chapter 19: conventional energy

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Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

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Chapter 19: Conventional Energy. 19.1 Energy Resources And Uses. How do we measure energy? Fossil fuels supply most of the world’s energy What are the current sources of U.S. energy? . Measuring Energy. Joule = Energy to raise 1 kg 10 cm Energy to Move 500 g (a Pound) 1 m/sec - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Page 2: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

19.1 Energy Resources And Uses

• How do we measure energy? • Fossil fuels supply most of the world’s energy • What are the current sources of U.S. energy?

Page 3: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Measuring Energy• Joule = Energy to raise 1 kg 10 cm– Energy to Move 500 g (a Pound) 1 m/sec

• calorie = Energy to heat 1 gm Water 1 C • Calorie = Energy to heat 1 kg Water 1 C– 1000 calories– Food Calorie– Equals 4200 joules

• Watt = 1 joule/second• Human body outputs about 100 watts

Page 4: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Quads

• Btu = British Thermal Unit = Energy to heat a pound of Water 1 Degree F

• 1 Btu = 1055 J• Many Energy Reports use Quads = 1

Quadrillion (1015) Btu• 1 Quad = 1.055 x 1018 J

Page 5: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

World Energy Use

• Total about 150,000 TWh = 540 x 1018 J = 128,000 Megatons

Page 6: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

U.S. Energy Use

• Total about 27,000 TWh = 97 x 1018 J = 23,000 Megatons

Page 7: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

What U.S Uses Energy For

Page 8: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Energy Use, California, 1972

Page 9: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Energy Use, California, 1979

Page 10: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Energy Use, California, 1993

Page 11: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Energy Use, California, 1994

Page 12: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Energy Use, California, 2003

Page 13: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

All You Need to Know

Page 14: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Economics• 2000 WINNEBAGO CHIEFTAIN

SERIES M-36LP-DSL• Average Retail Price: $51,600 • Suggested List: $140,851• Source: NADAGuides.com (23 April 2010)• Ten-Year Cost: $89,251• @$300/day = 297 days = 30 days/year

Page 15: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

19.2 Coal

• Coal resources are vast • Coal mining is a dirty, dangerous business • Burning coal releases many pollutants• Clean coal technology could be helpful

Page 16: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

19.3 Oil

• Oil resources aren’t evenly distributed• Like other fossil fuels, oil has negative impacts • What Do You Think? Oil Drilling in ANWR • Oil shales and tar sands contain huge amounts

of petroleum

Page 17: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Petroleum

A hydrocarbon molecule

What organisms make these?Answer: None

Page 18: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Petroleum

• Lots of organisms make these, however

• Fatty Acids• Probable source: Marine plankton

Page 19: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Petroleum Traps

Page 20: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Where the Oil Is

Page 21: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

The Geography of Oil

Page 22: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Hubbert Curves

• In 1956, Oil geologist M. King Hubbert noted that rates of oil production follow a bell-shaped curve.

• Cumulative production follows a slanting S- curve• Production lags discovery by about ten years.

Page 23: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Hubbert’s 1956 Prediction

Page 24: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Where We Stand Today

Page 25: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

What if We Find More Oil?

• Even a huge increase in total oil has very little effect on the peak and decline of production.

• Why? We waste most of it on inefficient uses.

Page 26: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

One Solution: Limit Production

Page 27: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Is There a Lot More Undiscovered Oil?• 80 per cent of oil being produced today is from fields

discovered before 1973. • In the 1990's oil discoveries averaged about seven

billion barrels of oil a year, only one third of usage.• The discovery rate of multi-billion barrel fields has

been declining since the 1940's, that of giant (500-million barrel) fields since the 1960's.

• In 1938, fields with more than 10 million barrels made up 19% of all new discoveries, but by 1948 the proportion had dropped to only 3%.

Page 28: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Oil Discovery Rates

Page 29: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

U.S. Petroleum Use• 2009 - 7,121,644,500 barrels• 2007 - 6,257,125,000 barrels• 2006 - 6,384,780,000 barrels• 2005 - 6,470,457,000 barrels• 2004 - 6,410,770,000 barrels• 2003 - 6,175,244,000 barrels• 2002 - 5,945,585,000 barrels• = 19,498,000 barrels a day• = 1 billion barrels in < two months

Page 30: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Global Petroleum Usage• 2008 projection: 87 million barrels/day• = 31.8 billion barrels per year• = 1 billion barrels in 11.5 days• = 1000 barrels/second• U.S. = 25% of total

Page 31: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Oil Fantasies“America is sitting on top of a super massive 200 billion barrel Oil Field that could potentially make America Energy Independent and until now has largely gone unnoticed. Thanks to new technology the Bakken Formation in North Dakota could boost America’s Oil reserves by an incredible 10 times, giving western economies the trump card against OPEC’s short squeeze on oil supply and making Iranian and Venezuelan threats of disrupted supply irrelevant” (Next Energy News, 13 February 2008)

Page 32: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Realty Check• 200 billion barrels @ 20 million barrels a

day = 10,000 days = 27 years• Then what?• Reality: maybe 10% of the oil is recoverable

with known technology• The Bakken is a “tight” formation• Horizontal drilling can increase yields

Page 33: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Canadian Oil Sands • 170 billion recoverable barrels• 10 x larger total amount• Current production: 1.2 million barrels/day• Projected production in 2015 = 3 million

barrels per day• 3 million barrels = 4 hours of U.S.

petroleum consumption

Page 34: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

19.4 Natural Gas

• Most of the world’s known natural gas is in a few countries

• There may be vast unconventional gas sources– Coal-Bed Methane– Fracking– Methane Hydrates

Page 35: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

MethaneHydrate

Page 36: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

Gas Hydrates

• Hydrocarbons trapped in cage of water molecules

• Freeze above 0 C under moderate pressure• Solid gas hydrates occur in marine

sediments (“yellow ice”)• Potentially huge energy resource• Possible role in climate change?

Page 37: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

19.5 Nuclear Power

• How do nuclear reactors work? • There are many different reactor designs • Some alternative reactor designs may be safer • Breeder reactors could extend the life of our

nuclear fuel

Page 38: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

19.6 Radioactive Waste Management

• We lack safe storage for radioactive wastes • Decommissioning old nuclear plants is

expensive

Page 39: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

19.7 Changing Fortunes Of Nuclear Power

• Nuclear Explosives Once Envisioned For:– Mining– Deepening Harbors– Large Excavations– Anything that Required Large Amounts of Explosives

• We Were Going to Have Nuclear– Cars– Airplanes– Trains

Page 40: Chapter 19: Conventional Energy

We Had a Long Range Energy Plan

• Before Fossil Fuels Ran Short, Nuclear Power Would Take Over

• By About 2000, We’d Have Fusion Power