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PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012
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PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Jan 20, 2016

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Page 1: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

PHYS 1110

Lecture 13

Professor Stephen Thornton

October 16, 2012

Page 2: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Reading QuizWhich of the following statements is most true?

A)China mines the most coal.

B)United States mines the most coal.

C)United States exports the most coal.

D)China imports the most coal.

E)Africa uses a surprisingly large amount of coal.

Page 3: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Reading QuizWhich of the following statements is most true?

A)China mines the most coal.

B)United States mines the most coal.

C)United States exports the most coal.

D)China imports the most coal.

E)Africa uses a surprisingly large amount of coal.

Page 4: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Alternative Oil Sources:

Tight oil

Artic offshore

Presalt deepwater

Oil shale

Oil sands

Page 5: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.
Page 6: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

This works up to 70 m depth. Drilling must be done for deeper depths.

Page 7: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Extraction of bitumen by drilling in oil sands.

Page 8: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.
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Page 10: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Hydraulic fracturing is used to obtain oil from rock formations. Both oil and gas can be obtained.

Page 11: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.
Page 12: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Oil shale has kerogen, a complex hydrocarbon, which is a substitute for crude oil.

The largest deposit in the world is in the Green River Formation (Colorado, Wyoming, Utah). As the cost of oil increases, it is more economical to extract oil from shale. Open pit, strip mining, and underground mining are all used.

Page 13: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Other subjects:

Types of natural gas

Pipelines

Refinery process and uses of oil

Natural gas distribution and uses of natural gas.

Page 14: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.
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Natural gas use in USA.

Page 20: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.
Page 21: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

New electrical generation capacity in the USA.

Page 22: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Natural gas fuel cells

Page 23: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

World energy price trends

Page 24: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Coal production and consumption

Page 25: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

China is the largest consumer, followed by the United States. The largest consumers following China, US, and India are Japan, South Africa, Russia, Germany, South Korea, Poland, and Australia to round out the top 10 consumers.The largest coal exporters are Australia, Indonesia, Russia, Columbia, South Africa, US, and China. Obviously China and the US use most of the coal they mine. The largest coal importers are Japan, China, South Korea, India, Taiwan, Germany, and the United Kingdom. It is interesting that China and South Africa are in the top seven countries in both exporting and importing coal. Both Germany and the United Kingdom are known for coal mining, but both import a significant amount of coal.

Page 26: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

World oil production and consumption.

Page 27: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

United States

Page 28: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.
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World natural gas production and consumption.

Page 30: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Left: reserves to production ratio.

Right: history of projected remaining years of coal left.

Right: world distribution of proven coal reserves.

Page 31: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Peak Coal

Australia after 2050Canada 1997United Kingdom 1913Germany 1985China 2015United States 2012-2050??

Page 32: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Sources of total global oil reserves

Page 33: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Estimated 2011 Proved Oil Reserves

Page 34: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

BP prediction. In 2010 global oil reserves are expected to last 46 years. Middle East and South America have most.

Page 35: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Hubbert CurveMost experts believe peak oil occurred in 2005/6.

Yom Kippur war in 1973.

Iranian hostage crisis in 1979-81.

Page 36: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.
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Page 38: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Proven natural gas reserves in 2009.Peak natural gas: 2020

Page 39: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Natural Gas

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Page 41: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Best estimates of remaining resources:

Coal 120 yearsOil 45 yearsNatural Gas 60 years

But some estimates are much longer.

Page 42: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Quiz

The terms peak coal, peak oil, etc refer to

A)How long until peak resource extraction occurs.

B)How long until the rate of production begins to decline.

C)The point in time when all the resource is gone.

D)The point in time when the maximum rate of a resource extraction is reached.

Page 43: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Quiz

The terms peak coal, peak oil, etc refer to

A)How long until peak resource extraction occurs.

B)How long until the rate of production begins to decline.

C)The point in time when all the resource is gone.

D)The point in time when the maximum rate of a resource extraction is reached.

Page 44: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.
Page 45: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.
Page 46: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Table 6-1 Mass of CO2 Emitted for Various Fuels per Quantity of EnergyFuel CO2 Emitted Fuel CO2 Emitted Fuel CO2 Emitted

(g/MJ) (g/MJ) (g/MJ) Natural Gas 50 Kerosene 68 Coal (bituminous) 88 Propane 60 Fuel oil 69 Coal (lignite) 92Gasoline 67 Wood 84 Coal (anthracite) 98Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenhouse_gas and http://www.eia.gov/oiaf/1605/coefficients.html

Page 47: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.
Page 48: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Cap and Trade

Vote failed in US Senate in 2009 but passed House by a vote of 219-212.

Successful in Northeast US and EU.

Page 49: PHYS 1110 Lecture 13 Professor Stephen Thornton October 16, 2012.

Advantages and Disadvantages of Fossil Fuels