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Changing Patterns of Oil Consumption
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Changing Patterns of Oil Consumption

Dec 30, 2015

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Zoe Shaw

Changing Patterns of Oil Consumption. Spec. Analyse the global patterns and trends in the production and consumption of oil. 2 hours. Proven Oil Reserves. Which countries have the highest proven reserves?. What does this map show?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Changing Patterns of Oil Consumption

Changing Patterns of Oil Consumption

Page 2: Changing Patterns of Oil Consumption

Spec• Analyse the global patterns and

trends in the production and consumption of oil.

2 hours

Page 3: Changing Patterns of Oil Consumption

Proven Oil Reserves

Which countries have the highest proven reserves?

Page 4: Changing Patterns of Oil Consumption

What does this map show?

Crude Petroleum Exports This is where oil is traded from.

Use these two maps to describe the spatial distribution of oil production around the world.

Page 5: Changing Patterns of Oil Consumption

Draw an accurate divided bar to show where the 85.4 million barrels of oil produced each day come from.

Page 6: Changing Patterns of Oil Consumption

World ENERGY stores

NATURAL GAS:Russia and USA produce 40% of world’s total

WINDGermany world leader at 23.6%Germany, USA and Spain account for 58% globally

HEP:China, Canada, Brazil and USA account for 46% of global total

OIL:In 2007 the Middle East = 30.8% of oil production

N. America = 16.5%Saudi Arabia dominates production 12.6% of world’s totalRussia accounts for over ½ of production for Europe and Eurasia

COAL:China produced 41.1% of global coal in 2007

USA produces 18.7%

Page 7: Changing Patterns of Oil Consumption

Oil first entered general use around 1900 when the global population was about 1.6 billion.  Since then the population has more than

quadrupled.  When we look at oil production overlaid on the population growth curve we can see a very suggestive correspondence:

Page 8: Changing Patterns of Oil Consumption

Describe the trends in global oil production between 1880 and now.

Page 9: Changing Patterns of Oil Consumption

Gap Minder

• Look at how the production trends of Major Producing Nations have varied over time.

• Complete this table:

GapMinderOil

1970 1990 2010Highest

Lowest

Page 10: Changing Patterns of Oil Consumption

• Peak oil is the point in time when the maximum rate of global petroleum extraction is reached, after which the rate of production enters terminal decline.

Hubbert Peak Oil Plot

Page 11: Changing Patterns of Oil Consumption

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EOm18c5Btiw&feature=player_embedded

Page 12: Changing Patterns of Oil Consumption