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How Much Will Offshore Drilling Help?
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantRico
Strike Three
Registered: April 8, 2007
United States Posts: 1,057
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Hi Guys,

"The better job of extraction, the sooner it's gone."

"Were close to peaking, when we use tar sands."

"We've exceeded sustainable supply."

"China & India join the party, when the glass is half empty, & must compete with us."

"Cheapest liquid gasoline"

"Promote 'Democracy' in the middle east insures oil supply."

"10,000 nukes (kick the oil habit) U-235 gone in 10 - 20 years.

See: A Crude Awakening
If I felt any better I'd be sick!
Envy is mental theft. If you covet another mans possessions, then you should be willing to take on his responsibilities, heartaches, and troubles, along with his money. D. Koontz
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantRico
Strike Three
Registered: April 8, 2007
United States Posts: 1,057
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If I felt any better I'd be sick!
Envy is mental theft. If you covet another mans possessions, then you should be willing to take on his responsibilities, heartaches, and troubles, along with his money. D. Koontz
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantRifter
Reg. Jan 27, 2002
Registered: March 13, 2007
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Quoting cmaeditor:
Quote:
There is a good amount of oil in the US that is not located offshore or in ANWAR, but it's not being drilled at all by any of the oil companies. Most domestic exploration and development in the US dropped to extremely low levels when the price of oil was so cheap that it wasn't cost effective to drill in the US and we instead imported the oil from other countries where their cost of labor for producing the oil was less. Now that oil has risen in price, the oil companies want new leases rather than work on the undeveloped ones they have been sitting on for 10 years or more.


Quite correct, at least insofar as the cost of recovering goes.  I have a former friend used to work for a domestic oil company until he retired about 10 years ago.  His retirement pension was based on money generated by their oil production.  When oil was cheap (below $80 a barrel) his check was a fixed amount.  When the price went above that, he started getting more money.  Why?  Because a lot ofl the wells owned by the oil company cost too much to operate below that amount.  Above it, they started making a profit.

Point is, there are millions of barrels of oil sitting in capped wells because cost to extract is higher than it can be sold for if foreign oil sells below a certain amount.  Those wells were found and drilled decades ago, so most people outside the industry aren't even aware they exist. 

There are two things to consider in this argument over oil.  First, there are billions of barrels of oil within reach in our territorial space, something on the order of 80 BILLION + according to some experts. Those billions are sitting under the northern Great Plains near the Montana-Canada border, in the eastern Gulf just off Florida, in the areas between 10 and 50 miles offshore on our east and west coasts, and in huge deposits of shale under Colorado.  We can't get at it because of the environmentalists and their misguided beliefs.  But even if we could, there is no refinery capacity available in this country because we haven't built a new refinery since 1978. 

Secondly, the left wing anti-drilling crowd is not interested in anything except regaining and maintaining their political power base.  If they were really worried about gas prices, the economy, national security, etc., they would be lining up with the conservatives to pass out permits to build new refineries, new nuclear power plants, drilling permits for offshore, and anything else that would benefit the US taxpayer and the economy.  They don't care if the economy is having a trainwreck or that we are rapidly becoming a 2nd rate world power because our security is compromised by our dependence on foreign sources of energy.

There are people in this world that want nothing more than to see the US fall, and those here in this country who don't much care if it does fall as long as they get to rule over the ashes and ruins.  Of course, it will take a decade of two to finish us off completely, but I can imagine how the citizens of Rome must have felt as their civilization fell apart around them.
John

"Extremism in the defense of Liberty is no vice!" Senator Barry Goldwater, 1964
Make America Great Again!
 Last edited: by Rifter
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantRico
Strike Three
Registered: April 8, 2007
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Hi Rifter,

It's very enjoyable to read your knowledgeable posts, while I wholeheartedly agree with the first half of your post, I take minor exception with the 2nd half. I believe you may learn a few things by watching, "A Crude Awakening' I know I did. If they awarded half gold stars you would have gotten one.

Also See: Here

Take Care Amigo
Rico
If I felt any better I'd be sick!
Envy is mental theft. If you covet another mans possessions, then you should be willing to take on his responsibilities, heartaches, and troubles, along with his money. D. Koontz
 Last edited: by Rico
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile Registrantkdh1949
Have Gun Will Travel
Registered: March 13, 2007
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Quoting Rico:
Quote:
s this sarcastic?????????? What kind of reaction does sarcasm, often get??????

Take Care
Rico

Rico,

You, who post hundreds of "funnies,"  now have the chutzpa to criticize someone else for using sarcasm?
Another Ken (not Ken Cole)
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DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile Registrantkdh1949
Have Gun Will Travel
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Quoting Daddy DVD:
Quote:
Drilling for more is not going to help on a long term basis, it's just postponing the inevitable and that's looking for and using alternatives. Even if we all just try to consume half of the fuel we need by buying a more efficient car, like I did, or by using public transportation, we will be out of oil eventually.

It may be only a temporary solution, but we need short-term solutions to keep going until the long-term ones are in place.  I'm all for finding alternatives -- and would use them if they currently existed.  Unfortunately, I have to live with what we have now, not what we might have 10 years from now.  And for the forseeable future, that means continuing to use petroleum.
Another Ken (not Ken Cole)
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DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantStar Contributorhal9g
Who is John Galt?
Registered: March 13, 2007
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Quoting kdh1949:
Quote:
I'm all for finding alternatives -- and would use them if they currently existed.


....and were affordable! 

Solar energy is available today, but it is cost prohibitive for the average homeowner otherwise builders would be installing it.

Hydrogen fuel cell cars are available (at least prototypes) today, but, until the cost comes way down, don't expect too many to show up on the roads.

Electric cars are available and in limited use today, but until the cost comes down and the technology improves to provide a longer range (more than 100 miles) they will remain impractical for many people.

Ethanol is available today, but has added significantly to food prices worldwide (not exactly a good trade-off for reduction of gasoline use).

The same can be said about any number of other "alternatives".  Most simply are not ready for prime time yet.  Hopefully over the next decade or two they will be.

The point is, as you point out, there are lots of great ideas out there, most of which are years away from being mass produced and affordable and therefore years away from having much of any impact on our current demands for oil.

In the meantime we must stem the tide of $700 billion of our wealth being transferred annually to foreign countries, many of whom are hell-bent on our destruction.
Hal
 Last edited: by hal9g
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile Registrantkdh1949
Have Gun Will Travel
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Quoting hal9g:
Quote:
Quoting kdh1949:
Quote:
I'm all for finding alternatives -- and would use them if they currently existed.


....and were affordable! 

I should have included that, of course.  That's a significant part of this whole discussion -- maybe the most important part.
Another Ken (not Ken Cole)
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 Last edited: by kdh1949
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantRico
Strike Three
Registered: April 8, 2007
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Hi Guys,

Quote:
KDH wrote:
now have the chutzpa to criticize someone else for using sarcasm?


I'm confused here? I have not intentionally tried to be sarcastic, to anyone!!!!!!!!!!! What criticism are you talking about!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Take Care
Rico

KDH & Hal have you watched THIS????????? Very informative!
If I felt any better I'd be sick!
Envy is mental theft. If you covet another mans possessions, then you should be willing to take on his responsibilities, heartaches, and troubles, along with his money. D. Koontz
 Last edited: by Rico
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributorwhispering
On ne passe pas!
Registered: March 13, 2007
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Quoting hal9g:
Quote:
Electric cars are available and in limited use today, but until the cost comes down and the technology improves to provide a longer range (more than 100 miles) they will remain impractical for many people.

I think this is the future. As you said impractical to many (at least now), but still practical to many.

http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=4502691n

The better ones are still expensive, but id expect the price to come down eventually.
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantRico
Strike Three
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Hello Whispering,

I saw that last night on 60 minutes, very good. Bob Lutz has bet the farm on the Chevy Volt.

If you have not seen 'A Crude  Awakening' (see 'THIS' above post) I urge you to dos so. Very insightful!

Take Care
Rico
If I felt any better I'd be sick!
Envy is mental theft. If you covet another mans possessions, then you should be willing to take on his responsibilities, heartaches, and troubles, along with his money. D. Koontz
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