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Home Front: Politix
Drilling our way out of rising oil prices
2008-05-30
Oil executives and some lawmakers believe it's one of the only ways to help calm skyrocketing prices, but others say it takes us further away from a long term solution.

The U.S. has huge amounts of untapped oil, but pesky politicians and environmentalists won't let us get it.
Pesky isn't the word I would use, but we have to keep this G-rated, I guess.
That's a common cry heard from some lawmakers and nearly everyone working at an oil and gas company. If the U.S. wants to help keep the market adequately supplied with oil and perhaps lower prices they say, it needs to open up vast sections of the country currently off-limits to oil and gas exploration.
And if they don't, then just maintain legislation that prohibits it. Simple. Hmm . . . .
But given the amount of time it would take to get new drilling projects up and running, and the relatively small amount of oil they'd likely yield, most analysts say more drilling in the U.S. would do little to help solve the world's dual energy challenge of meeting rising demand while cutting greenhouse gasses.
Not in the long run, but if everyone has the discipline to push forward on a new energy policy in a meaningful way while we drill for more oil, perhaps we could keep some money out of the hands of terrorist states.
Some 60% of all federal land as well as most of the East and West coasts are currently subject to drilling bans - many were put in place after a big oil spill off the coast of Santa Barbara, Calif., in 1969.

If these areas are not opened, it certainly won't be for lack of trying.
Why push? Let market forces punch down the politics for you. The money for big oil will be the same either way. Just kick back with some popcorn and wait to see what happens when the middle class doesn't like it anymore and people find it more expensive to go to work than to take food stamps and unemployment and stay home.
Oil industry executives harped on these drilling bans in testimony before Congress last week, telling lawmakers lifting them was one of the few things they could do that might have a prayer of lowering oil prices.
Other than developing distributed nuclear fusion and switching transportation over to electrical power.
Several Republican-led efforts to lift the drilling bans have emerged in Congress, but they have all failed so far.

"We're the only developed country that methodically restricts access to resources," said Richard Ranger, senior policy advisor at the American Petroleum Institute. "We can't conserve our way out of this. We're going to need a mix of policies, but increasing production is going to be part of that mix."

It's hard to say how much oil lifting the bans would provide - very little exploratory drilling has been done in most of these areas.

But using estimates based on the limited information available from the Minerals Management Service, the Bureau of Land Management and the Energy Information Administration, lifting the bans might boost the nation's oil production by 1 or 2 million barrels a day by sometime next decade.

These estimates are for conventional crude oil. They do not take into account the vast amounts of oil shale or tar sands that do exist in the country, but are either very expensive to develop or come with significant environmental costs.

Either way, 2 million barrels of oil is not an insignificant amount. It's roughly equal to the amount of oil currently coming from Nigeria, and would increase the current U.S. output of 8.5 million barrels a day by over 20 percent.

But the projects would take a long time to come online. Places like the Atlantic coast, thought to be rich in natural gas, lack drilling platforms, pipelines, terminals, storage facilities, and other energy infrastructure. EIA estimates that if Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge were opened for drilling tomorrow, oil wouldn't flow at full tilt until 2025.

Plus, oil is a global market. It's true that oil pumped in the U.S. could stay in the U.S. But prices will be determined by international, not national, supply and demand.

By 2025, world consumption, currently at about 85 million barrels a day, is expected to swell to well over 100 million barrels a day. That makes 2 million barrels a day look pretty small.
Kinda does, doesn't it? Nuclear.
"I wouldn't say it's a drop in the bucket," said Greg Priddy, a global energy analyst at the Eurasia group. "But it changes things only marginally over the long term."

Priddy said these 2 million barrels a day would need to be balanced against steep production declines expected in many non-OPEC areas like Russia, Mexico and the North Sea over the next several years. Non-OPEC production is expected to peak within the next decade or two, regardless of what the U.S. does, he said.

"It really just delays the day of reckoning a bit," he said.
Something politicians are drawn to. Sort of like a moth to a flame.
Environmentalists, of course, hate the idea of more drilling rigs in the wilderness or offshore on continental shelves rich in marine life.

They say spills will happen regardless of how careful the industry is, although numbers from the Minerals Management Service show the industry has greatly improved their environmental record. Also, countries like Canada and Norway, hardly known for being environmental mavericks, pursue aggressive offshore drilling plans.

The larger argument put forth by the environmental community is that more oil will not solve the world's energy challenge.

"When you're addicted, the first thing you want to do is stop drinking," said Adam Kolton, director of congressional affairs for the National Wildlife Federation, referring to President Bush's State of the Union speech when he said the nation was addicted to oil. "What the American people want is an end to dependency on oil and a focus on alternatives."

Kolton said more and cheaper oil will only foster the same culture of big cars and sprawling houses we've become accustomed to, and leave us even more dependent on OPEC 20 or 30 years out.
Ah, so it's my big car. So everyone switches to smart cars, including the trucking companies, and suppose we save 25% on oil or whatever. That'll get us maybe five years further down the road before the train wrecks.
"This is just more of the failed policies of the past," he said.
Well, doomed anyway. As most policies are when they look to future changes.
Environmentalists also push for focusing more on conservation.
And crushing the economy so we won't need as much oil.
If the U.S. switched to plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, the country would save 3.8 million barrels of oil a day - roughly twice what new drilling would provide - according to the Natural Resources Defense Council.
Didn't the old Hondas or something get most of 50mpg?
Most analysts agree that conservation will play a greater role in meeting energy demand than drilling in the U.S.

"It's not a comprehensive solution to the energy problem," Newedge brokerage Deputy Head of Research Antoine Halff said, referring to lifting the drilling ban. "If you want to design energy policy, you have to think about demand."
I demand we get moving.
Posted by:gorb

#9  Nimble Spemble - thanks for the petition link - signed it and mailed the congress critters...
Posted by: 3dc   2008-05-30 23:40  

#8  Actually, some of the figures I've heard from my friends still in the oil business is that the US could expand its oil production by up to 3.2 million barrels of oil a day within the next 30 years, if the barriers to drilling were eliminated. That includes oil pumped from platforms in the Gulf of Mexico (that part of it stretching from south of Mobile to Cuba, east), oil from off the Atlantic coast, drilling in several areas of the midwest that are currently off limits, drilling off the coast of California, drilling in both the Arctic National Wildlife Preserve and the Naval Oil Reserve, and oil from new fields currently being tested off the western coast of Alaska, north of the Aleutians. One thing that's been discovered recently is that you can't pump all the oil out of a reservoir, and that over time, some reservoirs will re-stock from oil migrating from elsewhere, mostly below current drilling depths.

As much as we need oil, it won't do us any good if we don't expand and modernize refining efforts, which are at near-peak production constantly. We need to build an additional 20 petroleum refineries NOW, then slowly upgrade existing refineries to where they can better produce results at lower costs and less of a chance for polluting the planet.

We also need to follow the lead of France and begin building nuclear power stations where they're feasible. Nuke power stations need LOTS of water for cooling, and there isn't much in desert country. There's no reason we can't build them close to rivers - say within 10 to 20 miles. France generates 25% of their electricity from nuclear plants. We should at least match that here in the US.

One thing that would happen almost immediately with the oil market if the US announced drilling in any of the major, untapped fields within our nation is that the speculators would begin unloading the oil futures they hold as fast as they can, knowing that the price is going to drop. The last guy out is REALLY going to get shafted, so most of them will act as soon as they hear the news.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2008-05-30 23:11  

#7  Sounds nice, RJ, but who's going to pay for one for me to replace the perfectly good Honda suv I have that's paid for (and yes, I need an suv for my business)?

And where are we going to get them all? There aren't enough made to meet the demand we have now.

I freely admit I don't know much about electric cars, but unless I can drive from here to Charlotte - and have some way to "fill up" at the other end for the drive back, it won't do me much good.

Of course, if we'd started drilling in ANWR 10 years ago (and in the Gulf and off both coasts), maybe we wouldn't be in such a pickle right now. Thanks, Congress. You self-centered pandering assholes.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2008-05-30 20:23  

#6  If the U.S. switched to plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, the country would save 3.8 million barrels of oil a day

And the ressulting brown and blackouts would bring the power distribution system crashing down, there's simply NOT that much generating capacity.
Nuke plants "Sometime" will NOT fix the shortage NOW.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2008-05-30 19:42  

#5  a big oil spill off the coast of Santa Barbara, Calif., in 1969.

Tarballs are normal on California beaches and have been forever. The pre-Spanish Indians used to gather them to line their baskets to make them waterproof.

At some point after this 1969 spill Arco (IIRC) reached an agreement with the Santa Barbarians to install what was basically an inverted funnel over a natural oil seep in Santa Barbara Bay in return for being allowed to drill further offshore, with the 'risk' of oil spills. Arco thought they'd lose money on the 'public service' part of the deal, but found they collected enough natural seep oil to actually pay for their costs. I think (I have heard the story 'in the business' for many years but do not have documentation.)
Posted by: Glenmore   2008-05-30 19:42  

#4  a big oil spill off the coast of Santa Barbara, Calif., in 1969.
It was horrible, the area still hasn't recovered. School childrens were drafted to clean up greasy baby ducks and the resulting homeless population is present on every American corner. It was a geniune American Holocaust. Also teh beach was closered for a couple of weeks.
Posted by: George Smiley   2008-05-30 19:22  

#3  By 2025, world consumption, currently at about 85 million barrels a day, is expected to swell to well over 100 million barrels a day. That makes 2 million barrels a day look pretty small.
That is a silly statement. World consumption of petro (as of other products) will closely parallel world production, which I doubt will ever get close to 100 million barrels/day.
Since it takes so many years to increase domestic oil production, perhaps other methods should be stressed, such as nuclear power. How long does it take to bring a new reactor on line, once the trial lawyers have been muzzled & leashed?
--- Also, railroads still have an inherent energy advantage compared to diesel trucks, but are currently in the USA limited by track capacity & overhead limitations. Locomotives can run on nuke-electricity or on anything that burns hot enough to generate steam. A major push to increase the capacity of railroads to carry freight & so decrease the need for diesel fuel is decades overdue.
What the American electorate still wants is cheap motor fuel and a continuation of Happy Motoring for the indefinite future. There is neither the discipline on their part nor the leadership by the political class to deal with the issue of ever-increasing petro prices and the transfer of the national wealth to terrorist states.
Perhaps when spot shortages of fuel develop and grocery store shelves go bare, the electorate will wake up.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2008-05-30 11:58  

#2  Sign the petition
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2008-05-30 11:25  

#1  We need to get from here (oil) to there (nukes, green), and the only way to do it without crippling our economy is to DRILL HERE DRILL NOW while we are building the nukes and developing and deploying a hyrdogen/electric economy.
Posted by: OldSpook   2008-05-30 11:23  

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