ch. 10 chapter 10. political and environmental issue opec – largely arab countries –...

27
CH. 10 CHAPTER 10

Upload: beryl-pearson

Post on 27-Dec-2015

218 views

Category:

Documents


3 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

CH. 10

CHAPTER 10

Page 2: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

political and environmental issue OPEC – largely Arab countries –

Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries1973 restricted import into US. – ahhhhh!!!!Strategic Petroleum Reserve – prevent crisis

during f.f. interruption – 1 billion barrels

Page 3: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

• 1970s – US conserved – drove less, bought fewer cars, used less heat/air

• 1980s – oil prices low and consumption is high

• 1990s – continued foreign dependence• Current – more non OPEC suppliers, cheap

energy, HIGH US consumption – large vehicles, larger energy-sucking homes (high ceilings, central air, hot tubs, etc.), increased speed limits from 55 mph– 55% US oil imported– Supplies won’t last forever

Page 4: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

HDC v. LDC 20% of population using 60% of energy 1 person in HDC = 8 in LDC

Ex: agriculture – tractors v. animals in field, energy to make fertilizers and pesticides

To raise LDC standard of living usually includes a rise in per capita energy consumption

Energy in US: 42% industries (making chemicals, minerals, food); 33% make buildings comfortable (heat/air, lights, hot water); 25% transportation

Page 5: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

Fossil fuels Coal, oil, natural gas Partially decayed

remnants of organism Supplies most of

energy in N. AmericaOther sources: nuclear,

solar, wind, etc.

Nonrenewable resource – forming, but too slowly

Page 6: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

Fossil fuel formation• Ancient climate: warm with many swamps with big trees• Plant die, don’t decompose well in watery grave – no fungi

in oxygen deprived env., anaerobic bacteria don’t decay wood quickly

• Sea level changes, sediment traps plants– TIME, heat, pressure convert nondecomposed

plant material into carbon rich coal. – Oil: microscopic aquatic organism died and

decompose in sediment and create oxygen deprived env. no more decomposition. Sediment covered.

– Natural gas (mainly methane): similar formation as oil, but hotter

– Oil/natural gas are less dense than rock – tend to move up through porous rock and accumulate beneath nonporous rock

Page 7: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

COALCOAL Industrial Revolution of mid 18th century Mainly for electricity; other: energy to

melt iron during conversion to steel Different grades – higher heat during

formation = drier, harder, higher energy content

Page 8: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

Grades of Coal

1. Lignite – soft, little heat, little sulfur; lots in W. US

2. Subbituminous – little heat and little sulfur, lots in Alaska

3. Bituminous (“soft coal”) – most common, sulfur!, lots of heat, lots in Appalachian region

4. Anthracite (“hard coal”) least sulfur, highest heat, mostly depleted in US

Little heat/soft

Lots of heat/hard

Page 9: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

COAL RESERVES Most abundant ff China, US (25%),

Russia, etc. Last 200 years at

present rate, more if deeper deposits become available

Page 10: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

SAFETY PROBLEMS WITH COAL Subsurface mining dangerous for miners

(cave-ins) Increased risk of cancer and black lung

disease

Page 11: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS OF MINING

Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act (SMCRA) – 1977: requires reclamation of surface coal minesReshape land, spread topsoil, plant

seeds/plants, sedimentation ponds confine sediment filled water, prevent acid mine drainage (rains through iron sulfide minerals and carries sulfuric acid to lakes/streams)

QUICK SUMMARY:Water pollution: sediment and acid

Land destruction: removes topsoil/can’t grow plants/erosion/habitat loss

Page 12: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

ENVIRONMENAL IMPACTS WITH BURNING COAL

Releases CO2 – prevents heat from leaving planetPossible effects: melt polar ice raise sea

levels and flood coastal areas, increases coastal erosion and increase risk of violent storms

Most CO2 per unit heat Most air pollution

Mercury – 1/3 of all airborne emissions (biomagnification!!! Consuming large fish…ick)

NOx and SOx from bituminous coal + H2O acid deposition○ Normal rain = ph 5.6○ Effects: decrease aquatic animal populations,

damage forests

Page 13: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

MAKING COAL CLEANER1. Scrubbers – remove sulfur. Chemical react with sulfur to create

precipitate to settle out; expensive – 10%-15% of construction costs

2. Lime scrubbers – H2O + lime sprayed to neutralize sulfur dioxide – creates calcium sulfate sludge. Landfills

Resource recovery: ○ sell calcium sulfate (synthetic gypsum) to make drywall, to farmers for soil (hold

water)○ Fly ash is used to make lightweight concrete

3. Electrostatic precipitator – removes particulate matter (like fly ash)4. fluidized-bed combustion – mixes crushed coal with limestone

during combustion. Limestone neutralizes sulfur-dioxide calcium sulfate. Lower temperature produces less Nox

Produces more heat from a given amount of coal, less CO2 emitted per unit electricity

Page 14: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted
Page 15: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

Can coalcoal ever be truly clean? What does that mean anyway?

“Clean coal”

Page 16: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

Clean Air Actprotects the public from air pollutants hazardous to our health

Amendments of 1990:

Reduce emissions of sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides to reduce acid rain

Page 17: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

OIL AND NATURAL GASOIL AND NATURAL GAS Most of energy used in world (including US) Petroleum = crude oil Petrochemical: plastics, fertilizers, pesticides Natural gas: mainly methane, some butane,

propane.+: very little air pollutants-: difficult to transport b/c a gasMethane – generate electricity, transportationStore butane, propane as liquid (liquified petroleum gas)

Page 18: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted
Page 19: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

EXTRACTION Oil pumps

Find traps by:Drill test holes to obtain rock samplesProduce explosion and analyze sound waves$$

Page 20: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

“Fracking” – hydraulic fracturing Water, sand, and chemicals injecting

underground to release natural gasConcerns: contaminating groundwater with

unknown chemicals and methane

Page 21: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

RESERVES Oil: middle east – over 50%/ ~ 50 years

left (not considering industrialization of China)

Natural gas – Russia (40%) and Iran/ ~ 150 years

Page 22: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

Environmental problems with natural gas and oil 1. burning the fuel – CO2 (less with natural gas),

acid deposition (not natural gas)

2. production and transport – Exxon Valdez Alaskan Oil Spill 1989: lack of

double hull; hit reef; killed birds, sea otters, etc.Persian Gulf Oil Spill – biggest in world, on purpose,

6 million barrelsDeepwater Horizon (BP) oil spill - during deep water

drilling – 5 million barrels

Page 23: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) Debate to open to oil exploration + create jobs, area close by production declining,

decrease dependence of foreign oil

- hurt national wildlife refuge (platforms, pipelines, roads, potential spills), temporary amount will increase future dependence

Page 24: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

SYNFUELS – another option for the future Liquid/gas from coal or other natural sources Drawbacks – energy intensive to produce = low net energy yield Types:

Methane Hydrates – methane in ice (permafrost areas, beneath deep ocean floor); positive feedback (global warming)

Tar sands – have bitumen (semi-solid oil), can convert bitumen to oil, mined using strip-mining

Oil Shale – “oily rock” Coal-to-liquid

○ Easy to transport through pipes, produce gasoline, can use lower grade coal, $$, requires energy

Page 25: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

Keystone XL pipeline

Oil sands (tar sands) in Canada Concerns :

Oil spills/crossing Ogallala AquiferExtracting: surface mining or injecting lots of

steam to make less thick = lots of energy (=lots of CO2)/ Boreal forest

Expensive to turn into gasoline

Page 26: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted

Pros/cons summary Coal

+: plentiful, not harmful if spilled, relative high energy yield

-: erosion, acid mine drainage, hurts miners, NOx/SOx/CO2/mercury

Oil

+: cheap, versatile, high energy yield

- : NOx/SOx, CO2, , oil spills, wildlife habitats

Natural gas+: no pollution from NOx and SOx, high energy yield

-: highly explosive, hard to transport (pipes carry risk of leaks/explosions), methane (CH4 is a greenhouse gas and ozone destroyer), least amount CO2

Page 27: CH. 10 CHAPTER 10.  political and environmental issue  OPEC – largely Arab countries – Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1973 restricted