© Distribution of this video is restricted by its owner
00:02 | So I've started the recorder. I'm to share my screen. Can everybody |
|
|
00:21 | lecture to Yes. Okay. Looks like everybody's here. Okay, |
|
|
00:38 | this is lecture to hang on. a minute. I'm back, but |
|
|
00:57 | . Eso What we're gonna look at is, um, sort of what |
|
|
01:03 | resource and reserve is. Um, that's been a narrative for a long |
|
|
01:09 | . Is this thing called peak And ah, a lot of people |
|
|
01:15 | worried about peak oil. No one to be worried about it right |
|
|
01:20 | and it really has a lot to , obviously, with the balance between |
|
|
01:28 | and consumption. And, uh, also I should say production. |
|
|
01:37 | sometimes I put consumption in here. probably should be production, but we |
|
|
01:42 | only consume a ZMA each as we and s o when, uh, |
|
|
01:48 | that balance between production and demand prices go up and prices go |
|
|
01:55 | If we have. If we're producing than we need, then, |
|
|
02:02 | we're going to see a drop in prices and vice versa. A lot |
|
|
02:07 | big questions is once we get done , say, the bacon or |
|
|
02:12 | what's going to replace that. I'm gonna bring up something about a very |
|
|
02:18 | truth. Um, about sustainability was in that movie. It was the |
|
|
02:29 | first slide, and everybody seems to ignoring it. And, uh, |
|
|
02:34 | to kind of look at, you , how much energy do we really |
|
|
02:39 | . And it's not just annoy oil gas issue. It's a total energy |
|
|
02:44 | , and then we're going toe kind Get to where? Where does this |
|
|
02:48 | us? And I'm gonna Early next , I'm gonna send you an |
|
|
02:52 | And you can, um, put your five cents. And really, |
|
|
02:56 | gonna be grading you on the fact you've got some original data. You |
|
|
03:02 | at some original data and you came with a real conclusion about it. |
|
|
03:08 | , this this is getting to be old picture. This is National Geographic |
|
|
03:15 | , but I don't think much has in the world. We still we |
|
|
03:21 | are What a lot of people like call a disposable society. You |
|
|
03:27 | we buy things and we throw them . We buy things and we throw |
|
|
03:30 | away. Um, I'm sure many you have heard about all the plastic |
|
|
03:36 | end up in the ocean. the first concern, for some |
|
|
03:43 | is why are the oil companies making this plastic? Nobody ever puts forward |
|
|
03:50 | question. And again, this is perspectives. Um, you know, |
|
|
03:56 | real problem is that we dump waste the ocean, and that's kind of |
|
|
04:01 | first, the first line of You know, we have a lot |
|
|
04:09 | , uh I think, very well environmentalists to God and collect all this |
|
|
04:15 | . But I think their job would a whole lot easier if we would |
|
|
04:19 | out a way that we didn't have much to throw away. And, |
|
|
04:24 | , and having said something like you know why a plastic straw would |
|
|
04:30 | end up in the ocean? I don't understand. And, uh, |
|
|
04:36 | apparently there are cities along the coast dump lots of plastic into the |
|
|
04:44 | And there are there are always around . Recycling, of course, is |
|
|
04:49 | thing. Um, not using. we don't need to use is |
|
|
04:54 | But when you look at this you know, you have to realize |
|
|
04:58 | Ah, we do live in a economy. And one thing that I've |
|
|
05:04 | in this pandemic is that people used go to the store and they look |
|
|
05:10 | things and, you know, they decide, you know, do I |
|
|
05:12 | that? And they looked at it few more times and decided they didn't |
|
|
05:15 | it. Now what a lot of do is they get online and they |
|
|
05:19 | something from Amazon or whatever, uh, everybody isn't this way, |
|
|
05:25 | some people just order and order and . And of course we have. |
|
|
05:30 | have a lot of these, televised shopping centers now, and people |
|
|
05:39 | TV and they by and by and and so a lot of the problem |
|
|
05:44 | really an individual problem. It's, it's It's like insecticides, For |
|
|
05:51 | Um uh, some companies were dumping terrible thing called Cay pone into the |
|
|
06:00 | River in Virginia, and they basically . They poisoned a lot of |
|
|
06:05 | and they also wiped out one of best oyster beds on this planet in |
|
|
06:10 | James River near the head of the River near the Chesapeake Bay. That's |
|
|
06:15 | problem that za real reason to get with industry. But another problem is |
|
|
06:21 | everybody that buys and a can of ah, you know, may spray |
|
|
06:27 | much on their lawn or wherever you're it. And at the end of |
|
|
06:31 | day, they may just dump it a storm drain. And, |
|
|
06:36 | it's no big deal of one does it? Essentially. I |
|
|
06:40 | it's still bad, but it's it's serious. But just imagine if 150 |
|
|
06:46 | people dump a can of insecticide in storm drain, Uh, once a |
|
|
06:53 | there once a year or maybe once 10 years, it's going to start |
|
|
06:57 | up. And so there's a lot this is individual responsibility and something that |
|
|
07:04 | I've noticed. You know, I've in school for a long time, |
|
|
07:10 | , and longer than most of you been alive. I was actually in |
|
|
07:14 | , I think, but But I when when I was a young man |
|
|
07:20 | on my bachelors degree, I'll never . The campus that I walked on |
|
|
07:26 | pristine. You never saw anybody throwing on the ground another kind of |
|
|
07:34 | But nowadays a lot of people Well, you know, I put |
|
|
07:38 | there because they pay someone to pick up and they wouldn't have a job |
|
|
07:41 | I didn't throw trash on the And I think that's just the wrong |
|
|
07:45 | . I don't think people that you hpe a thio to pick up the |
|
|
07:52 | would be out of a job if didn't litter the campus. So one |
|
|
07:56 | that I've noticed about the U of campuses many, many times that I |
|
|
08:00 | in there. There's an awful lot litter around, Uh, and some |
|
|
08:05 | the labs. You'll open up the drawers and students have left or candy |
|
|
08:09 | in there. And I'm not picking students or anybody because this is this |
|
|
08:14 | something that's commonplace. You know, hop in somebody's car and you can |
|
|
08:20 | . Over the past three years, been to 25 fast food places because |
|
|
08:25 | rappers air still in their car. I think I think one of the |
|
|
08:31 | of the biggest problems about pollution in disposable society we live in is is |
|
|
08:37 | attitude, and I think on an level people need to take responsibility for |
|
|
08:42 | kind of thing. And and, course, if a lot of trash |
|
|
08:50 | put in proper receptacles and the proper were dumped in proper dumpsites, we |
|
|
08:57 | never see any trash in the no matter how much we produce. |
|
|
09:02 | there. There are a lot of when you see plastics in the ocean |
|
|
09:08 | aren't related to the companies that actually the plastics, and I think that's |
|
|
09:13 | important. And and if you stop think about the incredible value of plastics |
|
|
09:19 | our society at any point, or many of you don't don't think about |
|
|
09:24 | like I dio. But, you , just imagine the PVC and different |
|
|
09:30 | of plastic pipes that we now use our plumbing systems in our sewage systems |
|
|
09:37 | used to use. There was a when they used cardboard coated with tar |
|
|
09:45 | as major sewage and water supply Thank God we don't do that |
|
|
09:52 | and there's another good thing about When you put that plastic in the |
|
|
09:58 | , unless somebody digs it up, going to stay there and it's going |
|
|
10:02 | function for probably hundreds of years, it's it's both efficient and it's safe |
|
|
10:10 | when we use things the proper way it's the same thing with trash and |
|
|
10:18 | , so that hasn't changed. There's these sorts of things and you stop |
|
|
10:23 | think about it. Even cars are made out of more and more plastic |
|
|
10:30 | . And as we go to electric cars, we're going to need more |
|
|
10:34 | more plastic materials to make these cars so that the batteries that they have |
|
|
10:42 | are getting better all the time. have longer lifetimes. You know a |
|
|
10:46 | of them. It's never a good to go below half on your |
|
|
10:51 | and they advertise, you know, , 300 miles on one charge, |
|
|
10:57 | you never wanted want to use up whole charge. So if you use |
|
|
11:03 | materials like plastics, that air durable and they last a long time |
|
|
11:08 | they actually can absorb some shock if bump into somebody, uh, you |
|
|
11:13 | , it's actually a good thing to plastic for those reasons, and that's |
|
|
11:17 | of the non combustible part of the industry. Anyway, having said all |
|
|
11:23 | that, this is the society we in, and as individuals, we |
|
|
11:28 | do as much of not even uh, to protect our environment. |
|
|
11:33 | we personally take a responsibility for the that we use ourselves. Okay, |
|
|
11:41 | I'm off of that soap box. what is a natural resource? And |
|
|
11:47 | is sort of a strictly well written . Think it's a concentration key is |
|
|
11:55 | natural. It's something you know. a substance. It's a liquid solid |
|
|
12:00 | a gas that occurs. And it to be significant quantities that we can |
|
|
12:06 | in society and benefit society. And course, some of these air renewable |
|
|
12:12 | some are non renewable. And to me, is kind of a |
|
|
12:17 | term to the renewable and non Imagine the oil in the ground as |
|
|
12:25 | non renewable. But there is so in the ground, uh, that |
|
|
12:31 | much as we think that will run of it, we may never actually |
|
|
12:34 | out of it in our lifetimes until find something to replace it. And |
|
|
12:40 | it will no longer be a But But, you know, because |
|
|
12:45 | have geologists and geophysicists and know how find this. Mm. Even though |
|
|
12:51 | a non renewable resource. In some , we do have not an infinite |
|
|
12:57 | , but we have an adequate Think that might be a more appropriate |
|
|
13:05 | ? And then we have things that call renewable and just imagine people with |
|
|
13:13 | , growing plants or crops. Of , the renewable. We can keep |
|
|
13:18 | them. But can we grow enough supply the societies that we're creating with |
|
|
13:26 | eight billion people? Within a very period of time? It's going to |
|
|
13:30 | 10 billion people. You know How do these renewable things renew fast |
|
|
13:36 | to actually be a substantial benefit to and available at the levels that we |
|
|
13:43 | him? And that's what makes it a resource. And and I'll talk |
|
|
13:49 | about this in a later part of . But again, a natural |
|
|
13:54 | It's It's, of course, got be naturally occurring. And let me |
|
|
14:00 | the class. Do you think oil naturally occurring? Yes, I don't |
|
|
14:09 | if you can raise your hand in in Zoom, but if you could |
|
|
14:15 | . Okay. It is absolutely naturally . Ah, would anybody want to |
|
|
14:23 | this? Question is, is oil bio fuel or not, a bio |
|
|
14:30 | the fuel that comes from biological It is a bio fuel. |
|
|
14:36 | probably 80%. If not 95% of American society would probably not considered a |
|
|
14:43 | fuel because it comes out of a , but we know better. |
|
|
14:49 | so So just kind of keep that mind. Okay, so I have |
|
|
14:56 | little menu thing in front of but here's here's a sort of the |
|
|
15:01 | way to grid Total resource is we these things. They're called discovered and |
|
|
15:10 | . And a lot of people have issue with this diagram that work in |
|
|
15:15 | oil industry because we have to sometimes things beyond a shadow of a doubt |
|
|
15:21 | we on to a bank. So might have a different and more precise |
|
|
15:26 | of what these are. But these These aren't bankers definitions, thes |
|
|
15:31 | just straightforward sort of scientific definitions. so what is a discovered resource |
|
|
15:40 | and obviously the most important thing here it's something that we know exist, |
|
|
15:47 | it's recoverable. And today, and we mean by recoverable today is if |
|
|
15:55 | come over here, we can recover . For example, I've helped discover |
|
|
16:04 | reservoir in, uh, in He was 60 million barrels of |
|
|
16:12 | but there were no pipelines anywhere near . And so to use this, |
|
|
16:18 | really needed to be able to get pipeline to it. And the pipelines |
|
|
16:23 | get to it could have cost almost much as, uh, the added |
|
|
16:29 | of producing that oil in the first . So it was an economic. |
|
|
16:35 | was no reason whatsoever to do okay? And so it became sub |
|
|
16:46 | . Okay, so it's less than . It's It was a known |
|
|
16:50 | but not recoverable today, okay? so we often call these reserves. |
|
|
16:58 | , the word reserve gets really uh, in the oil industry and |
|
|
17:04 | , um, and the banking because you have to have pipe on |
|
|
17:12 | to call it a reserve. You just say I've discovered it and you |
|
|
17:15 | just say I know we can produce . You have to have a pipe |
|
|
17:19 | it. But from a scientific in terms of total resource is if |
|
|
17:25 | look at discovered versus undiscovered economic versus economic, we only have three boxes |
|
|
17:33 | have recoverable today, which we call . We have deposits known, but |
|
|
17:39 | not recoverable in today's market rates. then we have these other things that |
|
|
17:45 | hypothetical. Anybody want to venture to I'll hypothetical resource in terms of the |
|
|
17:51 | industry, like helium? Well, , helium would be one, but |
|
|
18:01 | was thinking more like oil and It would be like the East Coast |
|
|
18:06 | the U. S. Absolutely. exactly what I'm talking about. |
|
|
18:09 | that's hypothetical. We don't have a in it. We don't know what's |
|
|
18:13 | happen. And I don't know if aware of this, but the |
|
|
18:18 | S Geological Survey a big part of goes in and looks at places like |
|
|
18:25 | Eocene of Texas or the alias scene Louisiana or X, Y and Z |
|
|
18:31 | different areas. That might be what would call several different plays in a |
|
|
18:38 | area. Yeah, they know how has been produced. They they know |
|
|
18:44 | much banks air calling reserves because they of know what they can get out |
|
|
18:49 | it. Uh, but they come with a hypothetical number based on the |
|
|
18:55 | of maybe they know a little bit the source rock and how big it |
|
|
19:01 | . And they've predicted that, you , You know, we've produced X |
|
|
19:07 | of barrels of oil, the next amount of, um, uh, |
|
|
19:14 | cubic feet of natural gas. But the volume of this feature and the |
|
|
19:22 | of what we think might be in source rock, they come up with |
|
|
19:28 | much more they think we could find produce from that area. And that's |
|
|
19:33 | , too. Okay, because we actually been able to identify it with |
|
|
19:39 | Orwell, Orwell near it or anything that. So that's what a real |
|
|
19:47 | oneness. And, of course, East Coast is a perfect example. |
|
|
19:52 | , let me ask you since we up the East Coast and I grew |
|
|
19:55 | on the East Coast, so I hoping open Thio to retire in Virginia |
|
|
20:03 | , where I grew up. because anybody tell me why I would |
|
|
20:08 | to go retire in Virginia Beach. , it's a nice place, |
|
|
20:20 | They're not gonna drill over there. , okay. Yeah. What happened |
|
|
20:26 | and then this really is a stoner me. um, during, |
|
|
20:31 | the Obama administration. They actually approved offshore Virginia. And, um, |
|
|
20:43 | it's like people are scared to death doing it once again. Does anybody |
|
|
20:49 | why that happened? Yeah, And this gets back to personal |
|
|
20:59 | Um, the oil industry needs to responsible, not 99 out of 100 |
|
|
21:05 | the companies, But all 100 of need to be responsible. And when |
|
|
21:11 | not, this kind of thing And, uh and that's why we're |
|
|
21:18 | drilling offshore Virginia now. It's not of either political party. It's because |
|
|
21:26 | industry itself in one particular company cut corners. When anybody with a good |
|
|
21:36 | of sense would realize Anytime you cut critical corners, you're gonna have an |
|
|
21:43 | . And but that's what happened. , looking back on it, I |
|
|
21:49 | . Ah, I know a lot the people that worked at BP, |
|
|
21:52 | I know most of people that worked BP were horrified by all this and |
|
|
21:56 | never have let something like that happen their watch. But it did, |
|
|
22:03 | and that's one of the things that have to do and what else happens |
|
|
22:06 | somebody makes a mistake like that ruins everybody else. Yeah, and, |
|
|
22:14 | , a really important word pops It's called regulation. You get more |
|
|
22:19 | . And, uh, I would to guess, uh, except for |
|
|
22:25 | thing. For the most part, regulations we already had in place before |
|
|
22:30 | spill were adequate. The problem is enforcement and people following the |
|
|
22:37 | And since they didn't, you you end up with this problem and |
|
|
22:41 | you end up with more regulations and were created out of, uh they |
|
|
22:48 | to protect either the people of the States or environment. And it's realistic |
|
|
22:55 | understand that all oil companies operating costs drop if we had less regulations. |
|
|
23:04 | we wouldn't need so many regulations if out of 100 played by the rules |
|
|
23:11 | of just 99 or 96 or 97 whatever. And, uh, and |
|
|
23:17 | again, it's It's about personal at corporate level and personal in terms of |
|
|
23:23 | your trash away. All of these , uh, uh, can be |
|
|
23:29 | not just by a company, but the people that work in that |
|
|
23:36 | And the leadership, especially of that . Okay, So anyway, we |
|
|
23:42 | back here to re sources and So reserves resource is that air considered |
|
|
23:47 | be identifiable and technically recoverable under today's conditions and total resource is include reserves |
|
|
23:56 | undiscovered, not identified and currently on . So we know there is a |
|
|
24:06 | offshore of the Atlantic, but we have reserves. Offshore Atlantic. Does |
|
|
24:12 | get that? Okay, if you for an oil company or if you |
|
|
24:16 | for slumbers or somebody like that, definition of a reserve is going to |
|
|
24:23 | quite different because you have tow, pipe behind it, and you have |
|
|
24:28 | be able to prove it with maps the whole nine yards. But from |
|
|
24:32 | academic standpoint and really an industry if you think about it, |
|
|
24:38 | reserves are not just resource is, there. Resource is that we can |
|
|
24:45 | under current economic and regulatory conditions. is, if we remove some of |
|
|
24:51 | regulations or we reduce some of the of producing, we might actually be |
|
|
24:57 | to produce that or, in the of the field in Denmark, that |
|
|
25:03 | was talking about there was a huge gas pipeline coming all the way from |
|
|
25:11 | Norway that went, went all the to Germany and it went by |
|
|
25:19 | And after a while they built enough these pipelines. They're able Thio, |
|
|
25:24 | some the ability to put some oil parts of those systems. And that |
|
|
25:32 | is now economic and producing a lot oil. And it didn't require anything |
|
|
25:37 | . There was a massive natural gas offshore Norway and in the north of |
|
|
25:48 | central, the Norwegian central Grob. and, uh And so basically, |
|
|
25:58 | were able Thio, uh, put pipelines just for that. And as |
|
|
26:05 | offshoot, you are able Thio produce anywhere in the world where you have |
|
|
26:11 | shore facilities and you have pipelines Quite . Uh, having the infrastructure there |
|
|
26:19 | makes the future assets a lot easier produce because thea upfront, uh, |
|
|
26:29 | in terms off of equipment and that of thing in infrastructure has it least |
|
|
26:35 | part been taken care of, so can help us move something from being |
|
|
26:40 | resource to reserve, both keeping our at a minimum. But making sure |
|
|
26:46 | have the ones we need. So don't put on too many extra |
|
|
26:51 | And, uh and then also the , uh, with infrastructure is infrastructure |
|
|
26:57 | developed. Resource is turn into Okay, so then I go into |
|
|
27:06 | , and of course, when we look at what a petroleum reserve might |
|
|
27:11 | Ah, here's a little bit more definition of that. And so if |
|
|
27:18 | was to ask you what a petroleum was, I might do that. |
|
|
27:21 | we're just talking about resource is and of those resource is this is the |
|
|
27:27 | is the overarching definition of that. we can get more specific and talk |
|
|
27:34 | total reserves that include proven probable and and and then also a lot of |
|
|
27:42 | have this thing they call bookable And I know when I when I |
|
|
27:49 | in production geology, the proven was . The probable was a smaller |
|
|
27:56 | and the possible was even a smaller . But we put that in there |
|
|
28:01 | we figured in some of these fields were in, we had enough |
|
|
28:04 | We have the infrastructure. Sooner or , we were going to drill this |
|
|
28:10 | , uh, But this changes depending where you're at which state you're |
|
|
28:15 | whether it's offshore and U. Waters. There's a lot of rules |
|
|
28:20 | on what actually is a bookable So you have to be careful with |
|
|
28:26 | . Okay, here's Here's another way looking at it, and this is |
|
|
28:33 | as the resource Pyramid. Triangles tend make us think of pyramids. For |
|
|
28:38 | reason, I haven't figured that out , but But anyway, these four |
|
|
28:43 | triangles or pyramids, this one doesn't four sides. It's just two |
|
|
28:50 | And, um, what you can here is we have unrecoverable resource |
|
|
28:57 | but we know it's in place. example, there's gas hydrates all over |
|
|
29:04 | place, but we don't know how get him, Uh, how to |
|
|
29:09 | them without actually and possibly destroying the that we're using. Thio release it |
|
|
29:16 | the subsurface and or the surface of ocean. Then we have things that |
|
|
29:21 | know that we way. In other , we can drill deep enough we |
|
|
29:27 | we can put some kind of jacket it to heat it up, |
|
|
29:31 | get a production line to it. , but it's still not economic. |
|
|
29:37 | then, then there's the ones that economically recoverable, and you bounce back |
|
|
29:42 | forth between this line, depending on price of the resource, the |
|
|
29:51 | the supply, which controlled to a factor. The price but also things |
|
|
29:58 | infrastructure. Is there a pipeline there not? If there's a pipeline |
|
|
30:04 | something that's down here in one area pop up here in another area where |
|
|
30:09 | already had infrastructure. Ah, if makes a big mistake on all these |
|
|
30:19 | , pop up are economically recoverable. might drift down into here because the |
|
|
30:25 | to produce goes up. But as as things get better as our |
|
|
30:30 | of production gets down in the value what we're producing goes up, we |
|
|
30:35 | Mawr things. That Aaron this proved improbable. And then here we |
|
|
30:39 | start producing it. We have it . Once it's produced, that's |
|
|
30:43 | That's the resource that we knew was , and we made money on |
|
|
30:48 | uh, in some cases to keep flow up, we might actually find |
|
|
30:55 | over producing things at a cost higher what we're getting paid, and that's |
|
|
31:00 | to some companies recently to with the drop and the need for cash |
|
|
31:06 | So this this is really more profound you might think. Just looking at |
|
|
31:12 | because, you know, for a to be in, any one of |
|
|
31:18 | boxes can change just based on economics on that support. An important thing |
|
|
31:24 | remember and economics can be based on , the environment that you're operating |
|
|
31:33 | the government that you're operating in. , uh, and whether or not |
|
|
31:39 | players in that area are trying to by the rules to keep the level |
|
|
31:44 | regulations down. Okay, so here . Here's a concept that bothered a |
|
|
31:53 | of people probably up until the year , but still even beyond that. |
|
|
31:59 | now some people are thinking about it . But it's a thing called peak |
|
|
32:08 | . And does anybody? Could anybody me very quickly? What are the |
|
|
32:16 | of peak oil? But what creates oil? It only takes a few |
|
|
32:24 | to explain it, demanding population it be demand and supply, and, |
|
|
32:37 | , it seems a little tricky and have a hard time dealing with |
|
|
32:41 | But this actually happened? You this This is a history, and |
|
|
32:46 | is also ah, why We, , started talking about peak production because |
|
|
32:57 | happened in the United States. So happens when we get to a point |
|
|
33:01 | this and this? This This doesn't show everything, but there's a reason |
|
|
33:10 | it's like this. Remember I told that we produce what we consume. |
|
|
33:19 | that. And here we have this , and we're producing what we can |
|
|
33:23 | , and we can produce what we consume. And you know that oil |
|
|
33:30 | didn't level off a this point in . Right? Oil production. Excuse |
|
|
33:37 | ? Oil consumption kept going up and in the United States. So what |
|
|
33:41 | here? Your story. What happened is we had to start right around |
|
|
33:51 | . We had to start importing an lot of oil. Okay, so |
|
|
33:56 | United States had reached peak production. world hadn't reached peak production, but |
|
|
34:00 | United States had and so what? production. What peak oil is is |
|
|
34:08 | you've gone around and you've drilled everything think you can drill and you can't |
|
|
34:13 | Reese. Can people see my Mhm. I'm sitting here waving in |
|
|
34:17 | air. I don't know if you see it, but you know, |
|
|
34:21 | producing, you're producing, you're And then no matter how hard you |
|
|
34:27 | , you can't find any more oil keep producing, to keep up with |
|
|
34:30 | rise in the need for production. that's what's peak oil. In other |
|
|
34:36 | , at that point and at this , we had dramatic, um |
|
|
34:42 | deficits in the United States. In words, we became a net a |
|
|
34:48 | importer of oil instead of of self . And that got everybody upset. |
|
|
34:54 | this this concerned everybody over the last decades. And, of course, |
|
|
35:02 | we get down into about right here this thing changes really dramatically after that |
|
|
35:07 | the United States. But for the , the whole thing changed too, |
|
|
35:10 | we started thio produce unconventional. So go look at this. This line |
|
|
35:20 | here is, um okay, this production in the United States, And |
|
|
35:31 | in 2000 and nine, BBC's TV called Horizon. They called me up |
|
|
35:37 | they had a question for me. , they wanted to know how I |
|
|
35:43 | about peak oil because Because, as turns out, the British have given |
|
|
35:49 | guy named Hubbert, Um, credit coming up with the term of peak |
|
|
35:56 | . Okay. And they wanted me tell them in. And I |
|
|
35:59 | Well, I can't tell you that because I knew this was gonna |
|
|
36:04 | I knew that when they asked me that this was about to happen. |
|
|
36:09 | it turned like that right then because was starting toe happen in 2000 and |
|
|
36:14 | . We started pulling on. a lot of these unconventional resource is |
|
|
36:20 | started coming online. Okay, so was peak oil supply a verdict? |
|
|
36:28 | , one of things that happens is , when I first made this |
|
|
36:33 | I just had the 2000 and 8 economic slump. But the other thing |
|
|
36:39 | happened is, since about 2016 to 2021 the oil industry has been in |
|
|
36:45 | major slump, too. And you even push that number back to say |
|
|
36:51 | in your life. Okay. uh, but the other thing |
|
|
36:56 | numerous resource discoveries happen. Ah, large number of probably like 56 or |
|
|
37:06 | multi billion barrel fields were found in Brazil. Three offshore in the |
|
|
37:10 | S. Was finding significant, oil resource is in the deep water |
|
|
37:17 | salt especially, but also in many . And then the things like the |
|
|
37:25 | is came in like gangbusters. And of a sudden they found a way |
|
|
37:31 | the price going up to make money the tar sands. And then, |
|
|
37:36 | course, the premium basins woken up . I can remember through a big |
|
|
37:41 | of my career in the oil industry , that the Permian Basin was pretty |
|
|
37:47 | dead and would be dead forever. then we figured out how to to |
|
|
37:53 | horizontal drilling in Hydrofracking and put those things together, come up with way |
|
|
38:05 | create surface area that would create more in reservoirs that had no permeability. |
|
|
38:12 | so we were able to get those trapped. Resource is out of the |
|
|
38:19 | and one of the things that I a lot of people and even I |
|
|
38:28 | have a hard time imagining this. the demand for energy in this world |
|
|
38:35 | very, very, very large. a huge, huge demand and we |
|
|
38:44 | come up with lots of alternate But if you look at the total |
|
|
38:49 | for energy in the world, even right now during the pandemic, its's |
|
|
38:56 | , it's a massive amount of And and it is very, very |
|
|
39:03 | for people to understand what 85 for million barrels of oil equivalent are in |
|
|
39:16 | of demand for just one source. of our energy sources. That's a |
|
|
39:23 | and and that's that's every day, know, that's a lot of |
|
|
39:31 | Okay, um, increase price of tents to increase the supply. |
|
|
39:41 | Because you make money by drilling it ? Yeah, I remember we were |
|
|
39:45 | about economic and sub economic. If price goes up, what was not |
|
|
39:53 | becomes economic. So without even drilling well, stuff that we couldn't make |
|
|
40:00 | off of starts to make money. then when the price goes up, |
|
|
40:06 | bankers go. Hey, I need get in. I need a piece |
|
|
40:08 | this pie. We need to start like crazy and get some more |
|
|
40:13 | And s o they essentially over That's why it's such a cyclical |
|
|
40:22 | Once we realize we have a valuable again, we get over excited about |
|
|
40:29 | . And so an increase in supply reduces the price of oil, |
|
|
40:35 | and then then you're kind of But you know, one of the |
|
|
40:39 | important things to remember is technology reduces reduce costs. Um, of |
|
|
40:45 | technology is what allows us to produce , but that technology is not |
|
|
40:51 | That's not the cheapest thing in the . And what else happens with technology |
|
|
40:57 | even, um, like I'll lump all together and technology? What happens |
|
|
41:02 | technology when the price of oil goes ? Usually they cut the group, |
|
|
41:09 | But they cut the groups typically in companies. But it seems like it's |
|
|
41:12 | important than ever because it it increases bottom line. It does. |
|
|
41:17 | uh, and, of course, you farm it all out and you |
|
|
41:21 | to call up slumber, say, does slumbers they do or what |
|
|
41:25 | What does horizontal drilling company do when price of oil goes up, charge |
|
|
41:30 | an arm and a leg for They charge more, and why do |
|
|
41:35 | charge more? Because demand is higher the supply of their equipment and their |
|
|
41:40 | becomes limited. And so there's all tethers holding us back. There's there's |
|
|
41:48 | which helps us produce things cheaper, it costs more when we when the |
|
|
41:52 | goes up. Ah, when we mistakes, regulations go up. All |
|
|
41:58 | things off are things that we actually some control over if we think about |
|
|
42:04 | and we need to work on it one of the things that has shocked |
|
|
42:09 | and I've been in the oil industry a while, I'm not in it |
|
|
42:12 | , but I've been paying attention to . But when I was actually in |
|
|
42:18 | , you know, it's just kind amazing in this latest boom, |
|
|
42:23 | because unconventional is require a lot of to produce. Uh, the resource |
|
|
42:34 | that they produce, they have to a lot. In other words, |
|
|
42:39 | have to keep drilling and drilling to the cash flow going and going |
|
|
42:43 | uh, with unconventional. If the went down, you could just walk |
|
|
42:49 | to the valve and turn it off leave it off and produce what you |
|
|
42:55 | . And then when the price went up, you went over and you |
|
|
42:58 | the valve back and you opened back again. But But because of the |
|
|
43:03 | of technology, you know the technology goes into fracking and horizontal drilling, |
|
|
43:11 | , when that when that price goes , those prices go way up. |
|
|
43:16 | when the price comes down, they drop his fast. Aziz, you |
|
|
43:21 | them to drop or as significantly as need them to make your costs go |
|
|
43:27 | . And so that causes a So, uh, that's why I |
|
|
43:32 | the the downfall that we've seen recently like a double whammy. Because because |
|
|
43:42 | your output in conventional wells, they a longer lifetime. They last the |
|
|
43:50 | out of, ah, good conventional , is gonna last a lot |
|
|
43:54 | and the decline curve is not as as it would be in in a |
|
|
44:00 | resource. So when we think about a xgo Oda's unconventional czar, there's |
|
|
44:05 | of like, um, you the flowers blooming in the spring. |
|
|
44:10 | , you know, by the summer all wilted. Whereas in a conventional |
|
|
44:15 | got, you've got coconuts that live through the year and they just keep |
|
|
44:21 | coconuts on top of you all the . I don't know if that really |
|
|
44:24 | , but that's the analogy. I'm . Okay, but here's here's something |
|
|
44:31 | really funny about peak oil. And though it might not have been called |
|
|
44:38 | oil with quotes around it, everybody what peak oil waas. Um, |
|
|
44:45 | in 18 57 here, Romania produces barrels of oil, and that was |
|
|
44:54 | beginning of the modern oil industry. , of course, if you're from |
|
|
45:00 | and my mother's family was from you were told, and you believed |
|
|
45:05 | whole life that the first oil well in Pennsylvania. But it wasn't the |
|
|
45:12 | one was in Romania. That uh, for commercial purposes. |
|
|
45:19 | do any of you have a guess a lot of petroleum came from before |
|
|
45:26 | wells were being grilled just from right? Exactly. There are tar |
|
|
45:32 | in places and their seats, and tar sands and their seats up there |
|
|
45:37 | , uh, in along the Caspian and Azerbaijan. Oil just flows out |
|
|
45:44 | the ground, and they had places you know, the burn. That's |
|
|
45:46 | the burning Bush and whatnot came They just, uh there's always there's |
|
|
45:52 | oil coming out of the ground there some places. So that's where it |
|
|
45:56 | . And then, of course, place was they went out and they |
|
|
46:00 | they produce the oil from from whale , and, uh and that was |
|
|
46:05 | good oil. But it's an expensive on a beautiful number of I got |
|
|
46:12 | tell you, You know, I Wales air just incredible. And it |
|
|
46:16 | hurts my soul when I see people and and, uh, way don't |
|
|
46:23 | the oil like we used to need . But some people just absolutely have |
|
|
46:27 | eat whale meat. I'm not sure , but but if you like |
|
|
46:31 | I can imagine it's pretty good. , So then, uh, they |
|
|
46:39 | , uh, production there in Canada then in Russia. And then, |
|
|
46:44 | , of course Rockefeller started wouldn't end being eso and, uh, in |
|
|
46:52 | 79 the U. S. Geological formed in part for fear of oil |
|
|
46:59 | . Okay, so this is sort the first realization of peak oil. |
|
|
47:05 | , in 18 82 the Institute of Engineers estimated hypothetically There was only 95 |
|
|
47:14 | more barrels of oil left to produce , but they were producing 25 million |
|
|
47:22 | per year. So that meant in years there'd be no more oil left |
|
|
47:28 | the entire world. And then in Ah, Spindletop happened. And of |
|
|
47:38 | , oil flooded the U. Oil market and that caused problems. |
|
|
47:42 | okay, so I don't know if catching this, but the fear of |
|
|
47:49 | amount of production being available disappearing just going away. And the the ideas |
|
|
48:02 | that we have too much goes too, because what controls how much |
|
|
48:08 | we need, Folks, Many people here. That's it. Population is |
|
|
48:15 | key to everything. It's not. we do is how many of us |
|
|
48:20 | it, and you can easily say only 100 people use a resource. |
|
|
48:28 | not too many are going to abuse . If a million people are using |
|
|
48:33 | resource, there are a lot of that will abuse. If there's eight |
|
|
48:39 | people, there's very, very many that will abuse it. And if |
|
|
48:43 | going to be another two billion, , in the next 15 years or |
|
|
48:50 | it's going to get. It's going get even worse and there's There's nothing |
|
|
48:54 | can do to change that unless we up with bigger and better energy |
|
|
49:01 | Okay, so 1906 again another. though there was a flood here, |
|
|
49:09 | market crashes. And then five years , there's an oil shortage and it |
|
|
49:15 | on and on and things paper Maverick and three. It was a really |
|
|
49:20 | paper, and and I used to all the way up to today, |
|
|
49:25 | I don't think we need to, you get the idea. Uh, |
|
|
49:30 | idea of the fact that we might produced our last drop of oil has |
|
|
49:36 | been in our minds, but it's been a reality, and the fact |
|
|
49:40 | we always think that demand is going disappear has also always been in our |
|
|
49:47 | . But in fact, that's never a reality, either. Asl Ong's |
|
|
49:52 | keeps growing, and I'm not, , if you think about biology, |
|
|
49:58 | really hard to imagine that population growth going to slow down anytime soon. |
|
|
50:06 | , so here is what they came with and uh, they had a |
|
|
50:14 | flag coming up in 2020. And this prediction was in June of 2000 |
|
|
50:19 | four. So as late as 2000 four, it was predicted that we |
|
|
50:24 | going toe reach peak oil. And we're all sitting here in the middle |
|
|
50:30 | a pandemic online, we know that didn't happen. And that's not going |
|
|
50:36 | happen. And, uh, in way, I'm glad, Uh, |
|
|
50:42 | some ways, you know, I we could get more energy out of |
|
|
50:46 | resource with less of a carbon And, of course, again, |
|
|
50:53 | everything else, we can do We just have to put energy and |
|
|
50:57 | into it. Okay. And here's is kind of Ah, a couple |
|
|
51:05 | projections and I just like to show real quick. It's kind of |
|
|
51:10 | in a sense, but they have scenarios. And of course, in |
|
|
51:14 | scenario, we won't reach peak oil 2047 according to this, and this |
|
|
51:21 | came out and, uh, 2004 and this was a little bit more |
|
|
51:29 | than this one that had peak oil 2020 this one thought in the worst |
|
|
51:34 | scenario would be 20 26th and 2037 2047. Uh, depending on on |
|
|
51:41 | we could do about it again, didn't happen. And it's probably not |
|
|
51:46 | happen. And this is also where demand was. Demand wasn't even as |
|
|
51:55 | a Z a projected. Okay, here is something Here's growth in |
|
|
52:05 | Here's the base case. This is 2017, and so it looks like |
|
|
52:11 | panning out in our ability to produce and more. You know, at |
|
|
52:15 | point we will reach a plateau, so it's not crazy to think about |
|
|
52:20 | . But here, they're projecting well 2035. And this, of |
|
|
52:27 | was before what happened. Coven It is one thing. And what |
|
|
52:37 | Cova did? Covitz dropped our demand , uh, look at these |
|
|
52:43 | Here we be, uh, we I think about a year ago we |
|
|
52:47 | , like, 100 million barrels a in the world that was being |
|
|
52:53 | Now it's down around 80 something. really, what's happening now is we've |
|
|
52:58 | from a state of worrying about peak versus which is supply. But now |
|
|
53:07 | worried about in the industry. What peak demand? When is the demand |
|
|
53:11 | to peak? And we will forever the future, have more oil than |
|
|
53:18 | need Thio to actually use. So kind of what's happening right now. |
|
|
53:25 | this was made in 2017. you know, we were already seeing |
|
|
53:32 | go up. We're seeing population go , and BP does a really good |
|
|
53:37 | of putting these perspectives together. And Mobil does 12 with a little bit |
|
|
53:43 | a different flair. And through the of my slides, you're going to |
|
|
53:46 | things going, um, kind of and down because, well, they're |
|
|
53:52 | be from one company to another one it's really hard to get graphics that |
|
|
53:57 | the same every year from the same . I don't know why in pie |
|
|
54:02 | , for example, or one of best ways for people to visually see |
|
|
54:06 | of these things. So I really pie diagrams better than some of these |
|
|
54:12 | . So well, I'll be showing some pie diagrams here in a |
|
|
54:16 | But but the thing is, is we know how much we've produced. |
|
|
54:20 | know how much we are producing. have an idea of how much we're |
|
|
54:24 | online. We have sensitivities towards what cause our production to go down. |
|
|
54:31 | could cause it to go up on the same time, we could do |
|
|
54:34 | same thing with demand. And so is something from E. I. |
|
|
54:42 | . And when I give you your , you might be looking on websites |
|
|
54:48 | E I. A. But you also want to look at something with |
|
|
54:52 | A. And it's it's a little inconvenient. I hate to keep using |
|
|
54:58 | word, but the United States came with the Energy Information Administration that does |
|
|
55:04 | lot of this. And and of , uh, the world itself came |
|
|
55:11 | with the International Energy Agency, and all have the same three letters. |
|
|
55:16 | first one, the last one is a in the first one in the |
|
|
55:21 | one have switched around, but in U. S. It's the Energy |
|
|
55:24 | Administration, which is this one E . A. And the other one |
|
|
55:28 | I e. A. The International Agency. Okay, and so here's |
|
|
55:35 | what they predicted ah, few years . Here's May 2015 and they predicted |
|
|
55:46 | a gut glut in oil would end around here in 2016 and it would |
|
|
55:55 | seeing prices go back up. we started to get this separation. |
|
|
56:02 | is production in the blue and this brown to black. I don't know |
|
|
56:07 | it looks like on your screen, it should be brown. But a |
|
|
56:11 | on this side means overproduction. A on this side and this side and |
|
|
56:20 | side means under production. So the goes up in these places and here |
|
|
56:25 | can see in the bar diagram to of help you here. We're producing |
|
|
56:29 | much here. We're producing too little here. Everybody see that and trust |
|
|
56:35 | when it's close, something like a can cause prices to go up because |
|
|
56:40 | slows down the ships from moving the or other things like that. Or |
|
|
56:44 | have to shut in wells again. because this is millions of barrels a |
|
|
56:52 | . This isn't per year. This every day. We have to get |
|
|
56:55 | to refineries and to markets. And here is ah, projection in 2016 |
|
|
57:06 | the the glut gap that they had here just kept going on and |
|
|
57:15 | Did it happen there? And here's projection. You're thinking it's gonna end |
|
|
57:20 | . And we did have higher prices a while. Went up a little |
|
|
57:26 | , but now I can't see it here because I met toe close. |
|
|
57:33 | folks out here, let me see I can get control of my cursor |
|
|
57:45 | . Okay, you can see the . Now, look what's happening |
|
|
57:51 | Ah, this is for 2018. so they're kind of forecasting that it's |
|
|
57:57 | to get up the demands going to up past 100 million barrels a |
|
|
58:02 | But we know now it's not right? This is This was just |
|
|
58:07 | December 18, they came out with , okay? And so here's the |
|
|
58:16 | trend line. But here's what's gonna now and take a good look at |
|
|
58:22 | because this is really important. We We have a little bit of red |
|
|
58:29 | here. We have a little bit red over there, which we saw |
|
|
58:33 | the last chart. That glut finally , but what what's happening here? |
|
|
58:46 | in this area, drawing on So you would think that there'll be |
|
|
58:50 | press rebound way? Haven't really seen yet, but that's next year. |
|
|
58:55 | . And it hasn't come yet, and I don't know if it's gonna |
|
|
59:00 | . Exactly. Ah, at this this point, it's probably not gonna |
|
|
59:06 | here, but at some point in , we've shut in all these |
|
|
59:12 | Uh, oil companies have laid off lot of people. Um, production |
|
|
59:20 | dropped. Ah. One thing that happen and is likely to happen is |
|
|
59:27 | when it comes back, is gonna going to accelerate faster than the supply |
|
|
59:33 | . And I think right now, lot of damage is being done to |
|
|
59:38 | industry, and it's gonna be really to recover. Uh uh, something |
|
|
59:44 | would get us up to this level a long period of time. And |
|
|
59:50 | tells some people that that's bad for oil industry. But actual in actual |
|
|
59:59 | , if our ability to produce produced oversupply drops and we can't produce an |
|
|
60:06 | , we're gonna have an undersupply, we're going to see prices coming back |
|
|
60:11 | , and it may not be right , but it certainly is gonna happen |
|
|
60:15 | the in the next year. um, the way things were gone |
|
|
60:20 | now, if they simply figured out way Thio get people to feel safer |
|
|
60:26 | getting on an airplane, and there in there are filtration things and there's |
|
|
60:32 | even mass. It could drop out the ceiling to do this. I |
|
|
60:37 | somebody's thinking about it, but there be ways that they could basically encapsulate |
|
|
60:42 | the people on the plane with a amount of cost and keep the the |
|
|
60:49 | spread of infection down when people are airplanes and people would feel a little |
|
|
60:53 | safer in a little bit happier about able to move around. I certainly |
|
|
60:57 | like to go overseas as soon as myself and I think a lot of |
|
|
61:03 | are really, uh, really just wait to get back on that |
|
|
61:09 | And that will have a big too. Okay, So getting back |
|
|
61:18 | it, here's one of the things happens. The decline curves in mostly |
|
|
61:25 | wells. Look a lot like And, uh, within one |
|
|
61:30 | 69% of the production has gone. to keep the production up, you |
|
|
61:34 | to keep drilling and you have to drilling. And one thing that we |
|
|
61:37 | know is happening is a lot of sweet spots are getting drilled up in |
|
|
61:42 | of the young conventional is that we operating today. Not all of |
|
|
61:47 | of course, and there's certainly reserves there to get. But the the |
|
|
61:52 | and easy access thio ah, lot fields is starting to get a little |
|
|
61:58 | tighter if none of this other stuff happening, but because lot of drilling |
|
|
62:05 | stopped, Uh, when you have curves like this, you have to |
|
|
62:09 | drilling and drilling and drilling to keep cash flow going and going, |
|
|
62:15 | and it's And that's actually created a of jobs for engineers that actually design |
|
|
62:22 | and companies, steel companies that produce deal. Thio, uh, on |
|
|
62:30 | the supplies for liners and stuff like . So a lot of things are |
|
|
62:33 | impacted, and because all of that being put on a table, so |
|
|
62:39 | speak, it's not going to when it was when it was delayed |
|
|
62:44 | a little bit. I don't know you remember that flip that I showed |
|
|
62:48 | a few slides back when production was for a little bit. And then |
|
|
62:54 | started to get better and people came and started drilling mawr and we started |
|
|
62:58 | mawr again on we had a little of a surge there for a while |
|
|
63:02 | the price of oil got over $60 barrel, and we were able to |
|
|
63:07 | that relatively quickly because the depth of damage to our industry was not a |
|
|
63:13 | . A zit is right now. what? What is what is going |
|
|
63:18 | actually help force a, um a production of in a in a and |
|
|
63:30 | need and a reduced supply of oil fill that need is gonna be mawr |
|
|
63:39 | . Uh, the next time those cross because we can't recover as fast |
|
|
63:45 | we could the last time we did because too much damage has been done |
|
|
63:49 | our industry. And, uh, that bodes well for people that might |
|
|
63:54 | looking for a job in the near , by the way. Okay, |
|
|
64:00 | is just another one showing you some decline curves and how you know we |
|
|
64:04 | do things to get the production But but the decline curves cumulatively, |
|
|
64:11 | , are pretty sharp. And this for things that we have in the |
|
|
64:17 | . And so here we get back this thing I mentioned and somebody also |
|
|
64:23 | out population. But when when Gore us Ah, his award winning |
|
|
64:32 | uh, that actually mimic some lectures I gave in physical geology in the |
|
|
64:38 | 2000. Um, because they're actually and two because that's when I started |
|
|
64:44 | again. One of the things that overlooked was this this population growth |
|
|
64:51 | And it's pretty scary. Uh, you look at it and and, |
|
|
64:59 | course, dollars air going up in . But yes, if you if |
|
|
65:04 | go back, I mean folks, I was when I was when I |
|
|
65:14 | your age, there was about four people on this planet, and now |
|
|
65:20 | we're getting Thio eight billion and and it hasn't been that long. |
|
|
65:27 | mean, my lifetime is very insignificant you consider the growth rate of people |
|
|
65:33 | this planet, and but in terms numbers of people during the time I've |
|
|
65:40 | alive. That's been explosive, and just I don't see that as a |
|
|
65:45 | . And I think anytime anyone talks sustainability and again as individuals, we |
|
|
65:51 | to mention this to people. But you talk about sustainability, um, |
|
|
65:57 | someone doesn't mention population and this a touchy subject, you know, no |
|
|
66:03 | wants to be told you can't have Children, and I don't know how |
|
|
66:08 | will ever work. That will be , Drago, Nian and, |
|
|
66:12 | But until the world realizes that we just keep reproducing at the rate we |
|
|
66:20 | , uh, it's going to be serious problem. And all the other |
|
|
66:24 | of sustainability are really insignificant compared to . And one of the most frightening |
|
|
66:32 | for me to think about is And that's another thing that people that |
|
|
66:38 | worried about sustainability because they have this , that we can grow crops and |
|
|
66:48 | we go to 10 billion people. , when you have more people living |
|
|
66:56 | the planet, you have to have concentrated agricultural places. Uh, that |
|
|
67:05 | have to transport those products, and lot of wasted happens when you have |
|
|
67:10 | do that. Now you get to personal level. People can grow their |
|
|
67:15 | vegetables. And if that happens, will help a lot. But the |
|
|
67:20 | and larger and over more overpopulated our get, the more likely we're gonna |
|
|
67:28 | these centers of population that need to fed by massive farm systems that in |
|
|
67:35 | create more waste in a greater carbon than people want. So sustainability will |
|
|
67:43 | be really addressed until population control is . And it's a horrible thing to |
|
|
67:49 | . It's a horrible thing to because back here when I was growing |
|
|
67:53 | in high school and reading about 1980 the idea of people controlling something like |
|
|
67:59 | was horrific. But now that we're here and in my lifetime, the |
|
|
68:05 | of people on the planet's doubled, , there's very few people that can |
|
|
68:09 | that outside of our generations. so population is the problem. Is |
|
|
68:18 | true that Sorry, I don't mean . Um, isn't it true that |
|
|
68:24 | countries nations, peoples become more developed actually their population rate of change goes |
|
|
68:30 | down? For example, Japan. , yes and no and and that's |
|
|
68:38 | problem. The population is distributed in places. Um, I mean, |
|
|
68:44 | know what you're saying, and people go to college tend to have less |
|
|
68:49 | 10 Children. And, uh and I'm not saying that Negative. There's |
|
|
68:56 | wrong with people having 10 Children if want, but, uh, from |
|
|
69:00 | moral perspective, But when we think population, it's a it's it's really |
|
|
69:09 | mean, this is 2000 and and, you know, we're already |
|
|
69:13 | here. We're we have skyrocketed and , you know, it's just, |
|
|
69:25 | know, disease. The spread of is showing its ugly face right now |
|
|
69:30 | than anything, and that could have positive, unfortunately positive effect on on |
|
|
69:37 | control. Mm one. Really? imagine if Ebola got into the United |
|
|
69:44 | with with nobody following the guidelines that were given, that would have been |
|
|
69:51 | , and it's a good thing that happen. And and there may may |
|
|
69:58 | be something as bad as Ebola, worse than co vid that comes |
|
|
70:04 | and if we're not prepared for it's going to be It could also |
|
|
70:09 | one of these things, too. even when we do this, you |
|
|
70:12 | , we're still talking about a lot people, you know, Here's 2020 |
|
|
70:18 | we're right. We're right at eight right now. So we're not falling |
|
|
70:23 | like this yet. And eso were on the red curve, as far |
|
|
70:28 | I can tell. And, it is, you know, nature |
|
|
70:35 | that way. It has natural controls competition and disease. And, |
|
|
70:41 | competition between species and disease often are ends up controlling populations. But I |
|
|
70:48 | , uh, we are very, clever species, especially the people in |
|
|
70:54 | classroom, and we can solve a of problems, and it's that help |
|
|
71:01 | in the short term. But in long term, we may be causing |
|
|
71:05 | significant problems than we realize. And something about agriculture, and it contributes |
|
|
71:12 | a third of entropy Anthropogenic co two . When I first put this up |
|
|
71:19 | in 2012, people thought I was and a little bit I thought I |
|
|
71:25 | kind of crazy to about this, , um, it makes a lot |
|
|
71:30 | sense, but it's part of the budget that a lot of people pay |
|
|
71:34 | attention, Thio. You can sue companies, but you can't sue |
|
|
71:41 | That's a political known of but And is something else that I found really |
|
|
71:48 | when the BP oil spill happened. , and we were hearing, |
|
|
71:54 | people from M I t. And very well known universities make statements. |
|
|
71:59 | was obvious that most of them didn't what a natural seat waas or that |
|
|
72:05 | were natural seats for that. There a lot of oil that naturally seeps |
|
|
72:13 | the Gulf of Mexico without anybody ever an oil well, And part of |
|
|
72:19 | reason is anytime organic material is And I'm glad, Uh, Dr |
|
|
72:29 | is not listening to me because I explain. This is complicated, as |
|
|
72:33 | would on go through a couple of cycles to explain it. But the |
|
|
72:40 | and bolts of it are whenever whenever turn the soil over, you re |
|
|
72:46 | release co 202 and and of sometimes you bury it when you overturn |
|
|
72:54 | . But at the same time, releasing co two and 02 in the |
|
|
72:59 | , and also transpiration releases water from plants. What is the number one |
|
|
73:08 | Gas Co. Two, of is the one way seem Thio, |
|
|
73:14 | think, rightfully focus on it, it's it's not the only greenhouse gas |
|
|
73:18 | be worried about. And, and the more feels that we have |
|
|
73:23 | grow like this, the more we're to be releasing just to keep the |
|
|
73:28 | fed. And, uh, have of you ever driven by a cabbage |
|
|
73:35 | ? Ah, a couple of weeks harvest time. You know, in |
|
|
73:46 | you don't have these things. But Virginia, where we have lots of |
|
|
73:49 | we call truck farms that have vegetables stuff, you know, other than |
|
|
73:54 | and wheat Ah, one of the that you notice, uh, in |
|
|
73:59 | lot of the vegetable fields is, , the stench of eso to sulfur |
|
|
74:07 | . And of course, that means rotting. And when everything rots, |
|
|
74:11 | is the bacteria producing and emitting into atmosphere? Besides just sulfur dioxide, |
|
|
74:22 | admitting a lot of CO two and methane you can't smell, but if |
|
|
74:27 | can smell the s 02 you can rest assured that a lot of methane |
|
|
74:33 | being put into the atmosphere at that in time. And so a lot |
|
|
74:37 | people don't think about this. And , like these folks at MIT, |
|
|
74:43 | of them did not appear to realize just algae, all those phytoplankton |
|
|
74:52 | And now a lot of them we call algae. We call them cyanobacteria |
|
|
74:58 | things like that because we've reclassified But all of the fighter plankton that |
|
|
75:04 | and ends up on the ocean floor to rot, and it on the |
|
|
75:11 | begins to produce Methane and Co the surface of the ocean and stuff |
|
|
75:16 | the ocean column. A zit and there are places offshore, |
|
|
75:25 | the Mississippi River, where he fluent our fertilizer going offshore creates incredible blooms |
|
|
75:32 | the death of all those fighter plankton actually created dead zones out in the |
|
|
75:37 | of Mexico, where absolutely nothing can because, ah, oxygen's depleted. |
|
|
75:45 | you just have these co two uh, anaerobic bacteria, uh, |
|
|
75:53 | things. And so agriculture is not small thing. Uh, 30% of |
|
|
76:00 | footprint is a significant amount of our . Okay, so, yes. |
|
|
76:11 | what else besides burning hydrocarbons started with industrial revolution. Large scale in my |
|
|
76:28 | . Okay, Yeah, we did . But when we're burning hydrocarbons, |
|
|
76:34 | worry about Well, you know, do release a lot of methane, |
|
|
76:37 | a lot of times we flare So when we burn hydrocarbons, you |
|
|
76:42 | when we're producing energy way, create two ah, in the production part |
|
|
76:50 | it. But also in the utilization it. Ah, you know, |
|
|
76:54 | we're using it in our cars and and planes, we're putting co two |
|
|
76:58 | the air. But around 18. you know, we started. We |
|
|
77:04 | trains and stuff like that, And so we're burning coal were burning |
|
|
77:09 | . We're building plants that have steam engines. Ah, but once |
|
|
77:16 | stand, we started making these things tractors and stuff like that. |
|
|
77:21 | What else did mankind do right around . 49. And, um, |
|
|
77:27 | isn't the first time they did but when did it really start getting |
|
|
77:32 | ? I mean, in 1949 it . It's one other thing that actually |
|
|
77:37 | to do with a greenhouse gas. this is this is what I mean |
|
|
77:46 | paying attention to data. Uh, ? Industrial farming, not farming like |
|
|
77:55 | cattle. Well, industrial farming, . But here's what happened. |
|
|
78:03 | if you pulled your slides up, would have had the answer. I'm |
|
|
78:07 | you didn't pull it up, but McCann mechanized agriculture and irrigation at the |
|
|
78:13 | time. And so this more mechanized is doing this kind of thing. |
|
|
78:20 | course it took It took until about 19 hundreds for that to really take |
|
|
78:24 | . But at the same time, also started this thing called Irrigation. |
|
|
78:30 | most of this really started, in the 20th century. But it |
|
|
78:37 | getting started then and and, uh of course, in the 19 twenties |
|
|
78:42 | thirties, we started building lots of and started impounding water on. |
|
|
78:51 | one of things that ah lot of have said is that, um |
|
|
79:00 | let me explain this before I get that. Ah, h 20 is |
|
|
79:09 | one of the most important greenhouse But after I seats, groundwater is |
|
|
79:15 | second largest courts. And, what did we start doing? |
|
|
79:21 | in the industrial revolution was we started put pipes in the ground and produce |
|
|
79:26 | to irrigate into we put these little do you call them? Tall, |
|
|
79:33 | Zehr. You know these windmills there in Texas all over the place and |
|
|
79:38 | water out of the out of the and getting into the surface atmosphere, |
|
|
79:47 | of water. And, uh so kind of kind of what started to |
|
|
79:52 | in this empowerment really started in the hundreds. And the mechanization, |
|
|
79:57 | in the 19 twenties and 19 thirties farming got to be really big. |
|
|
80:03 | so now a lot of it. looked at mechanization and we look at |
|
|
80:08 | , but the production of oil really start around 1900 either. So so |
|
|
80:13 | lot of this stuff a to the time that were burning hydrocarbons. We |
|
|
80:19 | started doing mawr with agriculture in the of irrigation by putting taking water out |
|
|
80:27 | the ground and storing water on the . In other words, keeping more |
|
|
80:31 | it in the surface atmosphere, And what does that do when you |
|
|
80:37 | more water on the surface? More water on the surface? What does |
|
|
80:42 | do to the the overall amount of vapor in the atmosphere it operates |
|
|
80:52 | it raises it. In other we get more. We get mawr |
|
|
80:57 | gas. Uh uh. Due to that extra water that we've pulled out |
|
|
81:03 | the ground, it's been sequestered in ground as groundwater. Now we've pulled |
|
|
81:08 | out. Not only that, when rains, uh, to prevent flooding |
|
|
81:14 | to have water for water, sources drinking sources and irrigation we've been pounded |
|
|
81:21 | so less makes it to the We have thes large broad fresh water |
|
|
81:28 | on the surface. Uh, that quicker. Fresh water evaporates quicker than |
|
|
81:33 | water that what are used to drain the ocean or permeate back down into |
|
|
81:39 | ground. Uh and so we, , we weren't really keeping it on |
|
|
81:45 | surface and we didn't keep it in reservoir. You go to the |
|
|
81:49 | There's plenty of water in the but it's saltwater, and it doesn't |
|
|
81:53 | as quickly. And so overall, input of water to the atmosphere in |
|
|
82:02 | of absolute, uh, amounts of vapor and in droplets. Unfortunately, |
|
|
82:11 | been looking for years and you might look, but I haven't seen very |
|
|
82:16 | studies say anything other than we This is an important area to |
|
|
82:22 | But we need to do more, on it. And, uh, |
|
|
82:26 | it bother you that green that the one greenhouse gas on the planet is |
|
|
82:35 | ? It's not CO two, and we're not studying water, and and |
|
|
82:43 | don't understand that at all. But maybe when you do this little |
|
|
82:48 | I give you maybe somebody, we'll some information I haven't been able to |
|
|
82:52 | . Nobody consume the earth. That's nobody can what to the earth. |
|
|
82:58 | , You can't do that either, you? And and of course, |
|
|
83:04 | you can't see the Earth and who's to fund it? But, |
|
|
83:08 | but anyway, here's in the next . Whether is has been and |
|
|
83:11 | we will always be the number one gas on this planet, and the |
|
|
83:16 | could be over 100 times that of two. Most scientists say what is |
|
|
83:22 | by the temperature and water does not temperature. And that is in part |
|
|
83:27 | , of course, because as temperature up, uh, it can, |
|
|
83:34 | , air can hold more water vapor when temperature goes down. and holds |
|
|
83:40 | water vapor. So that does control . However, Imagine being in a |
|
|
83:45 | and, uh, temperatures going But what's the relative humidity? It's |
|
|
83:52 | or two or 25 or some low . Um, so unless water vapor |
|
|
83:58 | always at 100% uh, it's That is not the absolute controlled temperature |
|
|
84:04 | not the absolute control of how much vapor we have in the atmosphere. |
|
|
84:10 | of water vapor is also important. the more fresh water we have in |
|
|
84:16 | lakes and the more freshwater we pull of the ground and throw into the |
|
|
84:21 | when we water, you know, of time when we irrigate, most |
|
|
84:25 | that water goes into the atmosphere. , of course, then it |
|
|
84:28 | But point I'm trying to make Is what our source is in that water |
|
|
84:35 | that we call the surface and atmosphere volume? And nobody has figured out |
|
|
84:41 | way to figure out how much that's . Now they are doing some of |
|
|
84:45 | with satellites, and they're starting to that it's definitely going up, but |
|
|
84:51 | one has gotten enough information as far I can tell to make a real |
|
|
84:55 | thing. And again, I think you stop and think, you |
|
|
85:01 | When did this problem of climate change start? Did it really start when |
|
|
85:07 | started producing lots of oil and Or did it really start when we |
|
|
85:11 | lots of oil and gas and irrigation mechanized agriculture? You know what are |
|
|
85:18 | are all the factors? One of worst things you could do with seismic |
|
|
85:23 | geological data is focused on one One variable when there's 56 or seven |
|
|
85:31 | have a role and in some a major role and the outcomes of |
|
|
85:37 | those variables air doing, whether they're up or down. And we know |
|
|
85:41 | her vapor, uh is the number greenhouse gas on this planet always has |
|
|
85:47 | , and we're not studying it. is really seriously studying it right |
|
|
85:52 | As far as I can tell I'm sure there's at least two places |
|
|
85:55 | the world you have not 10 that are looking at it. But the |
|
|
85:59 | and the research is not getting out the limelight. Okay? So because |
|
|
86:05 | of these things required and and I'm know it sounds like I'm on a |
|
|
86:10 | , but I'm not really trying to this is the thing we need to |
|
|
86:14 | on. But I'm saying that this something that he could have a major |
|
|
86:19 | , and we are ignoring it. just, like ignoring the temperature increase |
|
|
86:26 | work, uh, climate change itself ignore that is a risky thing. |
|
|
86:32 | to ignore the impacts or the variables air causing that to happen is very |
|
|
86:39 | as well. Because if we don't at all the variables, we may |
|
|
86:44 | to fix the problem focused on one when it turns out that variable is |
|
|
86:50 | as important as we thought, it waas. And for all of these |
|
|
86:54 | , you will find out that um co two going up does correlate |
|
|
86:59 | temperature. What a vapor Going up correlate with temperature. Ah, temperature |
|
|
87:08 | up does correlate with mechanized agriculture. but correlation does not equal the |
|
|
87:16 | And so we have to be very about how we evaluate decent. |
|
|
87:22 | so let's take a break now Before get onto this next section, it's |
|
|
87:27 | almost a now and a half. if I can figure out how toe |
|
|
87:31 | these controls on this, uh, just paused this share. Everybody is |
|
|
87:56 | there. Mhm. You're all Mhm. Now I need to figure |
|
|
88:06 | where my recorder went. Can you hear me? Yes. Yeah, |
|
|
88:23 | . Well, she's let me see I could do something here. There |
|
|
88:55 | go. I had to stop I couldn't pause sharing. And now |
|
|
89:00 | gonna pause. Can result. This isn't too complicated, but you |
|
|
89:07 | to figure it out. And that's wrong. That's the wrong lecture. |
|
|
89:26 | . Okay, now I need to my screen again. See everybody. |
|
|
89:40 | that? Yes. Okay, so many? How much energy do we |
|
|
89:46 | and what are the sources? So know climate change is an issue. |
|
|
89:53 | know disease is an issue we know an issue. Right now, supply |
|
|
90:01 | seem to be an issue at but that's not going to stay the |
|
|
90:05 | forever. And so what we're gonna at now is is you know, |
|
|
90:10 | , how much energy does the planet ? And when asking that question or |
|
|
90:17 | that question, we also need to about the fact that, um with |
|
|
90:25 | , the population is still really going considerably significant. It's almost log |
|
|
90:37 | Okay, So what I thought we focus on here is, uh, |
|
|
90:43 | terms of energy consumption in exit. and I put this down here because |
|
|
90:50 | when I give this lecture, I people I don't know what an exit |
|
|
90:54 | is, but I know it's a of energy, but I put this |
|
|
90:57 | here so that I consumed, almost I know what I'm talking about. |
|
|
91:02 | 277.78 terawatt hours, and if we across the globe at, I've actually |
|
|
91:13 | this diagram down because it had a more countries on it. But I |
|
|
91:17 | , Ah, if I put the 10 or so, that would be |
|
|
91:24 | enough. And I brought the scale in so you can see right now |
|
|
91:33 | China is actually the biggest user of right now. And, you |
|
|
91:38 | 20 years ago, it was not years ago. It was not developed |
|
|
91:46 | much as it is now, but population is definitely growing. And I |
|
|
91:54 | that addresses some of the some of concerns about population growth and the fact |
|
|
92:02 | it's it is getting very significant. , but here in the US, |
|
|
92:11 | , our consumption there's 94.65 jewels. exit Jules and I can't really tell |
|
|
92:22 | how much that is, but it's lot of energy. And, |
|
|
92:26 | liquid energy is only one form of energy that we use. And I |
|
|
92:35 | used this slide the first time I . Or maybe the it looks like |
|
|
92:40 | at the it's copyright in 2005. would have been about the actually the |
|
|
92:46 | time I taught, uh, freshman , cause I used to teach at |
|
|
92:52 | twice a year. Now I only graduate courses, and petroleum geology is |
|
|
93:00 | upper level undergraduate course. But this a nice little couple of pie diagrams |
|
|
93:09 | can see here. Petroleum's really big gas is big. Coal is big |
|
|
93:16 | powers. 8% all of renewal. is 6% now. What's significant about |
|
|
93:25 | renewable energy is everybody goes, wow. You know, we're gonna |
|
|
93:29 | we have to do is grow this we'll be able to replace all of |
|
|
93:35 | . Okay, if we could just can just grow enough renewable energy and |
|
|
93:40 | enough renewable energy. We can replace of this hydrocarbon based energy source. |
|
|
93:49 | , here they're telling you they've only 6%. But when you think about |
|
|
93:53 | , 50% of that at this point time was biomass. Biomass, which |
|
|
94:00 | bio fuels, burns high burns and creates hydrocarbons. Uh, creates. |
|
|
94:09 | me. It burns hydrocarbons, and creates co two. So only 3% |
|
|
94:15 | all of this in in 2000 and , which is when this is supposed |
|
|
94:22 | have been like, if you get in 2005, it will never have |
|
|
94:27 | because we don't know what the numbers for 2005 and usually takes them a |
|
|
94:32 | to figure out what, the year that Waas. So a lot of |
|
|
94:36 | , it's 2000 and five. You not be able to get really |
|
|
94:40 | uh, any later than 2003, in 2000 and one, this was |
|
|
94:49 | situation as it was then. So only a third of the Reno half |
|
|
94:57 | the renewable resource is or 3% of total that we need just in the |
|
|
95:02 | States, Uh, is carbon Okay, so then we look the |
|
|
95:12 | slide, and this is we go 2016. Okay, If you look |
|
|
95:22 | at here 6% 11 years later are from 2000 and one rather 15 years |
|
|
95:38 | , renewable energy has gone from 6% 10% in its attempt to replace all |
|
|
95:47 | this. Okay. And again, less than half. So they're doing |
|
|
95:58 | here. So out of this 10% 5% of it is actually has a |
|
|
96:11 | footprint, and only a little over of it is carbon neutral. And |
|
|
96:18 | , in 15 years we've gone let me put the laser pointer on |
|
|
96:24 | . In 15 years, we've gone 3% to 5.4% carbon neutral, which |
|
|
96:35 | 2.4% increase, or a 0.16% increase year. Now, um, let |
|
|
96:46 | just ask anyone in the room. you feel like we're winning the |
|
|
96:51 | Uh, to replace all of this . Just imagine how maney wind farms |
|
|
96:59 | maney solar farms. How many Um and so on have been built |
|
|
97:10 | those in those 15 years, not in China and the United States, |
|
|
97:16 | all over the world. And when you hear people talk about the contribution |
|
|
97:25 | of those systems, they tell you times not in how much is |
|
|
97:32 | but they talk about capacity. We the capacity to provide all the electricity |
|
|
97:41 | that city. We have the capacity provide the electricity for these two cities |
|
|
97:47 | these three cities. But the capacity not what they can produce, usually |
|
|
97:54 | especially solar and wind because of day night. And because when changes, |
|
|
98:06 | in the best case scenario capacity producing 30% is pretty much the highest level |
|
|
98:15 | been able to achieve up to this in time. So if, uh |
|
|
98:21 | you were compared to a nuclear if if nuclear reactors were like windmills |
|
|
98:30 | solar farms, then it would take nuclear reactors to produce the energy that |
|
|
98:37 | out of one of them. And there's no way that that is not |
|
|
98:43 | expensive and and it's also the reason Ah, as we're doing this. |
|
|
98:53 | have to remember that when when that is not being utilized, we have |
|
|
98:59 | have a backup. And of natural gas is a good backup, |
|
|
99:04 | companies and power companies know this. so they've been building a lot of |
|
|
99:08 | gas power plants to back up the and the solar. And let me |
|
|
99:13 | clear about one thing. I don't anything against solar or wind energy, |
|
|
99:19 | what I worry about, what I about is Theobald iti to scale it |
|
|
99:25 | at the rate at which we want scale it up. I don't I |
|
|
99:28 | actually think it's even possible, but think everybody's effort to try to scale |
|
|
99:35 | up as fast as they can I is well worth the effort. The |
|
|
99:40 | is that it's not being delivered, , as quickly as we would like |
|
|
99:47 | see it happen, and, when I've given public's talks about |
|
|
99:53 | I always point out that I'm neither or against alternate sources. I'm actually |
|
|
100:00 | all sources of energy, to be in a responsible manner and to be |
|
|
100:06 | the best way we can use Given the capacity and the production rates |
|
|
100:11 | we have, And that's what I we all have to think about. |
|
|
100:15 | in the oil industry. We still to be grateful that there is a |
|
|
100:19 | in a wind energy system because the needs it. We also need to |
|
|
100:26 | good that this thing over here, natural gas, can produce the same |
|
|
100:33 | of energy as coal and petroleum and half the carbon footprint. Just imagine |
|
|
100:40 | someone said all of a sudden you reduce the carbon footprint by 50%. |
|
|
100:45 | can do that with natural gas. of the sneaky lies, though, |
|
|
100:50 | things about petroleum and natural gas is we still flare a lot and and |
|
|
100:57 | still have a lot of what seemed be minor leagues. But they |
|
|
101:02 | uh, across the globe. And that's the stewardship thing, the personal |
|
|
101:09 | corporate responsibility that we need to try do everything we can to make that |
|
|
101:17 | footprint, Uh, that we with petroleum and natural gas as small |
|
|
101:22 | possible to even further reduce the carbon that oil and gas is actually |
|
|
101:29 | So there's a lot of work we do, and there's a lot of |
|
|
101:32 | they could do with solar and But the job is definitely not done |
|
|
101:37 | it won't be done for the next years. I don't think if even |
|
|
101:42 | But, you know, we could a major breakthrough. But at this |
|
|
101:45 | in time, after looking at these , I find it hard to consider |
|
|
101:54 | something like that could even happen. here I got to 2019. |
|
|
102:00 | So from 2016 to 2019, we've from 10% to 11% renewable. And |
|
|
102:10 | listening to me right now and myself well, we know that China and |
|
|
102:16 | States have really been putting a lot . And even the state of |
|
|
102:20 | by the way, has been putting lot into wind farms and solar |
|
|
102:25 | And this thing called hydro electric and a look back here. Hydro electric |
|
|
102:31 | 24 it Z now down to 22 of that 11% and courses this pie |
|
|
102:44 | . Ah, One of the good we're seeing is that biomass over here |
|
|
102:49 | dropped to 43% of that 11% so we're getting getting a little bit better |
|
|
102:56 | getting this. And could anyone in class tell me why anybody thinks that |
|
|
103:07 | are good? And why are they trees? Air? Pretty reliable, |
|
|
103:19 | . Okay, well, they are , right? The key is for |
|
|
103:25 | is they do fall in the category renewable, and they help people say |
|
|
103:30 | they have 11% renewable energy. but but this renewable energy is not |
|
|
103:39 | the carbon footprint at all. Does , Uh, does anybody in the |
|
|
103:44 | know why we started to do biomass and bio fuels and a lot of |
|
|
103:53 | companies? This is this is kind Ah, hiccup to me. I |
|
|
103:57 | quite understand it, but if you biofuels, you get carbon credits if |
|
|
104:03 | go toe a carbon tax system, biofuels air not saving on the carbon |
|
|
104:11 | . Uh, the whole reason why , uh, is being pushed, |
|
|
104:19 | they try to get it to have trying to grow it back. Several |
|
|
104:22 | companies, they're saying they're gonna be zero because they're gonna goto biofuels. |
|
|
104:27 | that's not just not going to be case. Uh, the whole reason |
|
|
104:31 | were doing this gets back to the part of our lecture because we thought |
|
|
104:38 | oil was a really thing, that were going to run out of |
|
|
104:42 | People thought, Well, we have renewable way to create hydrocarbons, and |
|
|
104:49 | called this biomass production. The recycling probably, uh, could help the |
|
|
104:57 | footprint. I'm not sure, but other ones definitely do not. Burning |
|
|
105:00 | doesn't help at all. Biofuels are same way. Putting alcohol in your |
|
|
105:06 | doesn't reduce the amount of co And so we have, uh, |
|
|
105:15 | issue with this, uh, in of if peak oil isn't gonna |
|
|
105:21 | There's absolutely no reason to really focus biomass or growing having farms of growing |
|
|
105:28 | amounts of algae that, by the , while the algae is growing that |
|
|
105:32 | going to convert toe oil is gonna a carbon footprint converting algae to hydrocarbons |
|
|
105:39 | we can use. This fuel will a carbon footprint. And then when |
|
|
105:43 | actually burn those hydrocarbons, they will a footprint. So it really, |
|
|
105:49 | it makes almost no sense to me anybody else is having ideas. But |
|
|
105:54 | the last three years, we've gone that 5.4% to 6.27% co two |
|
|
106:05 | which is a 0.87 increase. And almost a third of a percent Uh |
|
|
106:13 | , per year over over that period time. And I'm not sure, |
|
|
106:17 | the math doesn't look right. Mhm should be. Um it should be |
|
|
106:24 | third of the 0.87 So I guess got excited about my calculator last night |
|
|
106:31 | made something wrong, but I think gonna be a little bit less than |
|
|
106:35 | . But again, the problem is that as we put a lot of |
|
|
106:41 | , money and effort into this, again I agree is something we need |
|
|
106:46 | do. Ah, we're still not the war against this. And I |
|
|
106:55 | the reason why this one up is year, we've We've gone up a |
|
|
107:01 | bit. Mawr. Uh, then were in the previous years, |
|
|
107:10 | And that's because we've been investing more . So here is one of those |
|
|
107:17 | energy supplies. One vision and you see here around 2020. Oil was |
|
|
107:23 | to drop off, and I believe dark green is heavy. Oil and |
|
|
107:29 | gas was going to drop off. is almost completely disappeared, so this |
|
|
107:33 | all completely wrong. This was predicted 1997. Solar, wind and geothermal |
|
|
107:46 | are not there. What? They be here, but we come back |
|
|
107:50 | 2020. They're still very small, it started before 2020. And the |
|
|
107:57 | rate is really, really small. don't know how they're going to get |
|
|
108:01 | kind of expansive growth rate that they . Hydro Electric, You know, |
|
|
108:06 | only so many dams. Uh, many rivers that weaken, dam up |
|
|
108:12 | damming up rivers is also not an or or landscape or let's see lakes |
|
|
108:20 | nice. But if your house happens be where the lake is now, |
|
|
108:24 | not so nice to the people where they flood millions of acres of land |
|
|
108:30 | people happen to have cities in the of those reservoirs. So that's a |
|
|
108:35 | thing. A nuclear power, a scary and as dangerous as it |
|
|
108:44 | and the fact that we still don't how to ah safely store a lot |
|
|
108:51 | the waste. Ah, as faras footprint. This could produce as much |
|
|
108:59 | as we needed if we if we to it and it would have a |
|
|
109:04 | carbon footprint. So in my of anything really challenges, uh, |
|
|
109:11 | , natural gas and coal combined, going to be nuclear power. And |
|
|
109:17 | that's just based on the technology that have today. I think these things |
|
|
109:21 | going to continue to grow. But don't see this massive expansion Ah, |
|
|
109:28 | the near future. Because if if really what we've done is we've put |
|
|
109:36 | somewhere around here on the curve and not seeing it expand like that. |
|
|
109:44 | what you see here, here, got you know, you've only |
|
|
109:50 | um, 5.4% going to 6.27% and, uh, and that just |
|
|
110:00 | that much in three years. And and here's another. Another way |
|
|
110:08 | looking at it. And And this talking about primary energy. Not this |
|
|
110:14 | an energy. This isn't, power generation. Power generation or producing |
|
|
110:20 | is only one source, But you see here, um, they have |
|
|
110:28 | , uh, at 20%. You can see here says 2035. |
|
|
110:37 | renewables actually are higher than that. the carbon footprint is not getting a |
|
|
110:44 | of the renewables. And it's only of that. And we are up |
|
|
110:50 | around 11% already at 2020 we're up here, but we aren't getting that |
|
|
110:56 | benefit of the renewables. In other , reducing this a T expense of |
|
|
111:04 | is that we're only getting half of benefit because biomass is still close to |
|
|
111:10 | . We can see that natural gas going up. Cole, Um, |
|
|
111:15 | the later diagrams is gonna creator, an oil still hasn't fallen down like |
|
|
111:20 | . And this was done in And, uh, here, you |
|
|
111:26 | see. Uh, this is a that just talks about power generation, |
|
|
111:31 | is producing electricity. And you can that, uh, for producing electricity |
|
|
111:38 | is gonna is predicted to phase completely cold, for some reason, is |
|
|
111:44 | a major player. Um, natural has gotten bigger and stayed big. |
|
|
111:50 | has shrunk and stayed the same. renewables come in here in high growth |
|
|
111:56 | falling down. But again, as can see, we're not even if |
|
|
112:01 | go to 2035 on here, we completely replaced, uh, and |
|
|
112:07 | only half the renewables. Or let's say it's 60% of the renewables are |
|
|
112:14 | have a zero carbon footprint. So oil is still gonna have to play |
|
|
112:19 | major role in this because coal is . Uh, almost completely right |
|
|
112:25 | even though it was supposed to have big boom, Uh, Cole is |
|
|
112:29 | completely gone. Okay. And, , and looking at, uh, |
|
|
112:36 | , uh, the demand and growth can see here. This was in |
|
|
112:42 | . We thought things were going to keep going up. And does anybody |
|
|
112:46 | what the non combust? It ISS anybody there? What doesn't What? |
|
|
113:00 | combust but provides power? Don't Okay, well, it Z |
|
|
113:06 | this is liquids demand. And, , so remember the, uh, |
|
|
113:19 | generation right here is purple. but liquids air demanded for all sorts |
|
|
113:29 | other things, like powering the insides buildings, industry ships, planes, |
|
|
113:36 | , trucks and cars. More of is going to go to electricity, |
|
|
113:40 | look at what they have here in is a projection of power and power |
|
|
113:49 | power generation equals electricity and renewables is just a small part of that and |
|
|
113:58 | half the renewables, while 60% of are going to be carbon free and |
|
|
114:02 | still in terms of our overall demand liquids, power is right. There |
|
|
114:09 | that little thing right there. And rest of it's going to be this |
|
|
114:14 | , if if we, um if take cars and trucks off the |
|
|
114:20 | we're going to need to create more this power. If we have to |
|
|
114:24 | more power to power the cars and we're gonna have, we don't have |
|
|
114:33 | renewables to do it. We're gonna toe pump up. We've taken the |
|
|
114:37 | out, we're gonna have to put more oil. And there's just no |
|
|
114:41 | around it. I don't see. mean, you know, it's you |
|
|
114:45 | imagine a world you want, but don't see how you're going to eliminate |
|
|
114:51 | with this kind of transport demand that having. And during the point out |
|
|
114:56 | during the, uh, the cove 19 thing, we found out that |
|
|
115:02 | lot of people are buying things on and all of that is being transported |
|
|
115:07 | by large trucks and small trucks. is trying to go electric, |
|
|
115:14 | uh, that's gonna be a major to And I think, ah, |
|
|
115:21 | Tesla, we've seen issues with battery keeping up with car production. And |
|
|
115:26 | think when we get the bigger trucks bigger, bigger cars and more trucks |
|
|
115:30 | more cars, we're gonna have more with getting the materials for rapid battery |
|
|
115:35 | . But maybe we won't. But , if we take, we take |
|
|
115:40 | out of this. Uh, we're have to put more liquids in the |
|
|
115:44 | mix because renewables is just not going handle the job for power generation. |
|
|
115:54 | . And and here's, um, thing, um and of course, |
|
|
116:02 | asked a question about non combusted. combusted Use of liquids is going to |
|
|
116:08 | plastics. Things like plastics. In words, you're not burning it, |
|
|
116:12 | you're using the liquid. So it's of the liquid demand. And because |
|
|
116:25 | gas is 50 to 60% co two less compared to other fluids like oil |
|
|
116:33 | definitely coal, which isn't a Um, this is ah really important |
|
|
116:39 | for people to realize if, one of our atmospheric guys it now |
|
|
116:48 | with the U. S. Um um, on such issues, |
|
|
116:55 | said that, uh, just switching lot of the power plants in the |
|
|
116:59 | States a few years ago from from to natural gas made us reduce our |
|
|
117:08 | footprint by more than the Paris Accord was asking for us to do. |
|
|
117:12 | changed a little bit since then because kind of leveled out. But when |
|
|
117:16 | first started replacing coal power plants with two, the carbon footprint coming from |
|
|
117:23 | United States dramatically dropped over like a year period. And, of |
|
|
117:28 | with less things being burned right now it's dropped off significantly as well. |
|
|
117:36 | , so I think what I'm trying point I'm trying to get across to |
|
|
117:40 | is that in spite of all of good intentions, this is not growing |
|
|
117:48 | enough in any shape or form to all of this demand for liquids because |
|
|
118:02 | this is predicted, this has already into consideration the contribution here from renewables |
|
|
118:12 | most of where these renewables go, , electric, solar and wind are |
|
|
118:18 | going into power generation. They are into power generation, and so is |
|
|
118:24 | , for the most part. So it or not, that's the way |
|
|
118:34 | ISS, and and the industry that in is going to need to continue |
|
|
118:41 | provide. These resource is for our to even survive, much less |
|
|
118:51 | Okay, so let's take another look just a little bit of detail, |
|
|
118:56 | I think it's interesting, because people realize this because almost no one looks |
|
|
119:00 | this kind of stuff but trying to CO two free and greener. What |
|
|
119:06 | we have? We have nuclear, a lot of people think is a |
|
|
119:10 | no. We have hydro electric. electric has two issues. One |
|
|
119:18 | um it creates really need places to skiing, boats, boating and skiing |
|
|
119:23 | fishing and stuff. But it is on the city's did it drowns so |
|
|
119:28 | can't keep building hydro electric plants. it also depends on a lot of |
|
|
119:34 | electric generation throughout the world depends on and rainfall, and there have been |
|
|
119:43 | issues there. Ah, geothermal is of untapped, but it's very expensive |
|
|
119:50 | what I understand. Uh, we're gonna look a couple of charts |
|
|
119:58 | . I'll point out there was a when, uh, the wind in |
|
|
120:02 | was was so low in general overall a whole year that I think |
|
|
120:09 | there, ah, kept their Their actual production that was consumed. |
|
|
120:14 | amount of electricity they were able to was like 10% of their capacity. |
|
|
120:19 | that was a really bad year for and then then solar. If you |
|
|
120:25 | lots of cloud cover, that's gonna a problem. Of course, with |
|
|
120:29 | change, um, we probably will more cloud cover, and, uh |
|
|
120:36 | that could be an issue there. , of course, night night, |
|
|
120:40 | we can't get rid off and nuclear . We're all still frightened of it |
|
|
120:49 | we can have catastrophic problems with nuclear , and, uh, we don't |
|
|
120:55 | many of them. But when we them, they're bad, and we |
|
|
120:59 | have an issue with disposal of the . And I like to show this |
|
|
121:05 | you guys because 2019 is the last can get it. This came out |
|
|
121:09 | early, 2020 and, ah, of people, for some reason. |
|
|
121:16 | think the United States is doing nothing , uh, for all of this |
|
|
121:21 | stuff. And does anybody want to which company owned the biggest solar |
|
|
121:32 | uh, manufacturing firm in the world 1978. Anybody know the answer to |
|
|
121:46 | question? We're going to take a . Excuse me For the northern gas |
|
|
121:57 | ? Yes, it Wasit was mobile . They sold it because they weren't |
|
|
122:03 | any money. At that point in . They probably wish they had it |
|
|
122:07 | . But But the the attitude that companies and Americans haven't been working on |
|
|
122:17 | is just flat out wrong on in witness that I'm going to show you |
|
|
122:24 | things. A lot of people think has always been the number one producer |
|
|
122:30 | nuclear energy because 100% of their power and that's just power generation. Not |
|
|
122:35 | of their energy, you know, say Francis 100% nuclear. That's their |
|
|
122:41 | generation. Remember, from this there's power generation, folks. This |
|
|
122:46 | everything else we need liquids for. . Okay. So and then China |
|
|
122:56 | not really that that large. But can see here that the U. |
|
|
123:03 | . Um, I'm trying to think when this this was over a few |
|
|
123:10 | the US has gone up plus I think this is over. The |
|
|
123:15 | year we've gone up 4.1 terawatt which is 1, 277.78 eights of |
|
|
123:26 | an exit. Jewell eso We're the producer nuclear power, which surprises a |
|
|
123:33 | of people. It's probably no surprise this. 10 years ago, China |
|
|
123:38 | have been nothing. You could look this just a year ago or two |
|
|
123:41 | ago. Um, they just added Terra Watts in the last five |
|
|
123:47 | I wish I don't remember what what cut off was. Now that I'm |
|
|
123:51 | this but might have been 2017, that's what it was. It was |
|
|
123:58 | 2016. There it is. so in three years in three |
|
|
124:04 | the United States has gone up 4.1 hours. Francis dropped. China has |
|
|
124:15 | almost doubled what it had, and Russian Federation's grown a little bit. |
|
|
124:21 | Korea's dropped off, Um, and is about 10% of the world |
|
|
124:30 | And I put not capacities. Consumption what we're using. And that's not |
|
|
124:36 | wind and solar, which is advertised capacity. Okay, so here we |
|
|
124:44 | with solar panels. Uh, at point in time, the U. |
|
|
124:48 | . Was number one. Now we're number two since 2016. You can |
|
|
124:55 | that in gigawatts, which is not same thing as Terra Watts. It's |
|
|
125:00 | smaller than that. It's a lot than a terawatt. Uh, |
|
|
125:06 | uh China has gone up 74. dropped a little bit. Japan's pretty |
|
|
125:12 | stayed the same. And again for reasons. Solar people don't tell you |
|
|
125:20 | their production is because it doesn't sound impressive. What sounds impressive is the |
|
|
125:26 | and the capacity, um, is only a small part of Excuse |
|
|
125:37 | Production is only 30% at best of this capacity is, and overall, |
|
|
125:43 | provides 3% to total power generation. . You go back again to this |
|
|
125:51 | . There is power generation. It 3% of this bar right here. |
|
|
125:58 | percent okay. And I won't go to that again. I promise. |
|
|
126:09 | , then when you look at Uh, China is up to |
|
|
126:15 | That was gigawatts. This is gigawatts . This is capacity. It's not |
|
|
126:22 | . They're only producing a third of . They're only producing a third of |
|
|
126:26 | Onley producing a third of this. look at how small. That number |
|
|
126:32 | 11.9 gigawatts compared to 204.7 gigawatts. 25% of this for the U. |
|
|
126:45 | . Is produced in Texas right here Texas. But again, this is |
|
|
126:49 | that little purple bar of power generation it's making a contribution to in the |
|
|
126:55 | States. Okay, um, and I put put this out here, |
|
|
127:02 | . But this is also true for . Okay, And your geothermal? |
|
|
127:09 | had some different diagrams to you, I thought I would show that here's |
|
|
127:14 | . For that, you can see United States was the biggest then in |
|
|
127:18 | United States is the biggest now. , uh, and by a long |
|
|
127:23 | , and the Philippines have have started drop off a little bit. They've |
|
|
127:31 | from that time. But Indonesia, , has actually jumped ahead of them |
|
|
127:38 | , uh, in power generation for 2019. So I don't know if |
|
|
127:50 | have to keep reiterating this, but , as much energy is, everyone |
|
|
127:55 | the world is putting into this. applaud it. Please doom. |
|
|
128:00 | um, does it mean the end the oil industry? If I look |
|
|
128:05 | this chart, I don't know And maybe one of my questions for |
|
|
128:11 | for this report is for you to me how. How is this much |
|
|
128:20 | ? If this was replaced 100% and it's not by renewables. How is |
|
|
128:33 | going to get rid of all of liquid production demand? Okay, maybe |
|
|
128:44 | I'm being Ah, I know it from looking at the data. It |
|
|
128:49 | to me that there's a miss connect the threat of alternates to the oil |
|
|
128:56 | and all. I'm gonna help Go , sir, to interrupt just the |
|
|
129:00 | . Why is the big gap between capacity and the production and the wind |
|
|
129:04 | solar okay, that's real simple. wind, uh, for it to |
|
|
129:10 | full capacity. The winds have to about 25 knots all the time and |
|
|
129:18 | a little bit less than that. I believe it's, you know, |
|
|
129:20 | some, you know, pretty Pretty good wind. It might be |
|
|
129:24 | 15, but it's some fixed Uh huh. They working at |
|
|
129:30 | If it gets over a certain wind , I think they they change the |
|
|
129:35 | of the blades feathered out so they you know, they don't destroy the |
|
|
129:39 | and but but up, but the has to blow it a certain velocity |
|
|
129:47 | the time for them to get 100% . So that's the case for for |
|
|
129:53 | energy. And, um, one the things that happened in Europe and |
|
|
130:00 | think it was 2017 and we haven't the slide yet, but but the |
|
|
130:05 | energy was off that year because they have a lot of wind in the |
|
|
130:12 | . Okay? And I guess people drinking a lot of beer and eating |
|
|
130:19 | lot of beans that you're something but wind was down. Okay, so |
|
|
130:23 | that had a really negative impact on . Then we look at the solar |
|
|
130:30 | you have this much capacity, depends on where you are relative to |
|
|
130:39 | amount of sunlight you have over the of the whole year, you're obviously |
|
|
130:44 | to get more solar energy, in, um, in places close |
|
|
130:51 | the equator than places farther away from equator. But night and day, |
|
|
130:58 | you cut it, it 50 Uh, you're gonna lose half of |
|
|
131:02 | capacity just a night and day. you're gonna lose capacity, do thio |
|
|
131:09 | storms, clouds and other things like . And so the most that they |
|
|
131:14 | can produce is 30%. And uh there's also a certain number of |
|
|
131:24 | things that actually, uh, cause to have to shut these things down |
|
|
131:28 | now and then, which I know about. So I'm not going to |
|
|
131:31 | to explain that. But I know has something to do with it as |
|
|
131:35 | . I just looked up that wind blades lost 10 to 20 years, |
|
|
131:39 | they're made out of carbon fiber, it kind of seems kind of counter |
|
|
131:45 | , okay? And they also cost lot of money on, uh, |
|
|
131:50 | the first wave of windmills that went in the United States. And it |
|
|
131:54 | it was a really good thing to to see if if we could get |
|
|
131:57 | upscale, but it's still it's still scalable to what we need for our |
|
|
132:03 | energy needs. One advantage that we with power generation is that, um |
|
|
132:09 | you do have an electrical car, amount of waste of energy in an |
|
|
132:15 | car is less than the amount of energy when you're burning fuel. So |
|
|
132:20 | overall like if everything was electric. , if we go back to |
|
|
132:27 | if everything was electric, like all these, uh, I don't know |
|
|
132:34 | we're gonna do ships trained. I know how we're gonna do a plane's |
|
|
132:36 | , but if we could, this be a little bit thinner on, |
|
|
132:41 | it would all have to go into generation. But we're still, you |
|
|
132:45 | , we're still way way off of the power generation. We need to |
|
|
132:50 | these cars and these trucks and these , trains and planes. We can't |
|
|
132:57 | plastics because they're gonna be more valuable us then than anything else, |
|
|
133:02 | and some of the industrial needs, know, in the running buildings, |
|
|
133:08 | I think buildings is primarily diesel generators in and you know you get if |
|
|
133:18 | if you have storms or earthquakes or like that, it can disrupt even |
|
|
133:23 | generators. But But sometimes they're the thing that we have to back |
|
|
133:28 | All these other power sources of power get crashed down. For example, |
|
|
133:33 | if there's a disaster, a hurricane at the University of Houston right |
|
|
133:39 | every building on campus has a power up its diesel. And and they |
|
|
133:46 | that when Alison came in back in , and one. I believe |
|
|
133:49 | Waas or maybe 2002. Okay, it's hard to get charts like |
|
|
134:00 | and it's hard to get them. was the last one that I |
|
|
134:04 | uh, that I could actually trust numbers because people ah, try to |
|
|
134:11 | too much to the to the hydrocarbon and take too much too much of |
|
|
134:16 | cost out of the other ones because put the subsidized costs and stuff like |
|
|
134:20 | in it. But, uh, terms of producing Mila Watts per |
|
|
134:26 | this is what the numbers were I think these numbers are a lot |
|
|
134:30 | now, but these numbers are a lower, too, over across the |
|
|
134:36 | , but in general and one of cheapest things. And it has half |
|
|
134:44 | carbon footprint of the other liquids that's gas. And so, without trying |
|
|
134:53 | defend all of these numbers, which they probably all need a little bit |
|
|
134:58 | defense. But I think this is bargain basement thing to get energy to |
|
|
135:05 | world with the smallest carbon footprint. that's something we can do overnight if |
|
|
135:10 | wanted Thio. Uh, and not exactly overnight, but we could |
|
|
135:16 | it a lot quicker than than turning car into, um, a battery |
|
|
135:22 | car in truck to that's that's going taken awful lot of investment in |
|
|
135:29 | Aziz, much as we want I mean, if that's all we |
|
|
135:32 | , um, it's still going to a long time to get there. |
|
|
135:38 | this is another thing. And this this is just sources for power |
|
|
135:46 | which again is just that little purple in the overall need for ah, |
|
|
135:52 | liquids. Excuse me. And then What we see here is that when |
|
|
136:06 | look at hydro electric Ah, that's be one of the cheapest things as |
|
|
136:12 | as we have rain. And then marine title things reason we haven't built |
|
|
136:18 | for hydro electric is because they're very and they actually do disrupt the environment |
|
|
136:23 | lot. And here's solar energy which is concentrated solar power. And |
|
|
136:32 | is the photo photovoltaics. The cost that and this is kind of like |
|
|
136:39 | up water with sunlight. Or one you can do this is you could |
|
|
136:44 | lenses and you can concentrate the energy water and make a steam engine that |
|
|
136:51 | , and these were the other So in summary, uh, I'd |
|
|
137:00 | to say that population growth is becoming single most critical issue in terms of |
|
|
137:08 | . And, uh, I do that as the world gets more |
|
|
137:12 | we will we will, uh, control our population little better. That |
|
|
137:19 | happened in China, and also, have been saying this since I was |
|
|
137:24 | high school, and and the population more than doubled since then. And |
|
|
137:34 | , you know, waken hope these happen. But I think if we |
|
|
137:38 | address the biggest issue, I think definitely making a risky mistake's, |
|
|
137:46 | energy demand is still growing, and population goes up, it will continue |
|
|
137:50 | grow. There's no way to stop . The only thing we can do |
|
|
137:56 | changed the sources. So I think need to, as individuals support anything |
|
|
138:03 | helps alternate sources that are carbon free at the same time, realized the |
|
|
138:13 | the significant amount of energy required. , on this planet is going to |
|
|
138:21 | that that we keep producing liquid energy to support the growth of our population |
|
|
138:30 | the GPS of all these different companies countries that we have across the |
|
|
138:38 | Uh, and another thing to think is that even even as we go |
|
|
138:46 | mawr carbon free wind and solar type , uh, you know they need |
|
|
138:54 | , so they're always going to need kind of hydrocarbon backup, whether it's |
|
|
138:59 | or whether it's natural gas or something that. But most of the backup |
|
|
139:05 | diesel power and or, uh, generation from natural gas power plants. |
|
|
139:15 | another issue that's really important is, know, in terms of the carbon |
|
|
139:20 | , which a lot of people have . But I can tell you from |
|
|
139:26 | search just last night that since last it's changed a lot. There's more |
|
|
139:32 | , uh, this issue in terms , uh, the carbon footprint coming |
|
|
139:38 | of agriculture. And when I use word here, I have to be |
|
|
139:45 | using this distributed word, which is I put it in red. Sometimes |
|
|
139:50 | talk about distributed, uh, Is everybody having a garden in their |
|
|
139:58 | ? Uh, and even if you a place like New York City and |
|
|
140:02 | have people with little verandas, they have tomato plants growing on their |
|
|
140:09 | And, of course, those produced two to, but the amount of |
|
|
140:14 | involved there is probably near zero. that's what some people talk about distributed |
|
|
140:21 | sources. But the way when I the word in this sentence, I |
|
|
140:25 | that, Aziz, we have larger larger urban areas. We're gonna have |
|
|
140:31 | have mawr and mawr of these, , farms that are very large that |
|
|
140:39 | to produce massive amounts of and produce massive amounts of presumably meets and, |
|
|
140:52 | , and also get that to the . There's gonna be a lot more |
|
|
140:57 | . The more you have to Uh, when you have to build |
|
|
141:02 | things. There's efficiency in terms of . But there is, ah, |
|
|
141:07 | of efficiency, apparently in terms And I didn't make this up. |
|
|
141:12 | is what I read in terms off the the the food to the source |
|
|
141:19 | then the source to the restaurants and the restaurants actually into your mouth. |
|
|
141:24 | of the things people are doing these , which I think have been extremely |
|
|
141:28 | , is they've been, uh, , you know, food banks that |
|
|
141:35 | food from restaurants before it goes thio dates and actually donated it to people |
|
|
141:41 | needed. I think things like that help this a lot, but for |
|
|
141:45 | , distributed food sources is large farms from the city that have to transport |
|
|
141:51 | to the city, which, by way, takes more hydrocarbons the way |
|
|
141:55 | power situation is at this point in to get it to the cities and |
|
|
142:01 | the people. So that's it. like I said, I'm going to |
|
|
142:08 | you a, um, see, I can close this thing. I |
|
|
142:16 | I am. I got a question you, But I emailed you three |
|
|
142:22 | . I can either share my screen you may be able to pull them |
|
|
142:25 | , but I got him from the conference last week. I think they're |
|
|
142:30 | they're really value bombing. There is exactly what we're talking about. E |
|
|
142:37 | can show if you want, But don't you? Why don't you go |
|
|
142:40 | and show him? I don't e Maria can let you take control of |
|
|
142:45 | screen? Let's see. Yep. we go. You guys got |
|
|
142:55 | He's it. Okay, so this so there was three grabs that they |
|
|
143:01 | And this one waas, um geoscience areas through 2050. And it was |
|
|
143:08 | because, like, as you go your lecture, I think I think |
|
|
143:12 | right. We're more and more people the emergence of renewables as like replacing |
|
|
143:17 | all these hydrocarbon resources. But the is that that's not gonna happen for |
|
|
143:22 | long time. And even when that happen, like you're saying or were |
|
|
143:26 | , it's not happen at the rate other people think it could happen. |
|
|
143:29 | , like, really, what they're to highlight is like the different alternative |
|
|
143:33 | routes for geoscience skills through 2050. how, um, hydrocarbon still play |
|
|
143:38 | huge role in the skill set through that time period for the next 30 |
|
|
143:43 | . And then this was another one had employment for juice scientists is |
|
|
143:47 | So, um, predicts shortage, a job shortage of 35 full time |
|
|
143:52 | by 2028. And, um, 01 of the biggest fields is the |
|
|
143:56 | , but you still need geoscientists. then I don't think they have any |
|
|
144:00 | petroleum specifically, but because s so think that's kind of like where they |
|
|
144:04 | that up into. But here's Here's geological and petroleum technicians. Where |
|
|
144:09 | you see that? Right here. there. Oh, yeah, I'm |
|
|
144:16 | . Oh, yeah, There it . There it is. So they're |
|
|
144:18 | 5% of the full time that Um, so they're essentially saying it's |
|
|
144:24 | going anywhere. Um, and then other one, they had this |
|
|
144:29 | It was just saying, and I've the full picture. I can send |
|
|
144:32 | the actual like professor. Whoever wrote up? I saw it just I |
|
|
144:36 | screamed, shouted it while they were their presentation. But this is the |
|
|
144:40 | of skill sets the skill sets like all the skills that were getting |
|
|
144:44 | this program. And while why are is this carbon capture? Is that |
|
|
144:47 | that is? Yeah, that's carbon , utilization and storage or utilization and |
|
|
144:53 | . So, like finding containment and then this is, like, |
|
|
144:58 | relevant for me because I literally just a job today with a carbon capture |
|
|
145:06 | company. And, uh, it's crazy. This is crazy that |
|
|
145:10 | giving this lecture. So and so is kind of what the skill sets |
|
|
145:14 | they had. And And, you , this is what the people you |
|
|
145:18 | talking about, and it's exactly it with what you just Yeah, they |
|
|
145:23 | up saying there's gonna be a right? Yeah. Exactly what they're |
|
|
145:26 | is, if you could hold if we can all just hold onto |
|
|
145:30 | whatever we have for the next couple years, we're gonna be all |
|
|
145:32 | The last time, the last time oil industry was in this kind of |
|
|
145:38 | , uh, was was not 2000 2009. It was about 1999 |
|
|
145:44 | uh, everybody stop doing everything. then in, uh, 2000 and |
|
|
145:53 | , ExxonMobil did something just like this said, This is we're going to |
|
|
146:01 | this many masters graduates just for our . And they listed a big number |
|
|
146:09 | a lot of people, you naturally we're gonna be retiring. And |
|
|
146:14 | that number was mawr than, all of the graduate students put together |
|
|
146:22 | just the United States. Not across world, of course, but just |
|
|
146:26 | United States. Of course, the States might have had 30% of that |
|
|
146:31 | , or 20% of that output. but And that's what's gonna happen this |
|
|
146:37 | . And, um, a lot I don't know what it is about |
|
|
146:42 | in this program, but But a lot of the alumni that |
|
|
146:49 | You guys have been doing very And some of them have even |
|
|
146:54 | Fellas even started up his own glass , I think, near Texarkana. |
|
|
147:01 | wish I could remember his name right just just escapes me. But he's |
|
|
147:05 | . He got a bunch of entrepreneurial and he's produced this high quality glass |
|
|
147:11 | that apparently is hard to get your on on. There's a big demand |
|
|
147:16 | it. And he just switched from oil and gas and went into that |
|
|
147:20 | , uh, but I think it , it kind of underscores the type |
|
|
147:25 | people to get into this program. really, uh your you're not here |
|
|
147:29 | mom and Dad told you to go school. You're here because you really |
|
|
147:34 | learn and you want to be And And my guess is that you're |
|
|
147:40 | be successful, So just keep up good work. And they really like |
|
|
147:45 | way they really like the carbon like a startup. And they really |
|
|
147:49 | the the program, like, you , of course, because, |
|
|
147:52 | I don't have an MBA, and don't have ah, you know, |
|
|
147:57 | Yeah, Djelic or the C f . But geologists are. I told |
|
|
148:00 | in the interview, I said geologists value creators and risk mitigators so, |
|
|
148:06 | , that's exactly what other people other professionals are doing right now. |
|
|
148:09 | but I don't know if it's gonna this way, but I think a |
|
|
148:13 | of lot of your reservoir skills, going toe come into play at some |
|
|
148:18 | in time, It's just gonna be stuff in instead of taking it |
|
|
148:24 | E I thought I'd share that. thought that was and I'll share those |
|
|
148:28 | with you. I think I emailed Thio emailed you the slots. But |
|
|
148:34 | , co two floods are a good to get rid of it too. |
|
|
148:40 | , well, with that, I'm let you guys, I guess we've |
|
|
148:42 | of gone over. And, since tomorrow's our first Saturday, let's |
|
|
148:48 | it 8. 45 instead of 30. Uh, just give me |
|
|
148:57 | extra minutes. I've got I've got these cranky joints and it takes me |
|
|
149:02 | least an extra 10 minutes to make move. Okay. And anyway, |
|
|
149:08 | see you guys tomorrow. Thank Thank you. It's by the |
|
|
149:14 | It is fantastic to see all of again. I really miss all of |
|
|
149:20 | . Do you have? Do you , like, five minutes after class |
|
|
149:23 | talk real quick? Capstan? Could you give me a call on |
|
|
149:27 | get me to call you on the number you gave me? Yeah, |
|
|
149:32 | do that. E think It's gonna a specific capstone. But if you |
|
|
149:42 | a Daniel Daniel, we can have separate phone call. Okay? |
|
|
149:49 | And send me an email and we set up a time tomorrow or not |
|
|
149:52 | . But maybe Monday. Yeah. . Okay. We'll see you |
|
|
149:58 | E I have to stop the |
|