Fossil Fuel Management
Activities 21 and 22
Fossil Fuels…
… include coal, oil (from petroleum/crude oil), natural gas, tar sands, and oil shale.
… formed over a period of time from compressed vegetation and other organisms.
… are considered nonrenewable resources. Why?
Coal• Coal is the most abundant and
least expensive of the fossil fuels.
• It is also the most popular, accounting for almost 40 per cent of the total worldwide power generation.
• The use of coal can be traced back to around A.D. 50 from cinders in Roman ruins in Britain.
• There is also evidence to suggest that the Greeks used coal as a fuel in the 4th century.
www.answers.com
http://www.panda.org/news_facts/education/middle_school/homework_help/webfield_trips/coal/index.cfm
Roman and Greek ruins
users.ece.utexas.edu
Coal is a rock consisting almost entirely of organic material
http://www.athro.com/geo/trp/gub/coal.html
The great “coal” forests
• Today’s coal formed from prehistoric vegetation that accumulated thousands of years ago when much of the Earth's surface was covered in swamps.
• As the plants and trees in these swampy areas began to die, their remains sank into the swamp land, which eventually formed a dense material called peat.
• During this time there were huge forests of mosses, horsetails, and tree ferns
www.discover-tasmania.com
Modern giant tree fern
Peat – an early step in coal formation
Peat’s got its own journal
A good place to look for peat formation …
Peat only forms where there are low oxygen conditions, such as in this damp low spot on a swamp or bog.
Bodies don’t decay in bogs very well – as you can tell!
http://www.athro.com/geo/trp/gub/coal.html
en.wikipedia.org
Bog Man
The Coal Formation Process …
• The organic matter accumulates and forms a bed of peat.
• The peat bed gets buried by other sediments and under heat and pressure begins to transform to a low grade coal known as lignite.
• More heat and pressure further change the lignite into bituminous coal.
• Even more heat and pressure change the bituminous coal into a nice hard shiny anthracite coal.
The Steps of Coal Formation…
www.uky.edu
U.S. Coal Deposits …
http://www.princeton.edu/~jarigoni/CHEMGOOD/Introduction.htm
Is coal being made now?• Coal formation is a continuing
process, however large deposits of sediment are no longer covering swamp lands as in the past!
• Today, in areas such as the Great Dismal Swamp of North Carolina and Virginia, the Okefenokee Swamp of Georgia, and the Everglades in Florida, plant life decays and subsides, eventually to be covered by silts and sands, and other matter.
• Perhaps many years from now, those areas will contain large coal beds.
The Florida Everglades
rst.gsfc.nasa.gov
Coal Mining …
2 main methods of coal mining:
• Underground• Surface
– strip mining – mountaintop
removal (a new type of mining)
Exhausted rescuers looking for a missing miner emerge from a tunnel at Xinfu Coal Mine, where an explosion killed 17 miners on Monday in Qitaihe, Heilongjiang Province. [newsphoto]
www.chinadaily.com.cn
Coal mining has always been a dirty, dangerous job.
http://hewit.unco.edu/dohist/mining/work/coal/photo1.htm
A more modern underground mine
http://rogerphilpot.homestead.com/MinersinALowStope.jpg
A coal seam exposed by mining
http://rogerphilpot.homestead.com/mechanicalploughcolor.jpg
Strip mining coal
http://www.geokem.com/images/scans/Indonesian_coal_mine.jpg
www.globaljusticegame.mrap.info
Mountaintop Removal – a large scale type of coal mining
What effect does this type of mining have on the environment?
http://www.ohvec.org/galleries/mountaintop_removal/007/index.html
Health and environmental impacts of using coal as an energy source
• Surface mining requires the removal of massive amounts of top soil, leading to erosion, loss of habitat and pollution.
• Underground mining causes acid mine drainage, which causes heavy metals to dissolve and seep into ground and surface water.
• Coal mine workers also face serious health problems, including black lung, a lung disease from prolonged exposure to coal dust in mines.
• On the job hazards include: the mines may cave in, accumulate poison gases, or suddenly flood – all of which can injure or kill the miners
Black Lung
• Black lung is a legal term describing a preventable, occupational lung disease that is contracted by prolonged breathing of coal mine dust. Described by a variety of names, including miner's asthma, silicosis, coal workers' pneumoconiosis, and black lung, all are all dust diseases with the same symptoms.
• Like all occupational diseases, black lung is man-made and can be prevented. In fact, the U.S. Congress ordered black lung to be eradicated from the coal industry in 1969. Today, it is estimated that former coal miners each year die an agonizing death in often isolated rural communities, away from the spotlight of publicity.
http://www.umwa.org/job/blacklung/
More Environmental Impacts of Using Coal …
• Burning coal creates ground level ozone, smog and acid rain.
• Coal (and fuel oil) combustion emit fly ash particles into the atmosphere, which contribute to air pollution problems.
• Burning coal produces carbon dioxide, nitrogen oxide, sulfur dioxide and methane gas, all of which could contribute to global climate change.
hvo.wr.usgs.gov
Natural Gas…
A natural gas well
www.southernexploration.com
Natural gas …• Formed from the remains of tiny sea animals and plants that died thousands of years
ago. (Same process that formed petroleum.)
• The gas became trapped in the rock layers much like a wet household sponge traps water.
• Raw natural gas is a mixture of different gases. Its main ingredient is methane. By itself, methane is odorless, colorless, and tasteless. As a safety measure, natural gas companies add a chemical odorant (it smells like rotten eggs) so escaping gas can be detected. http://lsa.colorado.edu/essence/texts/naturalgas.htm
www.seed.slb.com
Processing natural gas …
• After natural gas comes out of the ground, it goes to a processing plant where it is cleaned of impurities (water, sulfur, dust) and separated into its various components
• Then it’s compressed and forced through pipelines under high pressure.
• It’s often cooled to a liquid state before being transported. LNG – liquified natural gas
A natural-gas processing plant off Thailand’s coast
www.nytimes.com
Natural Gas Processing …
www.answers.com
Benefits of using natural gas …• Cleaner fuel than petroleum or coal
• Has the highest energy content of the hydrocarbons used for fuel
• Our country has large reserves, mostly in the Gulf of Mexico, Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Wyoming, Kansas, and Alaska.
• Used for making plastics, detergents, drugs
• But, if we continue to use natural gas at the same rate as we use it today, the United States will run out in about 50 years (more can be recovered for higher $).
Other sources of natural gas
• Landfills - Landfill gas is considered a renewable source of natural gas since it comes from decaying garbage. – Landfill gas is 50 percent
methane
• Biomass - a fuel source derived from plant and animal wastes which generates natural gas
There are more than 350 commercial landfill gas recovery operations in the U.S. which generate electricity on-site, supply industrial gas-fired boilers, or produce substitute natural gas fuels such as CNG.
www.gtp-merichem.com
Some landfills are currently capturing the gas produced by decaying garbage.
A well is drilled into the waste mass in order to install a well.
The landfill gas is then pumped to a gas treatment and processing facility to separate out the methane from carbon dioxide and other non-methane compounds.
Study Reveals Huge U.S. Oil Shale Field …
WASHINGTON — The United States has an oil reserve at least three times that of Saudi Arabia locked in oil-shale deposits beneath federal land in Colorado, Utah and Wyoming, according to a study released yesterday.
Headline from The Seattle Times, September 1, 2005
As the head of Shell's Unconventional Resources unit, Steve Mutt, explained that as far back as the native Americans, people have been trying to exploit this resource, which is essentially immature petroleum. The Indians called it fire rock and inexperienced homesteaders tried to use it for their fireplaces with disastrous consequences.
www.evworld.com
An oil-shale rock burns on its own once it has been lit by a blowtorch. Associated Press photo by Douglas C. Pizac
http://sfgate.com
Oil shale doesn’t contain oil or (usually) shale
• The organic material is kerogen (not oil), and the "shale" is usually a relatively hard rock, called marl.
• Properly processed, kerogen can be converted into a substance somewhat similar to petroleum.
• The kerogen must be heated to a high temperature. This causes the organic material to be converted into a liquid. The liquid is then further processed to produce an medium grade oil which is said to be better than the lowest grade of oil.
Here’s the down side…….
• The report also says oil-shale mining, above-ground processing and disposing of spent shale cause significant adverse environmental impacts.
• Shell Oil is working on a process that would heat the oil shale in place, which could have less effect on the environment.
A new oil shale method uses in-ground heaters to “preheat” the oil shale so it is easier to remove the oil.
AP photo by Douglas C. Pizac http://sfgate.com
Instead of strip-mining the rock and then processing it, this new method superheats huge underground areas for several years, This method gradually forces the oil out of the stone and then pumps it to the surface
Tar sands (also called oil sands or bituminous sands)
• These sands contain clay, water, sand, and bitumen
• Bitumen contains 83.2% carbon
• This can be processed to make synthetic crude oil or be refined into petroleum products.
• This may prove to be a viable alternative to oil imported from the Middle East.
Wikipedia
Environmental impacts of using shale or tar sands• Takes lots of energy to
remove and process.
• Uses large amounts of water which is then polluted by the process.
• Generate huge amounts of waste that must be “put back” somewhere (unless the in-ground heating method is used).
climateprogress.org
www.borealbirds.org
Environmental Impact of Tar Sands
Alberta Tar Sands The term “tar sands” refers to thick oil called bitumen that is mixed in with sand, clay, and water. Intensive energy is
required to process the sands into crude oil. Tar Sands oil is the world’s most harmful type of oil for the atmosphere, emitting high volumes of greenhouse gases during development, which contribute to global warming, as well as other pollutants. Tar Sands projects are the largest contributor to greenhouse gas emissions growth in Canada. By 2015, the Tar Sands are expected to emit more greenhouse gases than the nation of Denmark (pop. 5.4 million).
www.borealbirds.org
Summary of Fossil Fuels …
• Petroleum• Coal
• Natural Gas• Oil Shale
• Tar Sands
How much longer will we have access to these fuels?How expensive will they get as demand exceeds supply?
What are some alternative energy sources?