Join The Media Freak Out Over Recent Jump In CO2 Emissions
« Reply #686 on: January 10, 2019, 09:23:56 AM »
https://www.investors.com/politics/editorials/co2-emissions-economy/
-------------------------

Is bringing manufacturing back to the US a bad thing?  More jobs, more people re-entering the workforce means more people driving to jobs and job interviews, are these bad things?  With prosperity, jet travel is up. COLD winter last year, was that bad for global warming?

We should start by banning fossil fuel heat, air conditioning and jet travel for Democrats and climate scientists.

When they change their own usage (cf Al Gore and his 'carbon neutral' heated swimming pools) and start supporting truly carbon-free nuclear plants I will begin to take them seriously.

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1,500 Private jets to Davos
« Reply #687 on: January 26, 2019, 06:18:21 PM »
Nearly 1500 Private Jets arrive at Climate Change focused Davos Summit

https://nypost.com/2019/01/23/nearly-1500-private-jets-to-land-at-climate-change-focused-davos-summit/
« Last Edit: January 26, 2019, 10:22:08 PM by Crafty_Dog »

DougMacG

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Re: Energy Politics & Science, Climate protection as a religion
« Reply #688 on: February 01, 2019, 04:13:00 AM »
Opinion piece in Frankfurt newspaper this am:

https://m.faz.net/aktuell/wirtschaft/teure-umweltpolitik-klimaschutz-als-neue-ersatzreligion-16018515.html

Climate protection as a religion
A COMMENT BY HOLGER STELTZNER


The Federal Government raises the climate far beyond other important policy areas, such as social affairs or the economy. Can we hope that the Union still comes to its senses?

Will the land of the inventors of petrol and diesel engines really abolish this? Or do German politicians still remember and stop the destruction of the economic heart chamber of Germany? After all, Munich has measured and found that the air was cleaner than feared and measured by the State Environmental Agency. The Federal Environmental Agency has incidentally informed that the fine dust limits are exceeded more in any German conurbation. Let's see what medium that was worth a message today. Hopefully, many other cities will also measure up to avoid driving bans.

Does it help the global climate, if local diesel cars drive in Eastern Europe or German coal-fired power plants are operated in emerging countries? We would have to move forward as a rich industrialized country for others to follow, it says. That's how the energy transition was founded. But no country followed us in the extreme subsidization of renewable energy, rightly, because in this country, the CO2 emissions sink only slightly.

What environmental problem kills most people, recently asked in a conversation with the Sunday newspaper the Danish world improver Bjørn Lomborg : air pollution within buildings, because nearly three billion people cook and heat wood, cardboard, manure or coal. Environmental scientists have calculated how best to use a euro to do as much good as possible for the climate. We cut off catastrophically: "For every euro that we spend in the EU, we avoid just 3 cents of climate impacts in the future."

Where should the electricity come from in the future?
Such inconvenient facts are not noted in Germany. Climate protection has the status of a substitute religion in large parts of society. An extremely expensive exit from coal is decided, although nobody knows how coal and nuclear power can be rapidly replaced, which today account for more than half of German power generation. Where the additional power for the seven to ten million politically wanted electric cars should come is not even asked. From French nuclear or Polish coal-fired power plants?

DougMacG

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Re: Energy Politics & Science
« Reply #689 on: February 08, 2019, 04:02:11 PM »
Just as the millions who have moved to the Southwest need water and air conditioning, people in the north need heat, not as a luxury but to live.  Natural gas and nuclear energy are the two greatest and cleanest resource technologies of our time, natural gas more than twice as clean as coal and nuclear 100% CO2 emision-free.

The 'Green New Deal' proposes to eliminate both.  Hard to take this extreme proposal seriously but if these laws were in effect today, nearly all of us here would be dead, no exaggeration.

I've been gone a week and temps are still below zero.  Without natural gas, you would heat millions of homes how?  The wind coincidentally has been near zero and same for solar panels constantly covered in wind blown snow during these lowest sun angle times of year in the north country. 

What the Ocasios propose to shut off all nuclear and all fossil fuel use is not cognitive dissonance, it is negligent genocide.
---------------------------

https://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2019/01/why-green-energy-is-futile-in-one-lesson.php

http://www.startribune.com/bitter-cold-shows-reliable-energy-sources-are-critical/505165032/
 
[In California, not affected by the upper midwest's extreme winter weather] Wind is operating a 3 percent of installed capacity, solar is operating at 12 percent of capacity.

ccp

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Re: Energy Politics & Science
« Reply #690 on: February 08, 2019, 06:34:35 PM »
Doug writes "
"Hard to take this extreme proposal seriously but if these laws were in effect today, nearly all of us here would be dead, no exaggeration."

Didn't one Democrat recently state as much.  That if the human race died off it would be best for the environment.

I just read that somewhere but cannot find now.

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Energy Politics & Science, The Nuclear Option, 20 Times Better
« Reply #691 on: February 12, 2019, 08:46:53 AM »
For some reason all momentum seems to be against nuclear energy right now which makes no sense if you want to reliably power the economy and curtail carbon dioxide emissions.

Nuclear power peaked in 1996 because of a slump in fossil fuel costs.  The financial crash of 2008 was a big setback, as was the Fukushima Daichi tsunami disaster of 2011.  MIT Tech Review reports that "equipment costs have risen 20 percent since 2010, in part because of heightened safety requirements".
https://www.technologyreview.com/s/537816/why-dont-we-have-more-nuclear-power/

In fact, this demonstrates my main point of Fukushima in that much learning occurred relating to increased safety of new construction out of this natural disaster, worst case scenario.

Tech Review adds:  "as low-carbon wind and solar power got cheaper".  Some key words are missing there; the first names of solar and wind are 'heavily subsidized' and the last name of both and especially solar is the phrase 'after dark' highlighting their unavoidable weakness, zero power often when needed most.  In other words, not a solution at all.

Finally, someone out there is reading the forum, see this new article in City Journal:

https://www.city-journal.org/atomic-power

"Closing New York’s second-largest power plant would seem to put a major crimp in the state’s electricity supply. And, since nuclear energy releases no carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, replacing Indian Point’s power with natural gas (the state’s largest source of electric power) promises to increase the region’s CO2 emissions."

   - To be replaced with renewable sources that have zero and near zero power after dark which in northern NY is up to 15 hours of the day.

"The New York Independent System Operator, a nongovernmental bureau that supervises the flow of electricity around the state, has studied how it will meet the demand for power after Indian Point closes. Its conclusion: three gas-fired power plants now under construction—and not the promised wind and solar installations—will make up the shortfall."

   - We are moving to carbon-free by moving from carbon-free back to carbon fossil fuels.  That makes sense to whom?

Back to City Journal:  "Don’t turn off those nuclear-powered lights just yet. ... In recent years, some eco-pragmatists and climate scientists have begun touting the advantages of zero-carbon nuclear energy—and poking holes in overblown hopes for renewables. These “pronuclear Greens,” as Robert Bryce dubbed them in a 2013 City Journal article, include former NASA climate scientist and current climate activist James Hansen, Greenpeace cofounder Patrick Moore, and environmental guru (and onetime Whole Earth Catalog publisher) Stewart Brand."
...
"In September, a bipartisan group of senators, including Lisa Murkowski, Cory Booker, and Dick Durbin, introduced the Nuclear Energy Leadership Act, a grab bag of initiatives to “rejuvenate the U.S. nuclear industry” and “drive innovation in advanced reactors.” The bill aims to streamline approvals for the next generation of nuclear technology and help U.S. companies become globally competitive again."

"President Trump signed a related bill, intended to boost public-private partnerships in nuclear research, into law in September."
...
"Secretary of Energy Rick Perry has floated two ambitious proposals to help keep both nuclear and coal plants in business. The administration argues that maintaining existing coal and nuclear facilities is necessary to keep the electric grid “resilient”—that is, able to recover quickly from a disruption. And grid resiliency is vital for national security."
...
"New Jersey’s nuclear subsidy will cost ratepayers $300 million per year. But New Jersey already forces consumers to fork over $600 million to subsidize solar. And those solar installations only generate 2.8 terawatt-hours of power. By contrast, the four nuclear plants covered in the plan produce 28 terawatt-hours of power—ten times as much. [For half the cost, a twenty-fold value improvement!]
...
[James] Hansen joined three other climate activists in stating: “Nuclear energy can power whole civilizations, and produce waste streams that are trivial compared to the waste produced by fossil fuel combustion.”
...
"spent nuclear fuel needs to be stored carefully, of course. But the fuel’s extreme density allows storage facilities to be quite small. Despite widespread fears, accidents involving spent nuclear fuel have been few and inconsequential. Compared with that of strip mines, oil wells, railroads, and pipelines—or, for that matter, vast arrays of solar panels and wind turbines—nuclear power’s total environmental footprint is almost dainty."

"the biggest concern is safety. “A lot of people say, ‘I understand the case for nuclear, but if things go wrong, it’s catastrophic,’ ” Shellenberger says. “But it turns out, that’s not true.” Three Mile Island caused no fatalities. At Fukushima, only one radiation-linked death has been confirmed, that of a worker who died of lung cancer seven years after the accident."
[Soviet Chernobyl is not a comparable facility.]

"Shellenberger sees the Fukushima disaster as, ironically, bolstering the argument for nuclear. “We’ve seen the worst that can happen and it’s not that bad!” "
[More importantly, the learning that took place in that disaster is of extreme value.]
"the fear of nuclear radiation turned out to be more deadly than the accident itself."

"All energy sources involve risks for both civilians and workers. ... In the U.S., more workers have died falling off rooftops while installing solar panels than in the entire history of commercial nuclear power."
[Again, for a fraction of the needed megawatts.]
...
"A “zero-carbon grid” is feasible only if we keep “firm low-carbon resources” in the mix. Today, that mostly means nuclear power."
...
"Despite obtaining 38 percent of its electricity from renewable sources, Germany has made little progress bringing down carbon emissions. Meanwhile, electricity rates have doubled, air quality is miserable, and the country still depends on coal for about 40 percent of its power."
...
Macron, France:  "“What did the Germans do when they shut all their nuclear in one go?” he asked rhetorically in a 2017 interview. “They worsened their CO2 footprint."
----------------------------------------------------

[Doug]  In short, we cannot cut our emissions without nuclear and we cannot have resilience in our grid without nuclear.

Take the last cold snap here for example.  Homes [lives] in the north country depend on both electricity and natural gas for heating. The furnaces use both.  The blower and the safety equipment on the high efficiency furnaces DO NOT WORK without electricity and when gas is not available, electric heaters are the only alternative.  The more we switch to solar and wind, the more we rely on natural gas to make up the ENORMOUS gaps.  Then when the extreme weather hits as it always does, and the natural gas supply and pipelines hit and surpass their limits and homes and lives go without heat.  Not by coincidence this happens right while death is 5 minutes or so away in exposure.  Powering the grid isn't some joke or trivial political matter. 

Crafty_Dog

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Cyber Vulnerability of the Energy Grid
« Reply #692 on: March 04, 2019, 09:29:49 AM »
Pasting here from the Homeland thread:

https://chicagoboyz.net/archives/59310.html

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US LNG Exports to Europe growing
« Reply #693 on: May 02, 2019, 09:01:12 AM »


U.S. energy exports to Europe. The European Union will try to facilitate a doubling of imports of U.S. liquefied natural gas by 2023, EU and U.S. officials said Thursday. It seems a modest goal considering that Europe’s LNG imports from the U.S. have grown by 272 percent since Washington and Brussels released a joint statement last July declaring their intent to improve energy cooperation. Moreover, the EU is currently using only 26 percent of its available capacity for LNG imports. The bottleneck comes from the U.S. side, where export capacity is still limited. The assistant U.S. secretary for fossil energy, however, said the U.S. would more than double its export capacity, to 112 billion cubic meters per year from 50 bcm per year, by 2020. Washington wants to boost natural gas sales to Europe so that the Continent will be less reliant on Russian supplies.

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Shale here to stay?
« Reply #694 on: May 20, 2019, 12:10:22 AM »
May 15, 2019



By Xander Snyder


Is the Shale Revolution Here to Stay?


Critics of the U.S. shale industry question its staying power.


Summary
U.S. shale oil is a booming business. As it drives up global oil supply and puts downward pressure on oil prices, U.S. production of shale oil poses a geopolitical threat to other oil-producing states. But critics say that the boom won’t last. If true, that changes the geopolitical calculus.

How much longer will shale oil be a booming business? The answer to that question, while fuzzy, has long-term geopolitical implications. U.S. shale oil production has grown steadily, putting downward pressure on the global price of oil. We’ve written before about the power of shale oil and the impact it has on other geopolitically important oil producers like Russia and Saudi Arabia, which rely heavily on oil revenue to either fund their government spending or support their economies. Our forecasts for these countries are built in part on the assumption that, as the global supply of oil increases, its price will hit a ceiling that could strain these countries’ public finances, which in turn would have political ramifications. But shale skeptics maintain that the industry is not sustainable. If they’re right, and if the shale industry were to die out in the next couple of years, tanking oil supply and spiking oil prices, the geopolitical calculus for Russia and Saudi Arabia would change substantially.

The critics’ argument is threefold. First, they claim that the shale boom depended on huge amounts of debt that was doled out without serious consideration for whether shale producers would be able to pay it back. Second, critics are worried that there’s less shale oil available than originally believed, reflected in shale wells’ depletion rates. Third, they see limited room for growth in the profitability of shale production as shale’s break-even price has stagnated. Combine these factors, the critics say, and you get an industry that will not endure. This Deep Dive will take a closer look at these criticisms and explore whether, in fact, U.S. shale really is an economically sustainable industry.

Shale: A Primer

To understand the criticisms of the industry, it’s important to understand what shale is and how oil is extracted from it – a technically complex and expensive process. Shale rock, embedded thousands of feet under the Earth’s surface, is less permeable than other types of rock. And yet it’s here that shale oil, or “tight oil,” is found. The extraction process for this oil is known as hydraulic fracturing – or “fracking” – and it requires drilling down to the shale deposits, and then drilling horizontally through the rock. The drillers then inject a water-based solution at high velocity to break apart the rock, creating fissures through which oil can flow. (This process can also be used to extract natural gas from shale deposits.)


 

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The U.S. shale industry really took off in 2009. Thanks to the United States’ extensive shale formations, it has benefited hugely from the shale revolution. The combined technologies of hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling vastly increased the productivity of shale wells, and overall U.S. oil production has increased apace. In 2018, the U.S. produced an average of nearly 11 million barrels per day of crude oil, almost 60 percent of which came from shale. It’s helped the U.S. surpass Russia and Saudi Arabia in the production of hydrocarbons and is pushing the U.S. toward becoming a net energy exporter, a benchmark it’s expected to reach next year.

Financing: The Catalyst

Financing was, in many ways, the engine that drove the rise of shale oil, but the industry’s reliance on debt has also threatened to bring it down. In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, interest rates fell, making debt cheaper and borrowing easier. In the low-interest rate environment, investors were looking everywhere for yield. Shale looked particularly appealing for debt investors since reserves could be used as collateral – if companies failed to pay their debts, the banks could simply take control of the reserves. This created the appearance of added security.

The availability of cheap, accessible debt coincided with two other important moments that created a turning point: skyrocketing oil prices and technological developments that had made the economics of shale drilling viable (though still expensive). Shale production took off, reversing a decadeslong decline in U.S. oil production that had begun in the 1970s.
Debt, however, is a double-edged sword. In exchange for immediate access to capital, firms assume higher operating costs down the road. This can lead to firms becoming over-leveraged as they assume so much debt that they cannot afford to both pay off the debt and pay regular operating expenses. So when oil prices tanked in 2015-16, many over-leveraged companies went out of business, causing U.S. oil production to drop from about 9.4 million bpd in 2015 to 8.8 million bpd in 2016. Notably, this was not an accident. Global oil supply had been climbing thanks to shale production. When supply is too high, OPEC typically cuts production to drive prices back up. But in 2015-16, OPEC chose not to cut supply, hoping that low prices would drive shale producers out of business and thus allow OPEC countries to reclaim market share they had lost to shale.

This downturn threatened to prove right concerns that, without high oil prices and access to cheap, plentiful debt, shale is not an economically viable industry. Companies had taken on unsustainable amounts of debt to fuel growth. When interest rates began to climb, the need to service that debt was a further incentive for shale companies to continue production – even if operations were barely or not at all profitable. These firms’ lending used to set up new wells created debt service expenses, which led to total operating expenses exceeding cash coming in from operations for too long; if interest rates had continued to rise, the entire industry would be, if not sunk, at least forced to slow production. This was not lost on debt investors, who of course feared that bankruptcies would wipe out most of their investment. As oil prices fell, access to debt capital decreased, forcing cash-strapped shale companies to turn instead to equity financing (that is, to issue more stock).


 

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Bankruptcies did, in fact, increase substantially when oil prices plummeted in 2015-16. Banks, as they are wont to do, had offered loans based on current or recent conditions, without consideration for what would happen when oil prices dropped – an inevitability in a cyclical industry like oil. Meanwhile, larger companies bought up the assets of the smaller, less efficient ones, leading to industry consolidation.

But the cycle continued, despite OPEC’s best efforts to keep prices down long enough to destroy the shale industry, and conditions improved. As a number of companies went bankrupt, oil supplies decreased, and prices rose once again. The companies that survived were forced to cut their capital expenditures, which actually led to an improvement in cash flow. Since 2016, bankruptcies have declined significantly.


 

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Still, some industry observers continued to insist that the economics of the industry itself – not just of individual companies – were fundamentally unsustainable because they relied too heavily on debt. They claimed that debt was not just one factor in shale’s growth but in fact the decisive factor. Without it, they said, the industry couldn’t survive, because total expenses, including debt services fees, would continue to exceed revenue. Since 2016, however, shale drillers have moved toward positive, or at least neutral, cash flow. As of early 2018, a greater share of shale companies was beginning to cover the cost of new wells with operating cash flow, rather than debt. Rystad Energy, an oil and gas market research firm, anticipates that in 2019 shale drillers will generate enough cash to cover capital expenses and pay dividends, though just barely.


 

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If shale companies have enough cash remaining to pay dividends – even just a little bit – it’s a sign that they have enough cash on hand to better pay their debts. As of the fourth quarter of 2018, about 40 percent of companies in a 33-company sample of shale producers were cash-flow positive. To be economically viable, more companies will need to at least break even – in the case of shale, that means they need to generate enough cash from operations to cover their operating expenses without external capital.


 

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So, while a good number of shale companies do seem to be in precarious financial situations, many are trending toward positive cash flow. And just because some companies are at risk of going out of business doesn’t mean that shale oil production will cease. Truly cash-strapped companies can sell their assets to major international oil companies that have diversified revenue streams and can keep shale machinery offline until oil prices rise. In other words, as time goes on, the shale industry will mature and, like any industry, experience both bankruptcies and consolidation as some companies prove to be more efficient operators than others.

Oil Reserves: Estimating What’s Out There

But it’s not just financing that shale skeptics criticize. They’re concerned, too, that shale companies substantially overestimated their reserves. They’re not wrong; many oil companies have had to revise their total reserve estimates downward, and it seems their initial overestimations were directly related to the question of financing. If companies had higher reserves – a form of collateral – they could take on more of the debt they needed to get underway. Similarly, when debt financing dried up in 2015-16 and companies started to issue stock, they overestimated their reserves so that it would be easier to raise money from investors.

How were oil companies able to convince banks and investors that their oil reserves were larger than they actually were? Oil-producing companies in the U.S. are required to file with the Securities and Exchange Commission estimates of their “total proven oil reserves” – the reserves for which there is a 90 percent chance that the oil will be recovered. But as the fledgling shale industry was starting to raise money, companies began to use a metric called “estimated ultimate recovery” instead. EUR simply refers to existing reserves, without indicating the likelihood of recovery. The metric is also based on the assumption that, as time goes on, companies would be able to replicate their early success – that additional wells would produce as much as already tapped wells. In retrospect, this was flawed logic; the initial wells are almost always the most productive ones.

Shale drillers also assumed they could pack shale wells close together. But packed too tightly, the wells would pull from shared reserves, decreasing the amount that each could draw. Both assumptions contributed to overly optimistic EUR numbers.
In response, investors are now scrutinizing shale producers’ claims. They began by questioning shale companies’ estimates of their reserves – and therefore whether they were worth investing in – and have started pushing for greater accountability in firms’ capital expenditures and demanding higher returns. As a result, shale companies are now exercising more oversight of capital expenditures, cutting spending, moving toward positive cash flow, and using that cash flow to return dividends to investors or to buy back shares. All of this is bolstering the economic sustainability of the industry.

Shale producers’ estimates affect more than just financing. Market research firms and the U.S. Energy Information Administration (which is responsible for collecting and reporting economic data on the energy industry that is used in policymaking and economic forecasting) take into consideration the reserve estimates that companies put out. Historically, forecasts of U.S. shale oil production have been outstripped by actual production, and current forecasts are almost uniformly positive – the EIA and industry consulting firms Rystad Energy and Wood Mackenzie all anticipate substantial increases in oil production over the next 10 years, even with lower oil prices. That’s good news for the shale industry – even with more conservative estimates of their reserves, shale oil isn’t going anywhere.


 

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The industry also stands to benefit from pipelines scheduled to come online in late 2019 and early 2020. Production has been constrained by a lack of transportation infrastructure in the U.S., and these pipelines will facilitate transport of resources from the Permian Basin, the source of nearly one-third of U.S. oil output, to refineries and export centers in places like the Gulf Coast. It seems shale oil production will continue growing, though at a somewhat slower pace than the industry initially anticipated.


 

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Supply and Profitability: The Geopolitical Question

Ultimately, what affects geopolitics is not the durability of one shale company or another – it is the price of oil and whether the supply of oil continues to increase. And even if the growth in U.S. shale oil production slows, the industry will likely persist for at least the next decade. Skeptics have questioned the shale industry’s ability to sustain high levels of production since it took off over a decade ago. But U.S. production has often outperformed forecasts, and we have to keep this in mind when examining claims that the shale industry is not financially viable.

One of the primary concerns here is the industry’s profitability. As the industry has grown and matured, the break-even price per well has come down. But some doubters claim that there are fewer gains to be made through technological advances. If true, this would mean that the break-even point will not come down much further, leaving little room for growth in the profitability of shale. This may be a valid criticism. But that still puts the profitable oil price for a lot of shale companies well below Saudi Arabia’s fiscal break-even point (the point at which the government can balance its budget), which the International Monetary Fund says is currently about $80-$85 per barrel.


 

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Another, more convincing critique examines the relationship between long-term supply and profitability. It’s based on comparing production rates in the Bakken Formation and the Eagle Ford Group, some of the earliest shale basins to be tapped, with the Permian Basin, whose development only took off in 2013. The U.S. has seen net oil production gains since 2016, and much of those gains were from new wells, especially in the Permian Basin. Meanwhile, however, production in Bakken and Eagle Ford has declined following the 2015-16 downturn. (Eagle Ford has stagnated, while Bakken has only recently inched above its pre-2015 production levels.)


 

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Since Eagle Ford and Bakken are older discoveries than the Permian, critics suggest that the former are more representative of what shale basins will be capable of producing after several years of drilling, and that those production levels will be much lower than following the initial discovery, when only the choicest wells were being drilled. The Permian’s production has an outsize effect on total U.S. production. If it follows the trend of its predecessors, that effect would be problematic.


 

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New wells usually produce more oil at the outset, and the rate at which oil flows thereafter is called the decline rate. The Permian’s decline rates are rising faster than expected. Take, for example, Wolfcamp – one of the drilling areas within the Permian Basin. When drilling in the Permian got underway in 2013, observers expected decline rates of 5-10 percent; but Wolfcamp’s rate is now closer to 15 percent annually. Shale companies will need to drill more wells just to keep producing the same volume of oil. If Eagle Ford, Bakken and Permian production all stagnate or decline, that could constrain the amount of oil the U.S. is able to produce in the long run.

That’s assuming no new reserves are discovered. But, in fact, new reserves are discovered often – even in the Permian itself. In December, the U.S. Department of the Interior reported that the Permian’s Wolfcamp and Bone Spring Formations contain the most oil and gas resources of any location ever assessed. Still, that was not an assessment of proven reserves – those that can be recovered using existing technology – but rather of undiscovered reserves – defined by the department as “resources postulated, on the basis of geologic knowledge and theory, to exist outside of known fields of accumulations” – and technically recoverable reserves – defined as “resources producible using currently available technology and industry practices.” For now, companies are poised to continue producing enough to fuel growth in U.S. oil production. But if Permian production stagnates, they may well have to keep finding more reserves – and ways to extract them – to make it last.

What’s Ahead for Shale

The cycle of the oil industry goes on. Demand for oil may decline as countries shift toward fuel-efficient and electric vehicles. But demand for petrochemicals (chemical products for which oil is an input) will continue to grow as more people in the world’s most populous countries – namely, India and China – move into the middle class. The growing demand for oil will drive prices up, enabling shale drillers to increase production and, therefore, producers to rely less on debt – and even to start paying dividends.

It’s no surprise, then, that countries that rely heavily on the oil industry are having to rethink the underpinnings of their economies. (Saudi Arabia, for example, is working to reconfigure its economy to depend less on oil.) The U.S. could also become energy independent, which could have significant geopolitical implications.

The combination of hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling, which paved the way for the shale revolution in the U.S., is out of the box and can’t be put back in. The technology will continue to allow the U.S. to produce large quantities of oil for the foreseeable future. Shale isn’t going anywhere – and it will have a major influence over the global economics of oil for at least the next decade.


ccp

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article does not account for TRump factor
« Reply #695 on: May 23, 2019, 07:43:54 AM »
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/silence-storm-oil-markets-230000063.html

Trump could pick up the phone and threaten or cajole or simply ask  Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to open up the spiggets if he wants continued military support
he has I believe already done this once.

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Re: Energy Politics & Science - US Natural Gas revolution
« Reply #696 on: August 27, 2019, 06:58:03 AM »
This is such a big story and it is still developing.  The strangest part is that the climate extremists want to stop the movement to natural gas that is cleaning up the environment more than any other factor.

https://www.realclearenergy.org/articles/2019/08/22/us_shale_natural_gas_lowering_global_prices_and_co2_emissions.html
...
U.S. shale surge has led to dramatically lower gas prices (we are currently experiencing the lowest summer prices in over 20 years) and a shift in U.S. manufacturing (from oil to gas) and electricity (from coal to gas). Beyond lower cost, this transformation has been environmentally beneficial as well: natural gas emits 30% less CO2 than oil and 50% less than coal.
...
natural gas this year will supply nearly 40% of U.S. power, about double what it provided before the shale revolution. Gas is also the backup fuel to compensate for the natural intermittency of wind and solar power: gas is needed for when "the wind is blowing" and "the sun isn’t shining." The U.S. is now reducing its CO2 emissions faster than any country on Earth: "Thanks to Natural Gas, US CO2 Emissions Lowest Since 1985."
https://www.realclearenergy.org/articles/2018/07/06/more_natural_gas_is_slashing_us_co2_emissions_110310.html
...
US Shale changed geo-politics
https://www.cityam.com/how-the-us-shale-revolution-changed-the-face-of-geopolitics/

DougMacG

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Nuclear Waste Is Safe. What About Other Waste?
« Reply #697 on: September 01, 2019, 07:19:02 PM »
(Solar waste is the worst, and battery waste.)

https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-nuclear-waste-is-safe-what-about-other-waste-11567194084
Other Waste?
The casks used to store nuclear fuel are designed to withstand accidents worse than seismic events.
Aug. 30, 2019 3:41 pm ET
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The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is considering whether to put nuclear waste at two sites in the Permian Basin. An inactive oil rig stood in Andrews, Texas, in July. PHOTO: SERGIO FLORES/BLOOMBERG NEWS
For the last 20 years, I have periodically evaluated the performance of used nuclear fuel in dry-cask storage—the same nuclear-waste form being considered for the Permian Basin sites in Texas and New Mexico (“Fight Brews over Nuclear Waste in Oil Patch,” U.S. News, Aug. 15). I couldn’t help see the irony in promoters of fracking, which according to the U.S. Geological Survey can increase seismic activity, worrying about the safety of dry-cask storage of nuclear waste. Nuclear waste always gets a bum rap, but it may be the only waste that is never purposely released into the environment. It is always managed, controlled and highly regulated.

Can the oil industry or any heavy industry say the same about its waste? The casks used to store nuclear fuel are designed to withstand accidents worse than seismic events, which will be benign to these large and heavy containers. The biggest risk to dry-cask storage is probably corrosion caused by exposure to air typical of coastal regions, which is managed by monitoring. Hard to see that being an issue in the Permian Basin.

G M

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Re: Nuclear Waste Is Safe. What About Other Waste?
« Reply #698 on: September 01, 2019, 07:41:57 PM »
Solar waste doesn't create giant monsters, so there is that!



(Solar waste is the worst, and battery waste.)

https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-nuclear-waste-is-safe-what-about-other-waste-11567194084
Other Waste?
The casks used to store nuclear fuel are designed to withstand accidents worse than seismic events.
Aug. 30, 2019 3:41 pm ET
SAVE
SHARE
TEXT
4

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is considering whether to put nuclear waste at two sites in the Permian Basin. An inactive oil rig stood in Andrews, Texas, in July. PHOTO: SERGIO FLORES/BLOOMBERG NEWS
For the last 20 years, I have periodically evaluated the performance of used nuclear fuel in dry-cask storage—the same nuclear-waste form being considered for the Permian Basin sites in Texas and New Mexico (“Fight Brews over Nuclear Waste in Oil Patch,” U.S. News, Aug. 15). I couldn’t help see the irony in promoters of fracking, which according to the U.S. Geological Survey can increase seismic activity, worrying about the safety of dry-cask storage of nuclear waste. Nuclear waste always gets a bum rap, but it may be the only waste that is never purposely released into the environment. It is always managed, controlled and highly regulated.

Can the oil industry or any heavy industry say the same about its waste? The casks used to store nuclear fuel are designed to withstand accidents worse than seismic events, which will be benign to these large and heavy containers. The biggest risk to dry-cask storage is probably corrosion caused by exposure to air typical of coastal regions, which is managed by monitoring. Hard to see that being an issue in the Permian Basin.

DougMacG

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Electricity prices going UP because of renewables, NG = 1/5th the cost
« Reply #699 on: September 03, 2019, 09:02:34 AM »
Electricity prices going UP because of so-called renewables.

in Minnesota, electricity is 500 percent more expensive than natural gas on an energy equivalent basis.
    - Data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration
https://www.americanexperiment.org/2019/09/clueless-minneapolis-city-leaders-sam-rockwell-problem-not-natural-gas-use/


See if you can see the solar contribution to electricity production in this Minnesota winter chart, yellow-orange color.  Also note the near zero wind contribution on the coldest days.  We will make up the difference with what?  Batteries??

« Last Edit: September 03, 2019, 09:14:06 AM by DougMacG »