Re: Reporting gross oil production to hide the collapse of net oil production
After years of debating EROEI with peak oil doomers, I've given up. I'm not sure what their agenda is but it isn't to develop an understanding of the political and economic impact of diminishing availability of cheaply produceable oil.
It makes sense at least theoretically to convert the energy in an abundant fixed energy source such as uranium into a transportation fuel like diesel by using nuclear power to heat water to produce steam to convert shale rock into crude oil (pyrolysis) that can be refined into diesel. However, mining shale rock and then converting it into liquids costs more than pumping crude from reservoirs. In fact any alternative to oil that's mined out of reservoirs of oil buried in the ground is necessarily more expensive to produce due to all of the extra capital and energy consuming steps involved. By the same token, oil mined from reservoirs at the bottom of the ocean also are more expensive to mine than shallow land-based reservoirs, and as the latter are rapidly depleting and the former are all that's left, the world's remaining oil endowment will be increasingly expensive to produce. This, as I've told the Peak Oil doomers since 2006, is why I coined the phrase Peak Cheap Oil. There will always be oil but starting in 1998 markets started to price in the reality that oil will be increasingly more expensive to produce -- forever -- albeit with periods of price declines when demand falls due to recession, some of which recessions will be triggered by oil price shocks.
While EROEI is a nonsense concept, profit is not. If E&P costs for a particular shale field including the cost of building and operating a nuclear power plant are higher than potential revenues then it will not be produced that way. I haven't done the math but I suspect that the economics of nukes-to-oil energy won't work until oil prices are two or three times current levels.
Originally posted by GRG55
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It makes sense at least theoretically to convert the energy in an abundant fixed energy source such as uranium into a transportation fuel like diesel by using nuclear power to heat water to produce steam to convert shale rock into crude oil (pyrolysis) that can be refined into diesel. However, mining shale rock and then converting it into liquids costs more than pumping crude from reservoirs. In fact any alternative to oil that's mined out of reservoirs of oil buried in the ground is necessarily more expensive to produce due to all of the extra capital and energy consuming steps involved. By the same token, oil mined from reservoirs at the bottom of the ocean also are more expensive to mine than shallow land-based reservoirs, and as the latter are rapidly depleting and the former are all that's left, the world's remaining oil endowment will be increasingly expensive to produce. This, as I've told the Peak Oil doomers since 2006, is why I coined the phrase Peak Cheap Oil. There will always be oil but starting in 1998 markets started to price in the reality that oil will be increasingly more expensive to produce -- forever -- albeit with periods of price declines when demand falls due to recession, some of which recessions will be triggered by oil price shocks.
While EROEI is a nonsense concept, profit is not. If E&P costs for a particular shale field including the cost of building and operating a nuclear power plant are higher than potential revenues then it will not be produced that way. I haven't done the math but I suspect that the economics of nukes-to-oil energy won't work until oil prices are two or three times current levels.
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