32 comments on Drilling on Wall Street
Comments can no longer be added to this story.
| Show without comments | PDF version
32 comments on Drilling on Wall Street
Comments can no longer be added to this story.
| Show without comments | PDF version
Search The Oil Drum with Google
Support The Oil Drum
Recently on TOD:World
TOD:Campfire
TOD:Europe
- Unique Times -- and the Future
- Peak Gold, Easier to Model than Peak Oil? - Part I
- Carbon Capture and Storage
TOD:Canada
- In this house, we obey the laws of thermodynamics!
- The Round-Up: October 24, 2008
- Compressed Air Energy Storage - How viable is it?
TOD:Australia/NZ
- The Bullroarer - Friday 27th November 2009
- International Energy Agency calls 'Peak' on OECD Oil Demand
- Australian Senate: Peak Oil motion defeated 31:6
TOD:Net Energy
Blogroll
Energy Sites
- The Coming Global Oil Crisis
- Die Off
- Dry Dipstick
- Energy Bulletin
- From the Wilderness
- Life After the Oil Crash
- Peak Oil Crisis
- Peak Oil News and Message Boards
- Powerswitch
- Rigzone
- Matthew Simmons
- Wolf at the Door
Environment & Sustainability Sites
- The Daily Green
- EcoGeek
- Eco Street
- Green Car Congress
- Green Options
- green.alltop.com
- Gristmill
- RealClimate
- Sustainablog
- Treehugger
- WorldChanging
Blogs
- Casaubon's Book
- Cleantech Blog
- Clusterf
k Nation (Jim Kunstler) - The Cost of Energy
- David Strahan
- Early Warning
- The Energy Blog
- European Tribune
- GraphOilology
- Health After Oil
- jeffvail.net
- Mobjectivist
- Peak Energy (Australia)
- Peak Energy (USA)
- R-Squared
- Resource Insights
Finance & Economics Blogs
- The Big Picture
- Calculated Risk
- The Crash Course
- Ecological Economics
- Econbrowser
- Environmental Economics
- Infectious Greed
- The Mess That Greenspan Made
- Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis
Organizations
Peak Oil Primers
Beware email scams!
Beware email scams claiming to be from this site. We do not have any job openings. If anyone contacts you about a job at The Oil Drum, do not reply to them, and definitely do not give them any personal information or send them money. Read more here.
“This order [i.e. capitalism] is now bound to the technical and economic conditions of machine production which today determine the lives of all the individuals who are born into this mechanism, not only those directly concerned with the economic acquisition, with irresistible force. Perhaps it will so determine them until the last ton of fossilized coal is burnt.”
—Max Weber, 1905
User login
Contact
- Content: editors at theoildrum dot com
- Tech support: support at theoildrum dot com
Personnel
- Editors: Nate Hagens, Gail the Actuary, Prof. Goose
- DrumBeat Editor: Leanan
- Contributors: ace, Engineer-Poet, Heading Out, jeffvail, JoulesBurn, Sam Foucher, Robert Rapier
- TOD:Campfire: Glenn, Jason Bradford
- TOD:Europe: Chris Vernon, Euan Mearns, Francois Cellier, Jerome a Paris, Luís de Sousa, Rembrandt, Rune Likvern, Ugo Bardi
- TOD:Canada: benk, Libelle
- TOD:ANZ: Big Gav, Phil Hart, aeldric
- Emeritus: Stuart Staniford
- Technician: Super G
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.










GAIA Host Collective
They all make expensive gas. I know the Barnett Shale is averaging about $4.00 a MCF, and maybe someone has the figures for costs on the other plays. I know the coalbed methane is a horizontal play and probably expensive since the wells have a low volume long lived flow, and the Cotton Valley/ Bossier are deep and require fracs, also expensive.
I agree that there is plenty of natural gas left, but its the expensive stuff. $6.00 or more is needed just to pay out the wells and have a decent profit.
One thing about the habitat of oil. Its almost all found at depths between about 2,000 ft and 10,000 ft. Yes, I know there is lots shallower, but it tends to be heavy and not have enough pressure to drive it through the rock into the wells. Deeper the oil tends to get naturally cracked by the heat and pressure into natural gas. Since we can now drill and produce gas down to at least 20,000 ft. technology has more than doubled the amount of prospective gas. Expensive gas.
What we are calling peak oil is cheap,light,sweet crude that is easy to refine. The holy annointed saviors of the refining industry and automotive industry, tar sands and oil shale kerogen, coal to liquids although common aren't cheap to recover or process, and the CO2 is killing all of us. We have craven politicians pandering to everyone and not telling the truth. The mainstream media won't tell the truth because of the advertising budgets of the car and gasoline industries. We are going to have to change our ways quickly or we are all face a world that is very bleak.Six Billion People!Its the real root of peak oil.
This is true. Very few are willing to face up to it. Everything else, every conservation step is a wasted unless we also address this issue. It's completely obvious.
We either bring world population under control at our own inititiative or nature does it for us. But it would take an uprecedented degree of mutual cooperation between countries, a world-wide education campaign, a change in our world culture.
It won't happen yet. Disaster of some scale will befall us. But I am not a long term pessimist. At some point, realism will prevail. There have been many world-wide bodies functioning in the second half of the 20th century addressing global problems, maybe not with great success always, or even mostly. But their existence shows what's possible. It's just a matter of how much suffering it will take to get our full attention.
Most countries that are developing into industrialized economies see the need to address population growth. Not all of them do, and not all of them will, but if they don't, they are the ones that are going to suffer. The amount of oil a country can afford is based off of its relative wealth, not its population. If India has 2 billion people, each person will get half as much energy.
In the end the whole situation will be self regulating. We can increase efficiency and use better technology to get by with less energy. Beyond that, if the energy is not available we'll end up going without. The burden will not be equally felt, but countries like India and China will feel great incentive to solve their population issues (as China already is doing). If the first world is any guide, basic economics will do the rest, as population is beginning to decline in the first world, sans the United States.
Nagorak,
Thank you for pointing out what should be to most people self obvious, but somehow never is.
I would go even further than your excellent sentence, "The amount of oil a country can afford is based off of its relative wealth, not its population.", and add a corallory:
"The amount of oil a country must afford to have compared to it's relative wealth is based on it's relative waste."
Let's deal with those two facts, and keep our eyes on that prize first, before we attempt to socially reengineer the world, which has always had dubious chances of success anyway.
Roger Conner known to you as ThatsItImout