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00:02 | So I've started the recorder. I'm to share my screen. Can everybody |
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00:21 | lecture to Yes. Okay. It like everybody's here. Okay, so |
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00:38 | is lecture to anyone. Just a . I'm back. Mhm. |
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00:57 | Eso What we're gonna look at now , um, sort of, but |
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01:03 | resource and reserve is, um, that's been a narrative for a long |
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01:09 | . Is this thing called peak And ah, a lot of people |
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01:15 | worried about peak oil. No one to be worried about it right |
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01:20 | and it really has a lot to , obviously, with the balance between |
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01:27 | and consumption. And, uh, also I should say production. |
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01:37 | sometimes I put consumption in here. probably should be production, but we |
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01:42 | only consume a ZMA each as we and s o when, uh, |
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01:48 | that balance between production and demand prices go up and prices go |
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01:55 | If we have, uh, we're more than we need. Then, |
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02:02 | , we're going to see a drop the prices and vice versa. A |
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02:07 | of big questions is once we get with, say, the bacon or |
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02:12 | , what's going to replace that. also gonna bring up something about a |
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02:17 | inconvenient truth. Um, about sustainability actually in that movie. It was |
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02:28 | very first slide, and everybody seems be ignoring it. And, |
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02:34 | going to kind of look at, know, how much energy that we |
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02:38 | need. And it's not just on and gas issue. It's a total |
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02:42 | issue, and then we're going toe of Get to where? Where does |
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02:48 | leave us? And I'm gonna Early week, I'm gonna send you an |
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02:52 | , And you can, um, in your five cents. And |
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02:56 | I'm gonna be grading you on the that you've got some original data. |
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03:01 | looked at some original data and you up with a real conclusion about |
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03:08 | Okay, this this is getting to an old picture. This is National |
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03:12 | 2003, but I don't think much changed in the world. We still |
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03:21 | still are. What? What? lot of people like to call a |
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03:25 | society. You know, we buy and we throw them away. We |
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03:29 | things and we throw them away. , I'm sure many of you have |
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03:35 | about all the plastic that's end up the ocean. Um, the first |
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03:42 | , for some reason, is why the oil companies making all this |
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03:48 | Nobody ever puts forward the question. again, this is about perspectives. |
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03:55 | , you know, the real problem that we dump waste into the |
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04:00 | and that's kind of the first, first line of defense. You |
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04:06 | we have a lot of, uh think, very well meaning environmentalists to |
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04:13 | and collect all this stuff. But think their job would be a whole |
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04:16 | easier if we would figure out a that we didn't have so much to |
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04:22 | away. And, uh, and said something like that, you know |
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04:29 | a plastic straw would ever end up the ocean? I personally don't |
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04:34 | And, uh, but apparently there cities along the coast that dump lots |
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04:42 | plastic into the ocean, and there there are always around us. |
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04:48 | of course, is one thing, , not using. What we don't |
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04:53 | to use is another. But when look at this picture, you |
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04:56 | you have to realize that Ah, do live in a disposable economy. |
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05:03 | one thing that I've noticed in this is that people used to go to |
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05:09 | store and they look at things you know, they might decide, |
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05:12 | know, do I need that? they looked at it a few more |
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05:14 | and decided they didn't need it. what a lot of people do is |
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05:18 | get online and they order something from or whatever, and, uh, |
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05:24 | isn't this way, But some people order and order and order. And |
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05:28 | course we have. We have a of these, uh, televised shopping |
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05:36 | . Now people watch TV and they and by and by and so a |
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05:43 | of the problem is really an individual . It's, um it's It's like |
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05:50 | , For example, Um uh, companies were dumping this terrible thing called |
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05:57 | Pone into the James River in and they basically wiped. They poisoned |
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06:04 | lot of people, and they also out one of the best oyster beds |
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06:09 | this planet in the James River, the head of the James River near |
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06:12 | Chesapeake Bay. That's one problem. that's That's a real reason to get |
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06:18 | with industry. But another problem is everybody that buys and a can of |
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06:25 | ah, you know, may spray much on their lawn or wherever you're |
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06:30 | it. And at the end of day, they may just dump it |
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06:33 | a storm drain. And it's no deal of one person, does |
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06:39 | Essentially. I mean, it's still , but it's it's not serious, |
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06:43 | just imagine if 150 million people dump can of insecticide in the storm |
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06:51 | Uh, once a month there once year or maybe once every 10 |
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06:56 | it's going to start adding up. so there's a lot of this is |
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07:00 | responsibility and something that I've I've You know, I've been in school |
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07:07 | a long time, Uh, uh, longer than most of you |
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07:12 | been alive. I was actually in , I think, but But I |
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07:18 | when when I was a young man on my bachelors degree, I'll never |
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07:24 | . The campus that I walked on pristine. You never saw anybody throwing |
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07:31 | on the ground on that kind of . But nowadays, a lot of |
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07:37 | say, Well, you know, put that there because they pay someone |
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07:39 | pick it up and they wouldn't have job if I didn't throw trash on |
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07:42 | ground. And I think that's just wrong attitude. I don't think people |
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07:48 | you have hpe a thio to pick the trash would be out of a |
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07:53 | if if we didn't litter the So one thing that I've noticed about |
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07:57 | U of H campuses many, many that I go in there. There's |
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08:01 | awful lot of litter around, and some of the labs. You'll |
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08:06 | up the lab drawers and students have or candy wrappers in there. And |
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08:10 | not picking on students or anybody because is this is something that's commonplace. |
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08:15 | know, you hop in somebody's car you can tell. Over the past |
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08:21 | years, they've been to 25 fast places because the rappers air still in |
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08:26 | car. And I think I think of the one of the biggest problems |
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08:32 | pollution in this disposable society we live is people's attitude, and I think |
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08:38 | an individual level people need to take for this kind of thing. And |
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08:45 | , of course, if a lot trash was put in proper receptacles and |
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08:52 | proper receptacles were dumped in proper dump , we would never see any trash |
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08:58 | the ocean, no matter how much produce. So there. There are |
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09:03 | lot of problems when you see plastics the ocean that aren't related to the |
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09:10 | that actually made the plastics. I that's pretty important. And and if |
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09:15 | stop and think about the incredible value plastics in our society, at any |
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09:21 | , maybe many of you don't don't about it like I dio. |
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09:27 | you know, just imagine the PVC different types of plastic pipes that we |
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09:32 | use for our plumbing systems in our systems. Uh, they used to |
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09:38 | . There was a time when they cardboard coated with tar paper as major |
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09:47 | and water supply lines. Thank God don't do that anymore, and there's |
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09:53 | good thing about it. When you that plastic in the ground, unless |
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09:58 | digs it up, it's going to there, and it's going to function |
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10:04 | probably hundreds of years. So it's both efficient and it's safe when when |
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10:10 | use things the proper way and it's same thing with trash and anyway, |
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10:18 | that hasn't changed. There's all these of things, and if you stop |
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10:23 | think about it, even cars are made out of more and more plastic |
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10:30 | . And as we go to electric cars, we're going to need more |
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10:34 | more plastic materials to make these cars so that the batteries that they have |
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10:42 | are getting better all the time. have longer lifetimes. You know a |
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10:46 | of them. It's never a good to go below half on your |
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10:51 | and they advertise, you know, , 300 miles on one charge, |
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10:57 | you never wanted want to use up whole charge. So if you use |
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11:03 | materials like plastics, that air durable and they last a long time |
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11:08 | they actually can absorb some shock if bump into somebody, uh, you |
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11:13 | , it's actually a good thing to plastic for those reasons, and that's |
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11:17 | of the non combustible part of the industry. Anyway, having said all |
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11:23 | that, this is the society we in, and as individuals we can |
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11:29 | as much of not even mawr, , to protect our environment. If |
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11:34 | personally take a responsibility for the products we use ourselves. Okay, so |
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11:41 | off of that soap box. So is a natural resource? And this |
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11:47 | sort of a strictly, uh, written out. Think it's a concentration |
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11:54 | is it's natural. It's something you . It's a substance. It's a |
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12:00 | solid or a gas that occurs. it has to be significant quantities that |
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12:05 | can use in society and benefit And of course, some of these |
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12:11 | renewable and some are non renewable. this, to me is kind of |
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12:16 | funny term to the renewable and non . Imagine the oil in the ground |
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12:24 | being non renewable. But there is much in the ground, uh, |
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12:31 | as much as we think that will out of it, we may never |
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12:34 | run out of it in our lifetimes we find something to replace it. |
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12:40 | then it will no longer be a . But But, you know, |
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12:45 | we have geologists and geophysicists and know to find this Mm even though it's |
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12:51 | non renewable resource. In some we do have not an infinite |
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12:57 | but we have an adequate supply. that might be a more appropriate |
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13:05 | And then we have things that we renewable and just imagine people with bio |
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13:13 | , growing plants or crops. Of , the renewable. We can keep |
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13:18 | them. But can we grow enough supply the societies that we're creating with |
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13:26 | eight billion people? Within a very period of time? It's going to |
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13:30 | 10 billion people. You know How do these renewable things renew fast |
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13:36 | to actually be a substantial benefit to and available at the levels that we |
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13:43 | him? And that's what makes it a resource. And, uh, |
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13:48 | I'll talk more about this in a part of this. But again, |
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13:53 | natural resource. It's It's, of , got to be naturally occurring. |
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14:00 | let me ask the class, Do think oil is naturally occurring? |
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14:09 | I don't know if you can raise hand in this, uh, in |
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14:12 | , but if you could Yes. . It is absolutely naturally occurring. |
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14:22 | , would anybody want to answer this is, is oil a bio fuel |
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14:27 | not? A bio fuel the fuel comes from biological mass. It is |
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14:34 | fuel. Uh, probably 80%. not 95% of the American society would |
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14:41 | not considered a bio fuel because it out of a tank, but we |
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14:48 | better. Okay, so So just of keep that in mind. |
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14:54 | so, um, I have a menu thing in front of it, |
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14:58 | here's here's a sort of the one to grid Total resource is we have |
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15:05 | things. They're called discovered and And a lot of people have an |
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15:13 | with this diagram that work in the industry because we have to sometimes prove |
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15:20 | beyond a shadow of a doubt that on to a bank. So we |
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15:23 | have a different and more precise definition what these are. But these aren't |
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15:29 | aren't bankers definitions, thes air, straightforward sort of scientific definitions. And |
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15:38 | what is a discovered resource is, obviously the most important thing here is |
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15:44 | something that we know exist, and recoverable. And today and what we |
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15:53 | by recoverable today is if you come here, we can recover economically. |
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15:59 | example, I've helped discover Ah reservoir , uh, in Denmark. He |
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16:09 | 60 million barrels of oil, but were no pipelines anywhere near it. |
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16:15 | so to use this, they really to be able to get a pipeline |
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16:20 | it. And the pipelines to get it could have cost almost a much |
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16:26 | , uh, the added value of that oil in the first place. |
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16:33 | it was an economic. It was reason whatsoever to do it, |
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16:42 | And so it became sub economic. , so it's less than economic. |
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16:48 | It was a known deposit, but recoverable today, okay? And so |
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16:55 | often call these reserves. Now, word reserve gets really hairy in the |
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17:01 | industry and the and the banking because you have to have pipe on |
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17:12 | to call it a reserve. You just say I've discovered it, and |
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17:15 | can't just say I know we can it. You have to have a |
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17:19 | on it. But from a scientific , in terms of total resource is |
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17:25 | we look at discovered versus undiscovered economic sub economic. We only have three |
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17:32 | we have recoverable today, which we reserves. We have deposits known, |
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17:39 | they're not recoverable in today's market And then we have these other things |
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17:45 | are hypothetical. Anybody want to venture guess a hypothetical resource in terms of |
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17:51 | oil industry? Like healing? yeah, helium would be one, |
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18:01 | I was thinking more like oil and . What have you like the east |
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18:06 | of the US? Absolutely. That's what I'm talking about. Now, |
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18:09 | hypothetical. We don't have a pipe it. We don't know what's gonna |
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18:15 | . And I don't know if you're of this, but the U. |
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18:18 | Geological Survey a big part of it in and looks at places like the |
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18:26 | of Texas or the alias scene of or X, y and Z these |
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18:32 | areas. That might be what we call several different plays in a given |
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18:40 | . They know how much has been . They they know how much banks |
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18:45 | calling reserves because they kind of know they can get out of it. |
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18:51 | , but they come up with a number based on the geology of Maybe |
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18:58 | know a little bit about the source and how big it is. And |
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19:02 | predicted that, you know, You , we've produced X amount of barrels |
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19:07 | oil and next x amount of, ah, 1000 cubic feet of natural |
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19:17 | . But given the volume of this and the volume of what we think |
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19:24 | be in the source rock, they up with how much more they think |
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19:29 | could find and produce from that And that's hypothetical, too. |
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19:34 | because we haven't actually been able to it with seismic Orwell, Orwell near |
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19:42 | or anything like that. So that's a real hypothetical one is. |
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19:47 | of course, the East Coast is perfect example. Okay, let me |
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19:52 | you since we brought up the East and I grew up on the East |
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19:56 | , so I was hoping, hoping to retire in Virginia Beach, where |
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20:03 | grew up. Uh, because anybody me why I would want to go |
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20:09 | in Virginia Beach. Besides, it's nice place. Yeah, Okay. |
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20:20 | not gonna drill over there. okay. Yeah. What happened was |
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20:26 | then this really is a stunner to . Um, during, uh, |
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20:31 | Obama administration. They actually approved leasing Virginia. And now it's like people |
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20:44 | scared to death of doing it once . Does anybody know why that |
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20:53 | Yeah, exactly. And this gets to personal responsibility. Um, the |
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21:01 | industry needs to be responsible, not out of 100 of the companies, |
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21:06 | all 100 of them need to be . And when they're not, this |
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21:13 | of thing happens. And, uh that's why we're not drilling offshore Virginia |
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21:20 | . It's not because of either political . It's because the industry itself in |
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21:29 | particular company cut 11 corners. When with a good amount of sense would |
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21:38 | Anytime you cut 11 critical corners, gonna have an accident. And but |
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21:44 | what happened. Um, looking back it, I know. Ah, |
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21:50 | know a lot of the people that at BP, and I know most |
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21:53 | people that worked at BP were horrified all this and would never have let |
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21:58 | like that happen under their watch. it did, and and that's one |
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22:03 | the things that we have to do what else happens when somebody makes a |
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22:07 | like that really is if everybody else , and, uh, a really |
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22:15 | word pops up. It's called You get more regulations, and, |
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22:21 | , I would venture to guess, , except for one thing. For |
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22:26 | most part, the regulations we already in place before that spill were |
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22:32 | The problem is, is enforcement and following the rules. And since they |
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22:40 | , you know, you end up this problem and then you end up |
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22:42 | more regulations and regulations air created out , uh they need to protect either |
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22:50 | people of the United States or And it's realistic to understand that all |
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22:57 | companies operating costs would drop if we less regulations. And we wouldn't need |
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23:05 | many regulations if 100 out of 100 by the rules instead of just 99 |
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23:12 | 96 or 97 or whatever. uh, and so again, it's |
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23:17 | about personal at a corporate level and in terms of throwing your trash |
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23:24 | All of these things, uh, be impacted not just by a |
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23:32 | but by the people that work in company and the leadership, especially of |
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23:37 | company. Okay, So anyway, get back here to re sources and |
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23:45 | . So reserves resource is that air to be identifiable and technically recoverable under |
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23:50 | economic conditions and total resource is include plus undiscovered, not identified and currently |
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24:00 | economic. So we know there is resource offshore the Atlantic, but we |
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24:09 | have reserves. Offshore Atlantic. Does get that? Okay, if you |
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24:15 | for an oil company or if you for slumbers or somebody like that, |
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24:20 | definition of a reserve is going to quite different because you have tow, |
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24:26 | pipe behind it, and you have be able to prove it with maps |
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24:29 | the whole nine yards. But from academic standpoint and really an industry |
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24:35 | if you think about it, reserves are not just resource is, |
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24:41 | there. Resource is that we can under current economic and regulatory conditions. |
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24:49 | is, if we remove some of regulations or we reduce some of the |
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24:54 | of producing, we might actually be to produce that or, in the |
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25:00 | of the field in Denmark, that was talking about. There was a |
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25:06 | natural gas pipeline coming all the way offshore Norway that went, went all |
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25:14 | way to Germany and it went by . And after a while they built |
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25:22 | of these pipelines. They're able get some the ability to put some |
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25:28 | through parts of those systems. And field is now economic and producing a |
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25:34 | of oil. And it didn't require extra. There was a massive natural |
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25:39 | supply offshore Norway and, uh, the north of the central, the |
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25:50 | central Grob. And and, uh so basically, they were able |
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26:01 | uh, put in pipelines just for . And as an offshoot, you |
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26:06 | able Thio produce it anywhere in the where you have off shore facilities and |
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26:12 | have pipelines quite often. Uh, the infrastructure there already makes the future |
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26:22 | a lot easier to produce because thea , uh, outlay in terms off |
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26:31 | equipment and that sort of thing in has it least in part been taken |
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26:36 | of, so that can help us something from being a resource to reserve |
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26:43 | keeping our regulations at a minimum. making sure we have the ones we |
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26:47 | . So people don't put on too extra ones and then also the |
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26:55 | uh, with infrastructure is infrastructure has . Resource is turn into reserves. |
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27:04 | , so then I go into and of course, when we we |
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27:08 | at what a petroleum reserve might uh, here's a little bit more |
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27:14 | definition of that. And so if was to ask you what a petroleum |
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27:19 | was, I might do that. if we're just talking about resource is |
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27:24 | reserves of those resource is this is This is the overarching definition of |
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27:31 | Then we can get more specific and about total reserves that include proven probable |
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27:37 | possible and and then also a lot people have this thing they call bookable |
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27:45 | . And I know when I when worked in production geology Ah, the |
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27:53 | was 100%. The probable was a percent, and the possible was even |
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27:58 | smaller percent. But we put that there because we figured in some of |
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28:02 | fields we were in, we had pipes. We have the infrastructure. |
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28:06 | or later, we were going to this. And but this changes. |
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28:13 | , depending on where you're at, state you're in, whether it's offshore |
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28:17 | U. S. Waters. There's lot of rules now on what actually |
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28:21 | a bookable reserve. So you have be careful with that. Okay, |
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28:27 | Here's another way of looking at and this is known as the resource |
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28:35 | . Triangles tend to make us think pyramids. For some reason, I |
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28:38 | figured that out yet, but but , these four sided triangles or |
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28:45 | this one doesn't have four sides. just two dimensional. And what you |
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28:53 | see here is we have unrecoverable resource , but we know it's in |
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29:00 | For example, there's, um, hydrates all over the place, but |
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29:05 | don't know how to get him. huh. How to produce them without |
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29:11 | , and possibly destroying the equipment that using. Thio release it from the |
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29:17 | and or the surface of the Then we have things that we know |
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29:22 | we way. In other words, can drill deep enough we can You |
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29:27 | put some kind of jacket on it heat it up, weaken, get |
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29:31 | production line to it, Uh, it's still not economic. And |
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29:38 | then there's the ones that are economically , and you bounce back and forth |
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29:42 | this line, depending on the price the resource, the demand, the |
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29:53 | , which controlled to a big The price but also things like |
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29:59 | Is there a pipeline there or If there's a pipeline there, something |
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30:05 | down here in one area would pop here in another area where they already |
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30:10 | infrastructure. Ah, if somebody makes big mistake on all these regulations, |
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30:19 | up are economically recoverable. Resource might down into here because the cost to |
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30:26 | goes up. But then, as things get better as our price of |
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30:31 | gets down in the value of what producing goes up, we get Mawr |
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30:36 | . That Aaron this proved, proved . And then here we just start |
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30:40 | it. We have it produced. it's produced, that's it. That's |
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30:43 | resource that we knew was there, we made money on it, |
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30:49 | in some cases to keep cash flow , we might actually find ourselves over |
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30:56 | things at a cost higher than what getting paid, and that's happened to |
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31:01 | companies recently to with the price drop the need for cash flow. So |
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31:07 | this is really more profound than you think. Just looking at it |
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31:14 | you know, for a reservoir to in, any one of these boxes |
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31:19 | change just based on economics and on support. An important thing to remember |
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31:24 | economics can be based on infrastructure, environment that you're operating in, the |
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31:33 | that you're operating in, and and or not the players in that area |
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31:41 | trying to play by the rules to the level of regulations down. |
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31:49 | so here is. Here's a concept bothered a lot of people probably up |
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31:55 | the year 2000, but still even that. And now some people are |
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32:02 | about it still. But it's a called peak oil. And, |
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32:11 | does anybody could anybody tell me very what are the elements of peak |
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32:18 | But what creates peak oil? It takes a few words to explain |
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32:27 | Demand on population. It would be and supply, and, um, |
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32:37 | seems a little tricky and people have hard time dealing with it, but |
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32:42 | actually happened. You know, this is a history, and this is |
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32:50 | ah, why We, um, talking about peak production because it happened |
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32:57 | the United States. So what happens we get to a point like this |
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33:07 | this? This This doesn't really show , but there's a reason why it's |
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33:11 | this. Remember I told you that produce what we consume. Remember |
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33:19 | And here we have this chart, we're producing what we can consume, |
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33:23 | we can produce what we can And you know that oil consumption didn't |
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33:31 | off a this point in time. ? Oil production. Excuse me? |
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33:37 | consumption kept going up and up in United States. So what happened |
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33:43 | New story. What happened here is had to start right around 1970. |
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33:51 | had to start importing an awful lot oil. Okay, so the United |
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33:57 | had reached peak production. The world reached peak production, but the United |
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34:01 | had and so what? Peak What peak oil is is when you've |
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34:08 | around and you've drilled everything you think can drill and you can't find risk |
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34:14 | people see my hand. Uh, sitting here waving in the air. |
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34:18 | don't know if you could see but you know, you're producing, |
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34:22 | producing, you're producing. And then matter how hard you try, you |
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34:27 | find any more oil to keep to keep up with that rise in |
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34:31 | need for production. And that's what's oil. In other words, at |
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34:37 | point and at this point, we dramatic, um uh, deficits in |
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34:44 | United States. In other words, became a net a net importer of |
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34:49 | instead of of self sustaining. And got everybody upset. So this this |
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34:55 | everybody over the last two decades. , of course, then we get |
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35:02 | into about right here on this thing really dramatically after that for the United |
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35:07 | . But for the world, the thing changed too, because we started |
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35:11 | produce unconventional. So let's go look this. This line and here |
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35:21 | um okay, this is production in United States, and here in 2000 |
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35:32 | nine, BBC's TV show called They called me up and they had |
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35:37 | question for me. Uh, they to know how I felt about peak |
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35:44 | because because, as it turns the British have given this guy named |
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35:50 | , um, credit for coming up the term of peak oil. |
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35:57 | And they wanted me to tell them . And I said, Well, |
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35:59 | can't tell you that because because I this was gonna happen. I knew |
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36:05 | when they asked me this that this about to happen. Fact it turned |
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36:09 | that right then because this was starting happen in 2000 and nine, we |
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36:15 | pulling on. Ah, a lot these unconventional resource is they started coming |
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36:23 | . Okay, so why was peak supply averted? Well, one of |
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36:29 | that happens is when I first made slide, I just had the 2000 |
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36:34 | 8 2009 economic slump. But the thing that's happened is, since about |
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36:42 | to now 2021 the oil industry has in a major slump, too. |
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36:46 | you might even push that number back say 2014, if you like. |
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36:53 | . And, uh, but the thing is, numerous resource discoveries |
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37:00 | Ah, a large number of probably 56 or seven multi billion barrel fields |
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37:07 | found in offshore Brazil. Three offshore the U. S. Was finding |
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37:13 | , uh, oil resource is in deep water sub salt especially, but |
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37:20 | in many basins. And then the like the unconventional is came in like |
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37:28 | . And all of a sudden they a way with the price going up |
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37:32 | make money off the tar sands. then, of course, the Permian |
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37:37 | woken up again. I can remember a big part of my career in |
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37:42 | oil industry Ah, that the Permian was pretty much dead and would be |
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37:48 | forever. And then we figured out to to do horizontal drilling in Hydrofracking |
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37:58 | put those two things together, come with a way to create surface area |
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38:07 | would create more permeability in reservoirs that no permeability. And so we were |
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38:12 | to get those untapped trapped. Resource out of the ground and one of |
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38:21 | things that I think a lot of and even I sometimes have a hard |
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38:29 | imagining this. But the demand for in this world is very, |
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38:36 | very large. It's a huge, demand. Um, we can come |
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38:44 | with lots of alternate sources. But you look at the total demand for |
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38:49 | in the world, even even right during the pandemic, its's massive, |
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38:56 | a massive amount of energy. uh, and it is very, |
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39:02 | hard for people to understand what 85 105 million barrels of oil equivalent are |
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39:15 | terms of demand for just one One of our energy sources. That's |
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39:22 | just, and that's that's every you know, that's a lot of |
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39:31 | . Okay, um, increase price oil tents to increase the supply. |
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39:41 | ? Because you make money by drilling up? Yeah, I remember we |
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39:45 | talking about economic and sub economic. the price goes up, what was |
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39:52 | economic becomes economic. So without even another well, stuff that we couldn't |
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40:00 | money off of starts to make But then when the price goes |
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40:06 | the bankers go. Hey, I to get in. I need a |
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40:08 | of this pie. We need to drilling like crazy and get some more |
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40:13 | . And and so they essentially over That's why it's such a cyclical |
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40:22 | Once we realize we have a valuable again, we get over excited about |
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40:29 | . And so an increase in supply reduces the price of oil, |
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40:35 | and then then you're kind of But you know, one of the |
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|
40:39 | important things to remember is technology reduces reduce costs. Um, of |
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|
40:45 | technology is what allows us to produce , but that technology is not |
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|
40:51 | That's not the cheapest thing in the . And what else happens with technology |
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|
40:57 | even, um, you know, , I'll lump it all together and |
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|
41:01 | What happens to technology when the price oil goes up? Usually they cut |
|
|
41:08 | group, but But they cut the typically in these companies. But it |
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41:12 | like it's more important than ever because it increases your bottom line. It |
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41:17 | . And, uh, and, course, if you farm it all |
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41:21 | and you have to call up say, what does slumbers they do |
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|
41:24 | what does? What does horizontal drilling do when the price of oil goes |
|
|
41:30 | , charge you an arm and a for services? They charge more and |
|
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41:35 | do they charge more? Because demand higher and the supply of their equipment |
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41:39 | their technology becomes limited. And so all these tethers holding us back. |
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41:47 | there's technology which helps us produce things . But it costs more when we |
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|
41:52 | the price goes up. Ah, we make mistakes, regulations go |
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|
41:57 | All these things off are things that actually have some control over if we |
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42:03 | about it and we need to work it And, uh, one of |
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|
42:07 | things that has shocked me and I've in the oil industry for a |
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42:11 | I'm not in it now, but been paying attention to it. But |
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|
42:15 | I was actually in it, you , it's just kind of amazing in |
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|
42:21 | latest boom, Uh, because unconventional require a lot of straws to |
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42:32 | Uh, the resource is that they , they have to drill a |
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42:38 | In other words, you have to drilling and drilling to keep the cash |
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42:41 | going and going and, uh, unconventional. If the price went |
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42:48 | you could just walk over to the and turn it off and leave it |
|
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42:52 | and produce what you needed. And when the price went back up, |
|
|
42:57 | went over and you turned the valve and you opened back up again. |
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43:02 | But because of the cost of you know the technology that goes into |
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|
43:09 | and horizontal drilling, Uh, when when that price goes up, those |
|
|
43:16 | go way up. But when the comes down, they don't drop his |
|
|
43:21 | . Aziz, you need them to or as significantly as you need them |
|
|
43:24 | make your costs go down. And that causes a problem. So, |
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|
43:30 | , that's why I think the the that we've seen recently is like a |
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|
43:37 | whammy. Because because maintaining your output conventional wells, they have a longer |
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|
43:49 | . They last the production out Ah, good conventional well, is |
|
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43:53 | last a lot longer, and the curve is not as steep as it |
|
|
43:57 | be in in a unconventional resource. when we think about it a xgo |
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44:03 | unconventional czar, there's sort of um, you know, the flowers |
|
|
44:09 | in the spring. But, you , by the summer they're all |
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44:12 | Whereas in a conventional you've got, got coconuts that live all through the |
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44:20 | , and they just keep dropping coconuts top of you all the time. |
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|
44:22 | don't know if that really happens, that's the analogy. I'm used. |
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|
44:28 | , but here's here's something that's really about peak oil. And, |
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44:34 | even though it might not have been peak oil with quotes around it, |
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|
44:40 | knew what peak oil waas. and in 18 57 here, Romania |
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44:51 | 2000 barrels of oil, and that the beginning of the modern oil |
|
|
44:56 | And of course, you're from Pennsylvania my mother's family was from Pennsylvania, |
|
|
45:04 | were told, and you believed your life that the first oil well was |
|
|
45:08 | Pennsylvania. But it wasn't the first was in Romania. That was, |
|
|
45:15 | , for commercial purposes. Uh, any of you have a guess where |
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|
45:21 | lot of, uh, petroleum came before these wells were being grilled just |
|
|
45:29 | seeps, right? Exactly. There tar pits in places, and they're |
|
|
45:33 | , and there's tar sands and their up there, and, uh, |
|
|
45:38 | along the Caspian Sea and Azerbaijan. just flows out of the ground, |
|
|
45:44 | they had places that you know the . That's where the burning bush and |
|
|
45:48 | came from. They just, there's always there's always oil coming out |
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45:53 | the ground there in some places. that's where it was. And |
|
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45:56 | of course, another place was they out in the like they produce the |
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|
46:01 | from from whale lard, and, and that was pretty good oil. |
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46:06 | it's an expensive thing on a beautiful of I got to tell you, |
|
|
46:12 | know, I think Wales air just . And it really hurts my soul |
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|
46:17 | I see people killing and and way need the oil like we used to |
|
|
46:24 | it. But some people just absolutely thio eat whale meat. I'm not |
|
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46:28 | why, but but if you like , I can imagine it's pretty |
|
|
46:34 | Okay, So then, uh, had, uh, production there in |
|
|
46:41 | and then in Russia. And uh, of course Rockefeller started wouldn't |
|
|
46:46 | up being eso. And in 18 the U. S. Geological Survey |
|
|
46:54 | in part for fear of oil Okay, so this is sort of |
|
|
47:01 | first realization of peak oil then in 82 the Institute of Mining Engineers estimated |
|
|
47:11 | , there was only 95 million more of oil left to produce on, |
|
|
47:19 | they were producing 25 million barrels per . So that meant in four years |
|
|
47:27 | would be no more oil left for entire world. And then in 1901 |
|
|
47:34 | , Spindletop happened. And of oil flooded the U. S. |
|
|
47:39 | market and that caused problems. But , so I don't know if you're |
|
|
47:44 | this, but the fear of the of production being available disappearing just keeps |
|
|
47:56 | away. And the the ideas sometimes we have too much goes away, |
|
|
48:05 | , because what controls how much energy need, Folks, Many people are |
|
|
48:13 | . That's it. Population is the to everything. It's not what we |
|
|
48:19 | . It's how many of us do . And you can easily say of |
|
|
48:25 | 100 people use a resource. Maybe too many are going to abuse |
|
|
48:31 | If a million people are using a , there are a lot of people |
|
|
48:36 | will abuse it. If there's eight people, there's very, very many |
|
|
48:41 | that will abuse it. And if going to be another two billion thio |
|
|
48:47 | the next 15 years or so it's to get. It's going to get |
|
|
48:52 | worse and there's there's nothing you can to change that unless we come up |
|
|
48:58 | bigger and better energy sources. so 1906 again another. Even though |
|
|
49:07 | was a flood here, the market . And then five years later, |
|
|
49:12 | an oil shortage and and it goes and on. And this thesis |
|
|
49:17 | Guevara 2000 and three. It was really good paper, and and I |
|
|
49:22 | to show all the way up to , but I don't think we need |
|
|
49:26 | , but you get the idea. , this idea of the fact that |
|
|
49:31 | might have produced our last drop of has always been in our minds, |
|
|
49:37 | it's never been a reality, and fact that we always think that the |
|
|
49:43 | is going to disappear has always been our mind. But in fact, |
|
|
49:48 | never become a reality, either. Ong's population keeps growing and that, |
|
|
49:56 | , if you think about biology, really hard to imagine that population growth |
|
|
50:01 | going to slow down anytime soon. , so here is what they came |
|
|
50:10 | with. And they had a red coming up in 2020. And this |
|
|
50:16 | prediction was in June of 2000 and . So as late as 2000 and |
|
|
50:23 | , it was predicted that we were toe reach peak oil. And, |
|
|
50:27 | , as we're all sitting here in middle of a pandemic online, we |
|
|
50:34 | that that didn't happen. And that's going to happen. And in a |
|
|
50:41 | , I'm glad. Uh, in ways, you know, I wish |
|
|
50:45 | could get more energy out of this with less of a carbon footprint. |
|
|
50:51 | , of course, again, like else, we can do that. |
|
|
50:55 | just have to put energy and time it. Okay. And here's this |
|
|
51:01 | kind of a couple of projections, I just like to show this real |
|
|
51:08 | . It's kind of complicated, in sense, but they have different |
|
|
51:12 | And of course, in one we won't reach peak oil until 2047 |
|
|
51:19 | to this, and this also came and, uh, 2004, |
|
|
51:25 | uh and this was a little bit optimistic than this one. that had |
|
|
51:30 | oil in 2020. This one thought the worst case scenario, would be |
|
|
51:35 | 26th and 2037 thin 2047. depending on on what we could do |
|
|
51:42 | it again, that didn't happen. it's probably not gonna happen. And |
|
|
51:51 | is also where the demand was. wasn't even as high a Z a |
|
|
51:59 | . Okay, so here is something growth in it. Here's the base |
|
|
52:06 | . This is from 2017, and it looks like it's panning out in |
|
|
52:12 | ability to produce more and more. know, at some point we will |
|
|
52:15 | a plateau, and so it's not to think about it. But |
|
|
52:20 | they're projecting well past 2035. And , of course, was before what |
|
|
52:34 | . Coven Cove. It is one . And what did Cova did? |
|
|
52:38 | dropped our demand from, uh, at these numbers here. We |
|
|
52:44 | uh we actually I think about a ago we had, like, 100 |
|
|
52:49 | barrels a day in the world that being used. Now it's down around |
|
|
52:54 | something. So really, what's happening is we've gone from a state of |
|
|
53:01 | about peak oil versus which is But now we're worried about in the |
|
|
53:09 | what is peak demand? When is demand going to peak? And we |
|
|
53:15 | forever in the future, have more than we need thio toe actually |
|
|
53:22 | So that's kind of what's happening right . And this was made in |
|
|
53:28 | Uh, you know, we were seeing production go up. We're seeing |
|
|
53:33 | go up, and BP does a good job of putting these perspectives |
|
|
53:41 | And Exxon Mobil does 12 with a bit of a different flair. And |
|
|
53:45 | the rest of my slides, you're to see things going, um, |
|
|
53:49 | of up and down because, they're going to be from one company |
|
|
53:53 | another one because it's really hard to graphics that air the same every year |
|
|
53:59 | the same company. I don't know in pie diagrams, for example, |
|
|
54:03 | one of the best ways for people visually see some of these things. |
|
|
54:08 | I really like pie diagrams better than of these things. So well, |
|
|
54:12 | be showing you some pie diagrams here a minute. But But the thing |
|
|
54:18 | , is that we know how much produced. We know how much we |
|
|
54:21 | producing. We have an idea of much we're putting online. We have |
|
|
54:27 | towards what could cause our production to down. What could cause it to |
|
|
54:31 | up on At the same time, could do the same thing with |
|
|
54:38 | And so here is something from I. A. And when I |
|
|
54:44 | you your assignment, you might be on websites with E I. |
|
|
54:49 | But you might also want to look something with E A. And it's |
|
|
54:55 | a little bit inconvenient. I hate keep using that word, but the |
|
|
54:59 | States came up with the Energy Information that does a lot of this. |
|
|
55:07 | and of course, uh, the itself came up with the International Energy |
|
|
55:14 | , and they all have the same letters. The first one, the |
|
|
55:18 | one, is always a in the one, and the second one have |
|
|
55:22 | around. But in the U. . It's the Energy Information Administration, |
|
|
55:25 | is this one E. I. . And the other one is |
|
|
55:29 | the International Energy Agency okay. And here's Here's what they predicted a few |
|
|
55:40 | ago. Here's Ah, May 2015 they predicted that a a gut, |
|
|
55:48 | glut in oil would end right around in 2016, and it would start |
|
|
55:55 | prices go back up. Remember, started to get this separation. Here |
|
|
56:02 | production in the blue and this dark to black. I don't know what |
|
|
56:07 | looks like on your screen, but should be brown. But a gap |
|
|
56:11 | this side means overproduction. A gap this side and this side and that |
|
|
56:20 | means under production. So the price 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 |
|
|
57:06 | And the the glut gap that they for here just kept going on and |
|
|
57:15 | . Did it happen there? And the projection. They're thinking it's gonna |
|
|
57:19 | here. And we did have higher for a while. Went up a |
|
|
57:26 | bit, but now I can't see myself here because I have toe close |
|
|
57:33 | folks out here. Let me see I can get control of my cursor |
|
|
57:41 | . Wow. Okay, you can the forecast. Now, look what's |
|
|
57:47 | now. Ah, this is for . And so they're kind of forecasting |
|
|
57:56 | it's going to get up the demands to get up past 100 million barrels |
|
|
58:02 | day. But we know now it's there, Right? This is This |
|
|
58:07 | just in December 18, they came with this, okay? And so |
|
|
58:15 | the previous trend line. But here's gonna happen now and take a good |
|
|
58:21 | at this because this is really We have We have a little bit |
|
|
58:28 | red in here. We have a bit of red over there, which |
|
|
58:32 | saw in the last chart, That finally ended. But what What's happening |
|
|
58:45 | ? Right in this area, drawing stock. So you would think that |
|
|
58:50 | be a press rebound? We haven't seen that yet, but that's next |
|
|
58:54 | . Exactly. And it hasn't come , but and I don't know if |
|
|
58:59 | gonna happen. Exactly. Ah, this at this point, it's probably |
|
|
59:05 | gonna happen here, But at some in time, we've shut in all |
|
|
59:10 | wells. Uh, oil companies have off a lot of people. |
|
|
59:19 | production has dropped. Uh, one that might happen and is likely to |
|
|
59:26 | is demand. When it comes is going toe is going to accelerate |
|
|
59:30 | than the supply can. And I right now, a lot of damage |
|
|
59:37 | being done to our industry, and gonna be really hard to recover. |
|
|
59:43 | uh, something that would get us to this level for a long period |
|
|
59:47 | time. And that tells some people that's bad for the oil industry. |
|
|
59:57 | actual in actual fact, if our to produce produced an oversupply drops and |
|
|
60:05 | can't produce an oversupply, we're gonna an undersupply and we're going to see |
|
|
60:10 | coming back up, and it may be right here, but it certainly |
|
|
60:14 | gonna happen in the in the next . So, um, the way |
|
|
60:19 | were gone right now, if they figured out a way Thio get people |
|
|
60:25 | feel safer about getting on an And there are in there are filtration |
|
|
60:31 | and there's probably even mass. It drop out of the ceiling to do |
|
|
60:36 | . Um, I hope somebody's thinking it, but there could be ways |
|
|
60:39 | they could basically encapsulate all the people the plane with a limited amount of |
|
|
60:46 | and keep the the potential spread of down when people are on airplanes and |
|
|
60:52 | would feel a little bit safer in little bit happier about being able to |
|
|
60:56 | around. I certainly would like to overseas as soon as possible myself and |
|
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61:02 | think a lot of people are uh really just can't wait to get |
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61:07 | on that airplane. And that will a big impact, too. |
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61:16 | So getting back to it, here's of the things that happens. The |
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61:22 | curves in mostly unconventional wells. Look lot like this, and within one |
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61:30 | , 69% of the production has So to keep the production up, |
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61:34 | have to keep drilling and you have keep drilling. And one thing that |
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61:37 | do know is happening is a lot the sweet spots are getting drilled up |
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61:42 | many of the unconventional is that we operating today. Not all of |
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61:47 | of course, and there certainly reserves there to get. But the the |
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61:52 | and easy access thio ah, lot fields is starting to get a little |
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61:58 | tighter if none of this other stuff happening, but because lot of drilling |
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62:05 | stopped, Uh, when you have curves like this, you have to |
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62:09 | drilling and drilling and drilling to keep cash flow going and going, |
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62:15 | and it's And that's actually created a of jobs for engineers that actually design |
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62:22 | and companies, steel companies that produce steel thio, Uh, on also |
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62:30 | supplies for liners and stuff like So a lot of things are being |
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62:34 | , and because all of that is put on a table, so to |
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62:39 | , it's not going to, when it was when it was delayed |
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62:44 | a little bit. I don't know you remember that flip that I showed |
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62:48 | a few slides back when production was for a little bit. And then |
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62:54 | started to get better and people came and started drilling mawr and we started |
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62:58 | mawr again on we had a little of a surge there for a while |
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63:02 | the price of oil got over $60 barrel, and we were able to |
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63:07 | that relatively quickly because the depth of damage to our industry was not a |
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63:13 | . A zit is right now. what? What is what is going |
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63:18 | actually help force a, um a production of in a in a and |
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63:30 | need and a reduced supply of oil fill that need is going to be |
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63:37 | impactful the next time those lines cross we can't recover as fast as we |
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63:46 | the last time we did this, too much damage has been done to |
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63:49 | industry. And, uh, that well for people that might be looking |
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63:55 | a job in the near future by way. Okay, um and this |
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64:00 | just another one showing you some other curves and how you know we can |
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64:05 | things to get the production up. the decline curves cumulatively, um, |
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64:11 | sharp. And this is for things we have in the pocket. And |
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64:18 | here we get back to this thing mentioned and somebody also pointed out |
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64:25 | But when when Gore gave us his award winning lecture, uh, |
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64:34 | actually mimic some lectures that I gave physical geology in the year 2000. |
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64:41 | , because they're actually 2000 and two that's when I started teaching again. |
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64:46 | of the things that he overlooked was this population growth curve. And, |
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64:52 | , it's pretty scary, huh? you look at it and and, |
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64:59 | course, dollars, we're going up everything. But if if you if |
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65:04 | go back, I mean, when I was when I was, |
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65:13 | when I was your age, there about four billion people on this |
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65:18 | and now now we're getting Thio eight , and and it hasn't been that |
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65:27 | . I mean, my lifetime is insignificant when you consider the growth rate |
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65:32 | people on this planet, and but terms of numbers of people during the |
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65:39 | I've been alive, that's been And I just I don't see that |
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65:43 | a problem. And I think anytime talks about sustainability and again as |
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65:50 | we need to mention this to But when you talk about sustainability, |
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65:56 | , if someone doesn't mention population and a really touchy subject, you |
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66:03 | no one wants to be told you have more Children, And, uh |
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66:07 | I don't know how that will ever . That will be pretty draconian. |
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66:11 | , uh, But until the world that we can't just keep reproducing at |
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66:18 | rate we are, uh, it's to be a serious problem. And |
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66:23 | the other issues of sustainability are really compared to population. And one of |
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66:29 | most frightening things for me to think is agriculture. And that's another thing |
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66:37 | people that are worried about sustainability because have this attitude that we can grow |
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66:47 | . Um, say we go to billion people. When you have more |
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66:55 | living on the planet, you have have more concentrated agricultural places. |
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67:04 | that then have to transport those And a lot of wasted happens when |
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67:10 | have to do that. Now you to the personal level. People can |
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67:14 | their own vegetables, and if that , that will help a lot. |
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67:19 | the bigger and larger and over more our cities get, the more likely |
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67:28 | gonna have these centers of population that to be fed by massive farm systems |
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67:34 | in themselves create more waste and a carbon footprint than people want. So |
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67:42 | will never be really addressed until population is addressed. And it's a horrible |
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67:48 | to say. It's a horrible thing think, because back here when I |
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67:52 | growing up in high school and reading 1984 the idea of people controlling something |
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67:59 | that was horrific. But now that over here and in my lifetime, |
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68:04 | number of people on the planet's Uh, there's very few people that |
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68:09 | say that outside of our generations. , So population is the problem is |
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68:18 | know, truth. Sorry, don't interrupt. Um, isn't it true |
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68:23 | as countries nations, peoples become more that actually their population rate of change |
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68:30 | way down, for example, Yes and no. And that's the |
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68:38 | . The population is distributed in those . Um I mean, I know |
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68:44 | you're saying, and people that go college tend to have less than 10 |
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68:51 | . And, uh and so I'm saying that Negative. There's nothing wrong |
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68:56 | people having 10 Children if they but, uh, from a moral |
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69:02 | , But when we think about it's a, um it's it's really |
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69:09 | mean, this is 2000 and and, you know, we're already |
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69:13 | here. We're we have skyrocketed and , you know, it's just |
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69:24 | you know, disease. The spread disease is showing its ugly face right |
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69:29 | more than anything. And that could a positive, unfortunately positive effect on |
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69:36 | population control. Mm one. Just imagine if Ebola got into the |
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69:43 | States with with nobody following the guidelines we were given, that would have |
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69:50 | catastrophic, and it's a good thing didn't happen. And and there may |
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69:58 | not be something as bad as but worse than co vid that comes |
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70:04 | , and if we're not prepared for , it's going to be. It |
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70:07 | also do one of these things But even when we do this, |
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70:12 | know, we're still talking about a of people, you know, Here's |
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70:17 | and we're right. We're right at billion right now. So we're not |
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70:23 | off like this yet. And eso still on the red curve, as |
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70:28 | as I can tell. And, , it is, you know, |
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70:34 | is that way. It has natural and competition and disease. And, |
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70:41 | , competition between species and disease often what ends up controlling populations. But |
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70:48 | think, uh, we are very clever species, especially the people |
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70:54 | this classroom, and we can solve lot of problems. Ah, that |
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71:01 | us in the short term. But the long term, we may be |
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71:05 | more significant problems than we realize. here's something about agriculture, and it |
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71:12 | about a third of entropy Anthropogenic co footprint. When I first put this |
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71:19 | back in 2012, people thought I crazy and a little bit I thought |
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71:24 | was kind of crazy to about but, um, it makes a |
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71:30 | of sense, but it's part of carbon budget that a lot of people |
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71:34 | no attention to. Um, you sue oil companies, but you can't |
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71:39 | farmers. That's a political no, , but and this is something else |
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71:46 | I found really interesting when the BP spill happened. Ah, and we |
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71:52 | hearing, uh, people from M t. And other very well known |
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71:57 | make statements. It was obvious that of them didn't realize what a natural |
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72:03 | waas or that there were natural seats that. There was a lot of |
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72:11 | that naturally seeps in the Gulf of without anybody ever drilling an oil |
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72:19 | And part of the reason is, time organic material is produced. And |
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72:27 | glad, Uh, Dr Maddox is listening to me because I won't |
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72:31 | This is complicated, as she would go through a couple of chemical cycles |
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72:38 | explain it. But the nuts and of it are whenever whenever you turn |
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72:43 | soil over, you re you release 202 and and of course, sometimes |
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72:52 | bury it when you overturn it. at the same time, you're releasing |
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72:57 | two and 02 in the atmosphere. also transpiration releases water from these |
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73:06 | What is the number one greenhouse Uh, Co two, of |
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73:10 | is the one way seem Thio, think rightfully focus on it. But |
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73:16 | it's not the only greenhouse gas to worried about. And, um, |
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73:22 | the more feels that we have to like this, the more we're going |
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73:26 | be releasing just to keep the population . And, uh, have any |
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73:31 | you ever driven by a cabbage Ah, a couple of weeks after |
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73:39 | time. You know, in Texas don't have these things. But in |
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73:48 | , where we have lots of what call truck farms that have vegetables and |
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73:52 | , you know, other than corn wheat Ah, One of the things |
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73:57 | you notice, uh, in a of the vegetable fields is, |
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74:02 | the stench of eso to sulfur And of course, that means everything's |
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74:09 | . And when everything rots, what the bacteria producing and emitting into the |
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74:15 | ? Besides just sulfur dioxide, they're a lot of CO two and methane |
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74:25 | you can't smell, but if you smell the s 02 you can be |
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74:30 | assured that a lot of methane is put into the atmosphere at that point |
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74:35 | time. And so a lot of don't think about this And then, |
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74:40 | these folks at MIT, Ah, of them did not appear to realize |
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74:46 | just algae, all those phytoplankton And now a lot of them we |
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74:53 | call algae. We call them cyanobacteria things like that because we've reclassified |
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75:01 | But all of the phytoplankton that dies ends up on the ocean floor starts |
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75:07 | rot, and it on the surface to produce Methane and CO two, |
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75:14 | surface of the ocean and stuff in ocean column. A zit rots, |
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75:20 | there are places offshore uh, the River, where effluent with our fertilizer |
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75:29 | offshore creates incredible blooms in the death all those fighter plankton have actually created |
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75:36 | zones out in the Gulf of where absolutely nothing can live because, |
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75:43 | , oxygen's depleted. And you just these, uh, co two |
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75:49 | uh, anaerobic bacteria, uh, things. And so agriculture is not |
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75:56 | small thing. Uh, 30% of footprint is a significant amount of our |
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76:06 | . Okay, So that's imagine what besides burning hydrocarbons started with the Industrial |
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76:24 | . Large scale in mining. Yeah, we did that. But |
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76:32 | were burning hydrocarbons we worry about you know, we do release a |
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76:36 | of methane, but a lot of we flare it. So when we |
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76:40 | hydrocarbons, you know, when we're energy, we way create co two |
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76:49 | , in the production part of But also in the utilization of |
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76:52 | Uh, you know, when we're it in our cars and trucks and |
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76:57 | , we're putting co two in the , But around 18. 49 you |
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77:02 | , we started. We got trains stuff like that, right? And |
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77:06 | we're burning coal were burning wood. building plants that have machines, steam |
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77:14 | . Ah, but once we we started making these things primitive tractors |
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77:19 | stuff like that. What? What did mankind do right around 18. |
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77:25 | . And, um, this isn't first time they did it, but |
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77:28 | did it really start getting expansive? mean, in 1949 it did. |
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77:34 | one other thing that actually has to with a greenhouse gas. Yeah, |
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77:44 | this is this is what I mean paying attention to data. Uh |
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77:51 | Industrial farming, not farming like raising . Well, industrial farming, |
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77:59 | But, um, here's what Uh, if you pulled your slides |
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78:05 | , you would have had the I'm glad you didn't pull it |
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78:08 | but both McCann mechanized agriculture and irrigation the same time. And so this |
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78:15 | mechanized agriculture is doing this kind of . Of course it took It took |
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78:21 | about the 19 hundreds for that to take off. But at the same |
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78:26 | , we also started this thing called . And most of this really |
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78:32 | uh, in the 20th century, it was getting started in and |
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78:39 | uh and of course, in the twenties and thirties, we started building |
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78:44 | of dams and started impounding water Um, one of things that ah |
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78:52 | of scientists have said is that, well, let me explain this before |
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79:01 | get to that. Ah, H 20 is probably one of the |
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79:10 | important greenhouse gasses. But after I , it's groundwater is the second largest |
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79:16 | . And what did we start Uh, in the industrial revolution was |
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79:22 | started to put pipes in the ground produce water to irrigate and thio We |
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79:29 | these little what do you call Tall, Lonesome Zor. You |
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79:34 | these windmills air out in Texas all the place and pulling water out of |
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79:41 | out of the subsurface and getting into surface atmosphere, reservoir of water. |
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79:49 | , uh so that's kind of kind what started to happen in this empowerment |
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79:53 | started in the 19 hundreds. And mechanization, uh, in the 19 |
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79:59 | and 19 thirties in farming got to really big. And so now a |
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80:05 | of it. We looked at mechanization we look at oil, but the |
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80:09 | of oil really didn't start around 1900 . So so a lot of this |
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80:14 | a to the same time that were hydrocarbons. We also started doing mawr |
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80:21 | agriculture in the form of irrigation by taking water out of the ground and |
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80:28 | water on the ground. In other , keeping more of it in the |
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80:33 | atmosphere, environment. And what does do when you have more water on |
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80:38 | surface? More fresh water on the . What does that do to the |
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80:44 | overall amount of water vapor in the ? It operates it. It raises |
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80:53 | . In other words, we get . We get mawr greenhouse gas. |
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81:00 | , uh, Due to all that water that we've pulled out of the |
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81:04 | , it's been sequestered in the ground groundwater. Now we've pulled it |
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81:09 | Not only that, when it uh, to prevent flooding and to |
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81:15 | water for water sources for drinking sources irrigation we've been pounded rivers so less |
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81:22 | it to the ocean. We have large broad fresh water masses on the |
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81:29 | . Uh, that evaporate quicker. water evaporates quicker than salt water that |
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81:34 | are used to drain to the ocean permeate back down into the ground. |
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81:42 | , and so we, uh, weren't really keeping it on the |
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81:45 | and we didn't keep it in that . You go to the oceans. |
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81:49 | plenty of water in the oceans, it's saltwater, and it doesn't evaporate |
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81:53 | quickly. And so overall, the of water to the atmosphere in terms |
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82:02 | absolute ah, amounts of water vapor droplets. Unfortunately, I've been looking |
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82:12 | years, and you might wanna But I haven't seen very many studies |
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82:17 | anything other than we know. This an important area to study, but |
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82:22 | need to do more, study on . And does it bother you that |
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82:28 | that the number one greenhouse gas on planet is water? It's not CO |
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82:37 | , and yet we're not studying and and I don't understand that at |
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82:45 | . But maybe maybe when you do little exercise I give you maybe |
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82:50 | we'll find some information I haven't been to find. Nobody can see the |
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82:54 | . That's why nobody can what to earth. Yeah, you can't do |
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82:59 | either, can you? And of course, if you can't see |
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83:04 | Earth and who's going to fund But, uh, but anyway, |
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83:09 | in the next slide. Whether is been and like, we will always |
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83:12 | the number one greenhouse gas on this , and the concentration could be over |
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83:17 | times that of CO two. Most say what is controlled by the temperature |
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83:23 | water does not controlled temperature, and is in part true, of |
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83:29 | because as temperature goes up. it can, uh, air can |
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83:35 | more water vapor on when temperature goes and holds less water vapor. So |
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83:41 | does control it. However, imagine in a desert and, uh, |
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83:48 | going up. But what's the relative ? It's zero or two or 25 |
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83:54 | some low number. Um, so water vapor is always at 100% it's |
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84:02 | . That is not the absolute Temperature is not the absolute control of |
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84:06 | much water vapor we have in the . Availability of what our baby vapor |
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84:12 | also important. And the more fresh we have in surface lakes and the |
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84:17 | freshwater we pull out of the ground throw into the atmosphere when we |
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84:23 | you know, most of time when irrigate, most of that water goes |
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84:26 | the atmosphere, and, of then it rains. But the point |
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84:30 | trying to make is that what our is in that water cycle that we |
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84:36 | the surface and atmosphere what air volume nobody has figured out a way to |
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84:42 | out how much that's increasing. Now are doing some of that with |
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84:46 | and they're starting to realize that it's going up. But no one has |
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84:52 | enough information as far as I can to make a real definitive thing. |
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84:56 | again, I think if you stop think, you know, When did |
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85:02 | problem of climate change really start? it really start when we started producing |
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85:08 | of oil and gas? Or did really start when we started lots of |
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85:12 | and gas and irrigation and mechanized You know what are what are all |
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85:19 | factors? One of the worst things could do with seismic or geological data |
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85:25 | focused on one element. One variable there's 56 or seven that have a |
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85:32 | and in some cases, a major , and the outcomes of what those |
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85:38 | air doing, whether they're going up down. And we know what our |
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85:42 | ah is the number one greenhouse gas this planet always has been, and |
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85:48 | not studying it. Nobody is really studying it right now. As far |
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85:52 | I can tell him. I'm sure at least two places in the world |
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85:56 | have not 10 that really are looking it. But the data and the |
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86:00 | is not getting out into the Okay, So because both of these |
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86:06 | required and and I'm I know it like I'm on a soapbox, but |
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86:10 | not really trying to say this is thing we need to work on. |
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86:14 | I'm saying that this is something that could have a major impact, and |
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86:19 | are ignoring it. And just, ignoring the temperature increase or work, |
|
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86:28 | , climate change itself to ignore that a risky thing. And to ignore |
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86:34 | impacts or the variables that air causing to happen is very risky as |
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86:40 | Because if we don't look at all variables, we may try to fix |
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86:45 | problem focused on one variable when it out that variable is not as important |
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86:51 | we thought, it really waas. for all of these things, you |
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86:55 | find out that that, um co going up does correlate with temperature. |
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87:01 | are vapor going up does correlate with . Ah, temperature going up does |
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87:09 | with mechanized agriculture. And but correlation not equal the cause. And so |
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87:17 | have to be very careful about how evaluate decent Okay, so let's take |
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87:23 | break. Now, Before we get this next section, it's been almost |
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87:28 | hour and a half. And if can figure out how toe work these |
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87:33 | on this, uh, I've just this share. Everybody is still |
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87:57 | Mhm. You're all there. Now I need to figure out where |
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88:07 | recorder went. Can you guys hear ? Yes. Yeah, Okay. |
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88:31 | , mhm. Let me see if could do something here. Okay? |
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88:55 | . There we go. I had stop sharing. I couldn't pause |
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89:00 | And now I'm gonna pause. Can . Okay, This isn't too |
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89:07 | but you have to figure it And that's the wrong. That's the |
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89:17 | lecture. Mhm. Okay, now need to share my screen again. |
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89:39 | everybody. See that? Yes. , so how many? How much |
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89:45 | do we need and what are the ? So, uh, we know |
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89:52 | change is an issue. We know is an issue we know demands an |
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89:57 | . Right now, supply doesn't seem be an issue at all, but |
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90:04 | not going to stay the same And so what we're gonna look at |
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90:08 | is is you know, really, much energy does the planet need? |
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90:14 | when asking that question or pondering that , we also need to think about |
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90:19 | fact that, um, with the population is still really going up |
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90:31 | significant. It's almost log rhythmic. , So what I thought we would |
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90:41 | on here is, uh, in of energy consumption in exit. Jules |
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90:47 | I put this down here because normally I give this lecture, I tell |
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90:52 | I don't know what an exit Jewell , but I know it's a lot |
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90:55 | energy, but I put this on so that I consumed, almost like |
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90:59 | know what I'm talking about. It's terawatt hours. And if we look |
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91:09 | the globe at, um, I've shrunk this diagram down because it had |
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91:14 | lot more countries on it, but thought, Ah, if I put |
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91:22 | top 10 or so, that would good enough, and I brought the |
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91:25 | back in so you can see right that, um, China is actually |
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91:34 | biggest user of energy right now. , you know, 20 years |
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91:39 | it was not 20 years ago. was not developed as much as it |
|
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91:46 | now, but it's population is definitely , and I think that addresses some |
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91:56 | the some of our concerns about population and the fact that it's it is |
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92:03 | very significant. Um, but here the US, um, our consumption |
|
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92:13 | 94.65 jewels. So exit Jules and can't really tell you how much that |
|
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92:23 | , but it's a lot of And, uh, in liquid energy |
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92:27 | only one form of the energy that use. And I probably use this |
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92:36 | the first time I taught. Or the it looks like looking at the |
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92:41 | copyright in 2005. This would have about the actually the 10th time I |
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92:47 | , uh, freshman geology, cause used to teach at least twice a |
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92:57 | . Now I only teach graduate and petroleum geology is an upper level |
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93:02 | course. But this is a nice couple of pie diagrams you can see |
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93:10 | . Petroleum's really big natural gas is . Coal is big nuclear powers, |
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93:18 | all of renewal. Energy is 6% . What's significant about this renewable energy |
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93:26 | Everybody goes. Oh, wow. know, we're gonna All we have |
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93:30 | do is grow this and we'll be to replace all of that. |
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93:35 | We can just We can just grow renewable energy and build enough renewable |
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93:41 | We can replace all of this hydrocarbon energy source. Well, here they're |
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93:49 | you they've only got 6%. But you think about it, 50% of |
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93:55 | at this point in time was Biomass, which includes bio fuels, |
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94:04 | high burns and it creates hydrocarbons. , creates. Excuse me. It |
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94:09 | hydrocarbons, and it creates co So only 3% of all of this |
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94:19 | in 2000 and one, which is this is supposed to have been |
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94:24 | if you get something in 2005, will never have 2005 because we don't |
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94:28 | what the numbers are for 2005 and takes them a year to figure out |
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94:33 | , the year before that Waas. a lot of times, it's 2000 |
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94:37 | five. You may not be able get reald data, uh, any |
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94:42 | than 2003, but in 2000 and . This was the situation as it |
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94:50 | then. So, really, only third of the reno half of the |
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94:58 | resource is or 3% of the total we need just in the United |
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95:04 | Uh, is carbon neutral. so then we look the next |
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95:14 | and this is we go through Okay, If you look back at |
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95:24 | 6% 11 years later, we're actually 2000 and one rather, uh, |
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95:36 | years later, renewable energy has gone 6% to 10% in its attempt to |
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95:47 | all of this. Okay. And , 46% less than half. So |
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95:57 | doing better here. So out of 10% almost 5% of it is actually |
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96:11 | a carbon footprint, and only a over 5% of it is carbon |
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96:17 | And so, in 15 years we've from, let me put the laser |
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96:23 | on here. In 15 years, gone from 3% to 5.4% carbon |
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96:33 | which equals 2.4% increase, or a increase per year. Now, |
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96:45 | let me just ask anyone in the . Do you feel like we're winning |
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96:50 | war? Uh, to replace all this on. Just imagine how maney |
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96:58 | farms, how maney solar farms, many dams, Um and so on |
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97:07 | been built in those in those 15 not only in China and the United |
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97:15 | , but all over the world. when when you hear people talk about |
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97:24 | contribution of of those systems, they you often times not in how much |
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97:32 | produced, but they talk about We have the capacity to provide all |
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97:40 | electricity for that city. We have capacity to provide the electricity for these |
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97:46 | cities or these three cities. But capacity is not what they can |
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97:52 | usually with especially solar and wind because day and night. And because when |
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98:02 | , the in the best case scenario producing at 30% is pretty much the |
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98:13 | level they've been able to achieve up this point in time. So if |
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98:21 | you were compared to a nuclear if if if nuclear reactors were like |
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98:30 | and solar farms, then it would three nuclear reactors to produce the energy |
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98:37 | comes out of one of them, and there's no way that that is |
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98:43 | more expensive. And and it's also reason why, uh, as we're |
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98:52 | this, we have to remember that when that capacity is not being |
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98:58 | we have to have a backup. of course, natural gas is a |
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99:01 | backup, and companies and power companies this. And so they've been building |
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99:08 | lot of natural gas power plants to up the wind and the solar. |
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99:13 | let me be clear about one I don't have anything against solar or |
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99:17 | energy, but what I worry What I worry about is Theobald Illit |
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99:23 | . To scale it up at the at which we want to scale it |
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99:27 | . I don't I don't actually think even possible, but I think everybody's |
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99:32 | to try to scale it up as as they can I think is well |
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99:38 | the effort. The problem is that not being delivered, Uh, as |
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99:46 | as we would like to see it , and, uh, when I've |
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99:51 | public's talks about this, I always out that I'm neither for or against |
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99:58 | sources. I'm actually, for all of energy, to be used in |
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100:03 | responsible manner and to be used the way we can use them, given |
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100:09 | capacity and the production rates that we . And that's what I think we |
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100:13 | have to think about. Uh, in the oil industry. We still |
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100:17 | to be grateful that there is a in a wind energy system because the |
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100:23 | needs it. We also need to good that this thing over here, |
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100:29 | natural gas, can produce the same of energy as coal and petroleum and |
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100:37 | half the carbon footprint. Just imagine someone said all of a sudden you |
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100:42 | reduce the carbon footprint by 50%. can do that with natural gas. |
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100:48 | of the sneaky lies, though, things about petroleum and natural gas is |
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100:54 | we still flare a lot and and still have a lot of what seemed |
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101:00 | be minor leagues. But they uh, across the globe. And |
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101:06 | that's the stewardship thing, the personal corporate responsibility that we need to try |
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101:12 | do everything we can to make that footprint. Uh, that we have |
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101:20 | petroleum and natural gas as small as to even further reduce the carbon footprint |
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101:27 | oil and gas is actually creating. there's a lot of work we can |
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101:31 | , and there's a lot of work could do with solar and wind. |
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101:34 | the job is definitely not done, it won't be done for the next |
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101:39 | years. I don't think if even , But, you know, we |
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101:42 | have a major breakthrough. But at point in time, after looking at |
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101:47 | numbers, I find it hard to that something like that could even happen |
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101:57 | here I got to 2019. so from 2016 to 2019, we've |
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102:05 | from 10% to 11% renewable, and listening to me right now and myself |
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102:13 | well, we know that China and States have really been putting a lot |
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102:19 | . And even the state of by the way, has been putting |
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102:21 | lot into wind farms and solar energy this thing called hydro electric and take |
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102:28 | look back here. Hydro electric was . It's it's now down to 22 |
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102:38 | of that 11% and of course is pie grows. Ah, One of |
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102:45 | good things we're seeing is that biomass here has dropped to 43% of that |
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102:52 | . So so we're getting getting a bit better about getting this. |
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102:58 | uh, could anyone in the class me why anybody thinks that biofuels are |
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103:08 | ? And why are they good Air? Pretty reliable, maybe. |
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103:19 | , well, they are renewable, ? The key is for them is |
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103:26 | do fall in the category of and they help people say that they |
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103:31 | 11% renewable energy. Um, but this renewable energy is not helping the |
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103:40 | footprint at all. Does any, , does anybody in the class know |
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103:44 | we started to do biomass things and and a lot of oil companies? |
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103:54 | is this is kind of Ah, to me. I don't quite understand |
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103:58 | , but if you produce bio you get carbon credits. If we |
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104:03 | toe a carbon tax system, but air not saving on the carbon |
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104:11 | Uh, the whole reason why biomass is being pushed, and they try |
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104:19 | get it to have been trying to it back. Several oil companies, |
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104:23 | saying they're going to be carbon zero they're going to go toe biofuels. |
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104:27 | that's not just not going to be case. Uh, the whole reason |
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104:31 | were doing this gets back to the part of our lecture because we thought |
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104:38 | oil was a really thing that we going to run out of oil. |
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104:42 | thought, Well, we have a way to create hydrocarbons, and it's |
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104:50 | this biomass production. The recycling stuff , uh, could help the carbon |
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104:57 | . I'm not sure, but these ones definitely do not. Burning wood |
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105:01 | help at all. Biofuels are the way. Putting alcohol in your gasoline |
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105:07 | reduce the amount of co two. so we have, uh, riel |
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105:15 | with this, uh, in terms if peak oil isn't gonna happen. |
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105:21 | absolutely no reason to really focus on or growing having farms of growing massive |
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105:28 | of algae that, by the while the algae is growing that we're |
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105:32 | to convert to oil is gonna have carbon footprint converting algae to hydrocarbons that |
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105:39 | can use this fuel will create a footprint And then when we actually burn |
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105:44 | hydrocarbons, they will create a So it really, uh it makes |
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105:50 | no sense to me unless anybody else having ideas. But in the last |
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105:55 | years, we've gone from that 5.4% 6.27% co two neutral, which is |
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106:05 | 0.87 increase. And it's almost a of a percent Uh huh, per |
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106:14 | over over that period of time. I'm not sure, but the math |
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106:18 | look right. Uh huh. It be, um it should be a |
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106:24 | of the 0.87 So I guess I excited about my calculator last night, |
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106:31 | something wrong, but I think it's be a little bit less than |
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106:35 | But again, the problem is is as we put a lot of |
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106:41 | money and effort into this, which I agree is something we need to |
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106:47 | . Uh, we're still not winning war against this, And I think |
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106:56 | reason why this one up is per we've We've gone up a little |
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107:02 | Mawr. Ah. Then we were the previous years. Okay? And |
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107:10 | because we've been investing more money. here is, uh, one of |
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107:16 | projected energy supplies. One vision and can see here around 2020. Oil |
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107:23 | going to drop off. And I the dark green is heavy. Oil |
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107:28 | natural gas was going to drop Coal is almost completely disappeared, so |
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107:33 | is all completely wrong. This was in 1997. Yeah, solar, |
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107:44 | and geothermal just are not there. ? They might be here, but |
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107:50 | come back to 2020. They're still small, but it started before |
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107:56 | And the growth rate is really, small. I don't know how they're |
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107:59 | to get this kind of expansive growth that they expect. Hydro electric, |
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108:05 | know, there's only so many So many rivers that weaken dam |
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108:11 | and, uh, damming up rivers also not an environmentally or or landscape |
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108:19 | let's see lakes or nice. But your house happens to be where the |
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108:23 | is now, it's not so nice the people where where they flood millions |
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108:28 | acres of land and people happen to cities in the middle of those |
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108:34 | So that's a different thing. A power. Um, a scary and |
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108:43 | dangerous as it is and the fact we still don't know how to |
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108:49 | safely store a lot of the Ah, as faras carbon footprint. |
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108:57 | could produce as much energy as we if we if we went to it |
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109:03 | it would have a zero carbon So in my mind of anything really |
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109:09 | , uh, oil, natural gas coal combined, it's going to be |
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109:14 | power. And and that's just based the technology that we have today. |
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109:20 | think these things we're going to continue grow. But I don't see this |
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109:25 | expansion Ah, in the near Because if if because really what we've |
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109:34 | is we've put ourselves somewhere around and on the curve, and we're not |
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109:40 | it expand like that. And what see here, here, we've got |
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109:48 | know, you've only got, 5.4% going to 6.27% neutral, |
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109:58 | uh, and that just isn't that in three years. Okay? And |
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110:06 | here's another. Another way of looking it. And And this is talking |
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110:12 | primary energy. Not This is an . This isn't, um, power |
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110:17 | . Power generation or producing electricity is one source, But you can see |
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110:26 | , um, they have renewables, , at 20%. Okay, you |
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110:33 | see here. Says 2035. The actually are higher than that, but |
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110:41 | carbon footprint is not getting a benefit the renewables, and it's only half |
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110:48 | that. And we are up here 11% already at 2020 we're up in |
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110:55 | , but we aren't getting that full of the renewables. In other |
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110:59 | reducing this a T expense of this that we're only getting half of that |
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111:06 | because biomass is still close to We can see that natural gas is |
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111:12 | up. Cole, Um, and later diagrams is going to creator, |
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111:18 | an oil still hasn't fallen down like . And this was done in |
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111:24 | And, uh, here, you see. Uh, this is a |
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111:29 | that just talks about power generation, is producing electricity. And you can |
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111:35 | that, uh, for producing electricity is gonna is predicted to phase completely |
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111:42 | cold, for some reason, is a major player. Natural gas has |
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111:48 | bigger and stayed big. Nuclear has and stayed the same. But renewables |
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111:54 | in here in high growth is falling . But again, as you can |
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111:59 | , we're not Even if we go 2035 on here, we haven't completely |
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112:06 | , uh, and again, only the renewables. Or let's let's say |
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112:11 | 60% of the renewables. We're gonna a zero carbon footprint. So this |
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112:17 | is still gonna have to play a role in this because coal is |
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112:22 | Uh, almost completely right now, though it was supposed to have a |
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112:27 | boom, coal is almost completely Okay. And, uh, and |
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112:34 | at, uh, liquids, the demand and growth you can see |
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112:40 | . This was in 2017. We things were going to just keep going |
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112:45 | . And does anybody know what the combust? It ISS Is anybody |
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112:58 | What doesn't What doesn't combust but provides ? Don't know. Okay, |
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113:05 | it Z okay, this is liquids . And so remember the, |
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113:19 | power generation right here is purple. , but liquids air demanded for all |
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113:29 | of other things, like powering the of buildings, industry ships, |
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113:35 | trains, trucks and cars. More this is going to go to |
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113:40 | But look at what they have here 27 is a projection of power and |
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113:46 | is power. Generation equals electricity. renewables is still just a small part |
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113:55 | that and only half the renewables, 60% of renewables are gonna be carbon |
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114:02 | and they're still in terms of our demand for liquids, power is |
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114:08 | There is that little thing right And the rest of it's going to |
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114:13 | this. Now, if we, if we take cars and trucks off |
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114:19 | road, we're going to need to more of this power. If we |
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114:24 | to create more power to power the and trucks we're gonna have, we |
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114:33 | have the renewables to do it. gonna have toe pump up. We've |
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114:37 | the coal out, we're gonna have put in more oil. And there's |
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114:41 | no way around it. I don't . I mean, you know, |
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114:45 | you can imagine a world you but I don't see how you're going |
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114:49 | eliminate oil with this kind of transport . that we're having. And during |
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114:56 | let me point out to during the Cove in 19 thing, we found |
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115:02 | that a lot of people are buying on Amazon, and all of that |
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115:05 | being transported by by large trucks and trucks. Amazon is trying to go |
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115:14 | , and, uh, that's gonna a major effort to And I |
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115:18 | ah, with Tesla, we've seen with battery production keeping up with car |
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115:26 | . And I think when we get bigger trucks and bigger, bigger cars |
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115:30 | more trucks and more cars, we're have more issues with getting the materials |
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115:34 | rapid battery production. But maybe we . But nevertheless, if we |
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115:39 | we take liquids out of this. , we're gonna have to put more |
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115:44 | in the power mix because renewables is not going to handle the job for |
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115:50 | generation. Okay, And and um, another thing, um, |
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116:01 | of course, I asked a question non combusted. Non combusted. Use |
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116:05 | liquids is gonna be plastics. Things plastics. In other words, you're |
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116:12 | burning it, but you're using the , so it's part of the liquid |
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116:16 | and because natural gas is 50 to co two emissions less compared to other |
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116:31 | , like oil and definitely coal, isn't a liquid. Um, this |
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116:37 | ah really important thing for people to if, um, one of our |
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116:47 | guys, it now works with the . S. Government. Um |
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116:54 | on such issues, he said uh, just switching a lot of |
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116:58 | power plants in the United States a years ago from from coal to natural |
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117:05 | made us reduce our carbon footprint by than the Paris Accord it was asking |
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117:12 | us to do. It's changed a bit since then because it's kind of |
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117:15 | out. But when they first started coal power plants with CO two, |
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117:21 | carbon footprint coming from the United States dropped over like a two year |
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117:28 | And, of course, with less being burned right now it's it's dropped |
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117:32 | significantly as well. Okay, so think what I'm trying the point I'm |
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117:38 | to get across to you is that spite of all of our good |
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117:47 | this is not growing fast enough in shape or form to replace all of |
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117:57 | demand for liquids because, as this predicted, this has already taken into |
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118:08 | the contribution here from renewables because most where these renewables go hydro electric, |
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118:17 | and when are all going into power , they are 100% into power |
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118:23 | and so is geothermal, for the part. So like it or |
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118:33 | that's the way it ISS, and the industry that you're in is going |
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118:39 | need to continue to provide. These is for our economies to even |
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118:47 | much less grow. Okay, so take another look at just a little |
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118:55 | of detail, because I think it's , because people don't realize this because |
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118:59 | no one looks at this kind of but trying to get CO two free |
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119:04 | greener. What do we have? have nuclear, which a lot of |
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119:09 | think is a no no. We hydro electric. Hydro electric has two |
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119:16 | . One is, um it creates need places to go skiing, |
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119:22 | boating and skiing and fishing and But it is rough on the cities |
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119:27 | it drowns, so you can't keep hydroelectric plants. But it also depends |
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119:33 | a lot of hydro electric generation throughout world depends on snowfall and rainfall, |
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119:42 | there have been serious issues there. , geothermal is kind of untapped, |
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119:49 | it's very expensive from what I Ah, wind, we're gonna look |
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119:56 | couple of charts on, I'll point . There was a year when, |
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120:01 | , the wind in Europe was was low in general overall for a whole |
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120:07 | that I think there, there, kept their output, their actual production |
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120:14 | was consumed. The amount of electricity were able to generate was like 10% |
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120:18 | their capacity. And that was a bad year for wind and then then |
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120:24 | . If you have lots of cloud , that's going to be a |
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120:28 | Of course, with climate change, probably will have more cloud cover. |
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120:35 | , uh, and that could be issue there. And, of |
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120:39 | night night, something we can't get off and and nuclear again. We're |
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120:46 | still frightened of it because we can catastrophic problems with nuclear reactors and |
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120:54 | we don't have many of them. when we have them, they're |
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120:58 | and we still have an issue with of the waste. And I like |
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121:04 | show this to you guys because 2019 the last you can get it. |
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121:08 | came out in early 2020 and lot of people, for some |
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121:16 | still think the United States is doing for for all of this alternate |
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121:23 | Uh, does anybody want to know company owned the biggest solar photovoltaic, |
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121:33 | , manufacturing firm in the world in . Anybody know the answer to that |
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121:48 | ? We want to take a It's excuse me when the Northern Gas |
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121:57 | Yes, it Wasit was mobile They sold it because they weren't making |
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122:03 | money at that point in time. probably wish they had it back, |
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122:09 | But the the attitude that oil companies Americans haven't been working on this is |
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122:18 | flat out wrong in toe witness that going to show you some things. |
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122:25 | lot of people think France has always the number one producer of nuclear energy |
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122:31 | 100% of their power generation and that's power generation. Not all of their |
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122:36 | , you know, people say Francis nuclear. That's their power generation remember |
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122:43 | this diagram there's power generation, This is everything else we need liquids |
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122:50 | . Okay, Okay. So and China was not really that large. |
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122:59 | you can see here that the S. Um I'm trying to think |
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123:06 | when this this was over a few , the US has gone up plus |
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123:14 | . I think this is over. last year, we've gone up 4.1 |
|
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123:18 | hours, which is 1, 277.78 of of an exit. Jewell eso |
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123:30 | the biggest producer nuclear power, which a lot of people. It's probably |
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|
123:35 | surprise about this. 10 years China would have been nothing. You |
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|
123:39 | look at this just a year ago two years ago. Um, they |
|
|
123:44 | added 120 Terra Watts in the last years. I wish I don't remember |
|
|
123:50 | what my cut off was. Now I'm doing this, but might have |
|
|
123:52 | 2017, and that's what it It was since 2016. There it |
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124:00 | . Okay, So in three in three years, the United States |
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124:08 | gone up 4.1 terawatt hours Francis China has has almost doubled what it |
|
|
124:17 | and the Russian Federation's grown a little . South Korea's dropped off. |
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|
124:26 | and this is about 10% of the consumption, and I put not |
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124:31 | Consumption is what we're using. And not like wind and solar, which |
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124:38 | advertised by capacity. Okay, so we go with solar panels. |
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124:46 | at one point in time, the . S. Was number one. |
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124:49 | we're only number two since 2016. can see that in gigawatts, which |
|
|
124:58 | not the same thing as Terra It's much smaller than that. It's |
|
|
125:02 | lot smaller than a terawatt. we, uh, China has gone |
|
|
125:07 | 74. We've dropped a little Japan's pretty much stayed the same. |
|
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125:14 | again for advertising reasons. Solar people tell you what their production is because |
|
|
125:21 | doesn't sound very impressive. What sounds is the capacity and the capacity, |
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|
125:31 | , is really only a small part Excuse me. Production is only 30% |
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125:39 | best of whatever this capacity is, overall it provides 3% to total power |
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125:47 | globally. You go back again to chart there is power generation. It |
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125:53 | 3% of this bar right here. percent okay. And I won't go |
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126:04 | to that again. I promise. , then. When you look at |
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126:11 | , uh, China is up to . That was gigawatts. This is |
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126:18 | again. This is capacity. It's production. They're only producing a third |
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126:23 | this. They're only producing a third this Onley producing a third of |
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126:28 | And look at how small. That is 11.9 gigawatts compared to 204.7 |
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126:40 | And 25% of this for the S. Is produced in Texas, |
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126:46 | here in Texas. But again, is just that little purple bar of |
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126:51 | generation that it's making a contribution to the United States. Okay, |
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126:59 | and here I put put this out , too. But this is also |
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127:03 | for solar. Okay. And geothermal. I had some different diagrams |
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127:10 | you, so I thought I would that here's 2016. For that, |
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127:15 | can see the United States was the , then in the United States is |
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127:19 | biggest now. And, uh, by a long shot and the Philippines |
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127:27 | have started Thio drop off a little They've raised from that time. But |
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127:34 | , uh, has actually jumped ahead them in, uh, in power |
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127:41 | for for 2019. So I don't if I have to keep reiterating |
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127:51 | but again, as much energy everyone in the world is putting into |
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127:57 | . I applaud it. Please Or, um, does it mean |
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128:02 | end of the oil industry? If look at this chart, I don't |
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128:09 | how, and maybe one of my for you for this report is for |
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128:13 | to tell me how. How is much energy? If this was replaced |
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128:25 | and and it's not by renewables, is it going to get rid of |
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128:37 | of this liquid production demand? maybe maybe I'm being Ah, e |
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128:47 | from looking at the data. It to me that there's a miss connect |
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128:52 | the threat of alternates to the oil and all. I'm gonna help. |
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128:58 | ahead. Certainly just the question. is the big gap between the capacity |
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129:03 | the production and the wind and solar , that's real simple and wind. |
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129:10 | , for it to reach full The winds have to be about 25 |
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129:14 | all the time and maybe a little less than that. But I believe |
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129:20 | , you know, it's some, know, pretty different. Pretty good |
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129:23 | . It might be only 15, it's some fixed number. Ah, |
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129:28 | working at 100%. If it gets a certain wind speed, I think |
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129:34 | they change the angle of the blades out so they don't you know, |
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129:38 | don't destroy the windmill and but but , But the wind has to blow |
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129:44 | a certain velocity all the time for to get 100% capacity. So that's |
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129:51 | case for for wind energy. um, one of the things that |
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129:59 | in Europe and I think it was and we haven't gotten the slide |
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130:03 | but but the wind energy was off year because they didn't have a lot |
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130:09 | wind in the country. Okay? I guess people weren't drinking a lot |
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130:17 | beer and eating a lot of beans you're something but the wind was |
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130:22 | Okay, so that that had a negative impact on it. Then we |
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130:28 | at the solar if you have this capacity, uh, depends on where |
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130:36 | are relative to the amount of sunlight have over the course of the whole |
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130:43 | . You're obviously going to get more energy, uh, in, |
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130:50 | in places close to the equator, places farther away from the equator. |
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130:56 | night and day, if you cut , it 50 50. Uh, |
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131:01 | gonna lose half of your capacity just night and day. Then you're gonna |
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131:05 | capacity, do thio dust storms, and other things like that. And |
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131:13 | the most that they normally can produce 30%. And the There's also a |
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131:23 | number of maintenance things that actually, , cause them to have to shut |
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131:27 | things down every now and then, I know nothing about. So I'm |
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131:30 | going to try to explain that. I know maintenance has something to do |
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131:33 | it as well. I just looked that wind turbine blades lost 10 to |
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131:39 | years, and they're made out of fiber, so it kind of seems |
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131:42 | of counter productive, okay? And also cost a lot of money on |
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131:49 | , in the first wave of windmills went up in the United States. |
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131:54 | it was it was a really good to do to see if if we |
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131:56 | get this upscale. But it's still still not scalable to what we need |
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132:02 | our overall energy needs. One advantage we have with power generation is |
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132:08 | um if you do have an electrical , the amount of waste of energy |
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132:14 | an electrical car is less than the of waste energy when you're burning |
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132:19 | So the overall like if everything was . Um, if we go back |
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132:25 | this, if everything was electric, all of these Ah, I don't |
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132:33 | how we're going to do ships I don't know how we're gonna do |
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132:36 | plane's electric, but if we this would be a little bit thinner |
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132:41 | , but it would all have to into power generation. But we're |
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132:44 | you know, we're still way way of getting the power generation. We |
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132:50 | to power these cars and these trucks these ships, trains and planes. |
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132:56 | can't replace plastics because they're gonna be valuable to us then than anything |
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133:01 | Probably. And some of the industrial , you know, in the in |
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133:06 | running buildings. Like I think buildings primarily diesel generators and in and, |
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133:16 | know, you get if you if have storms or earthquakes or things like |
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133:21 | , it can disrupt even diesel But But sometimes they're the only thing |
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133:26 | we have to back up. All other power sources of power lines get |
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133:31 | down. For example, if if a disaster, uh, hurricane disaster |
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133:37 | the University of Houston right now, building on campus has a power back |
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133:41 | its diesel. And and they did when Alison came in back in |
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133:48 | and one. I believe it. or maybe 2002. Okay, so |
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133:58 | hard to get charts like this, it's hard to get them. This |
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134:01 | the last one that I got, , that I could actually trust the |
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134:07 | because people ah, try to add much to the to the hydrocarbon ones |
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134:15 | take too much too much of the out of the other ones because they |
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134:18 | the subsidized costs and stuff like that it. But, uh, in |
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134:24 | of producing Mila Watts per hour. is what the numbers were then. |
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134:28 | think these numbers are a lot better , but these numbers are a lot |
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134:33 | , too over across the board, in general, uh, one of |
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134:39 | cheapest things. And it has half carbon footprint of the other liquids that's |
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134:48 | gas. And, uh, so trying to defend all of these |
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134:55 | which which they probably all need a bit of defense. But I think |
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135:01 | is the bargain basement thing to get to the world with the smallest carbon |
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135:07 | . And that's something we can do if we wanted to, uh, |
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135:14 | well, not exactly overnight, but could do it a lot quicker than |
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135:18 | turning every car into, um, operated car and truck to that's that's |
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135:26 | to taken awful lot of investment in , Aziz, much as we want |
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135:30 | , I mean, if that's all want, it's still going to take |
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135:35 | long time to get there, and is another thing, and this is |
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135:42 | is just sources for power generation, again is just that little purple line |
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135:48 | the overall need. for Ah, liquids. Excuse me. And then |
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136:01 | What we see here is that when look at hydro electric Ah, that's |
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136:10 | be one of the cheapest things as as we have rain. And then |
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136:15 | marine title things reason we haven't built for hydro electric is because they're very |
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136:20 | and they actually do disrupt the environment lot. And here's solar energy |
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136:29 | which is concentrated solar power. And is the photo photovoltaics. The cost |
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136:35 | that and this is kind of like up water with sunlight. Or one |
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136:43 | you could do this is you could lenses and you can concentrate the energy |
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136:49 | water and make a steam engine that , and these were the other |
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136:55 | So in summary, uh, I'd to say that population growth is becoming |
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137:03 | single most critical issue in terms of . And, uh, I do |
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137:10 | that as the world gets more we will we will, uh, |
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137:16 | control our population little better. That happened in China, and also, |
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137:22 | have been saying this since I was high school and and the population has |
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137:29 | than doubled since then. And so know waken hope these things happen. |
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137:37 | I think if we don't address the issue, I think we're definitely making |
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137:43 | risky mistake's, uh, energy demand still growing, and as population goes |
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137:49 | , it will continue to grow. no way to stop that. The |
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137:54 | thing we can do has changed the . So I think we need |
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138:01 | as individuals support anything that helps alternate that are carbon free on at the |
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138:08 | time, realized the, uh, the significant amount of energy required. |
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138:18 | , on this planet is going to that that we keep producing liquid energy |
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138:26 | to support the growth of our population the GPS of all these different companies |
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138:35 | countries that we have across the Uh, and another thing to think |
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138:41 | is that even even as we go mawr carbon free wind and solar type |
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138:52 | ah, you know they need so they're always going to need some |
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138:56 | of hydrocarbon backup, whether it's diesel whether it's natural gas or something like |
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139:03 | . But most of the backup is power and or ah, steam generation |
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139:10 | natural gas power plants. And another that's really important is, you |
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139:18 | in terms of the carbon footprint, a lot of people have ignored. |
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139:23 | I can tell you from my search last night that since last year it's |
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139:29 | a lot. There's more about, this issue in terms of, |
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139:37 | the carbon footprint coming off of And when I use this word |
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139:44 | I have to be careful using this word, which is why I put |
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139:47 | in red. Sometimes people talk about , uh, agriculture. Is everybody |
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139:55 | a garden in their backyard? and even if you take a place |
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140:01 | New York City and you have people little verandas, they may have tomato |
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140:07 | growing on their porch. And, course, those produced CO two to |
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140:13 | , uh, the amount of waste there is probably near zero. So |
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140:18 | what some people talk about distributed food . But the way when I use |
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140:23 | word in this sentence, I mean Aziz, we have larger and larger |
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140:29 | areas. We're gonna have toe have and mawr of these, uh, |
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140:36 | that are very large that have to massive amounts of, um produce and |
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140:46 | amounts of presumably meets and, and also get that to the |
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140:55 | There's gonna be a lot more The more you have to do, |
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141:00 | , when you have to build large , there's efficiency in terms of |
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141:05 | But there is, ah, lack efficiency, apparently in terms off. |
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141:11 | I didn't make this up. This what I read in terms off, |
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141:15 | the the the food to the source then the source to the restaurants and |
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141:21 | the restaurants actually into your mouth. of the things people are doing these |
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141:26 | , which I think have been extremely , is they've been, uh, |
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141:33 | , you know, food banks that take food from restaurants before it goes |
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141:38 | expiration dates and actually donated it to that needed. I think things like |
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141:43 | will help this a lot, but me, distributed food sources is large |
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141:49 | away from the city that have to it to the city, which, |
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141:52 | the way, takes more hydrocarbons the our power situation is at this point |
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141:58 | time to get it to the cities feed the people. So that's |
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142:06 | And like I said, I'm going give you a, um, see |
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142:12 | I can close this thing. I I am. I got a question |
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142:18 | you. Uh, but I emailed three figures I could either sharing my |
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142:23 | or you may be able to pull up. I got him from the |
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142:27 | conference last week. I think they're They're really value bombing. There is |
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142:33 | exactly what we're talking about. E can show you want Why don't |
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142:39 | Why don't you go ahead and show ? I don't e think Maria can |
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142:43 | you take control of the screen? see. Yep. Here we |
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142:50 | You guys got mine. He's Okay, so this was so there |
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142:59 | three grabs that they had And this waas, um geoscience employment areas through |
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143:07 | . And it was interesting because, , as you go through your |
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143:11 | I think I think you're right. more and more people value the emergence |
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143:15 | renewables as like replacing the all these resources. But the problem is that |
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143:21 | not gonna happen for a long And even when that does happen, |
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143:24 | you're saying or were saying It's not at the rate that other people think |
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143:28 | could happen. So, like, , what they're trying to highlight |
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143:31 | like the different alternative job routes for skills through 2050 and how, |
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143:37 | hydrocarbon still play a huge role in skill set through through that time period |
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143:41 | the next 30 years. And then was another one they had employment |
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143:45 | Geoscientists is expanding. So, predicts shortage, like a job shortage |
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143:50 | 35 full time employees by 2028 s of the biggest fields is the |
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143:56 | But you still need geoscientists. And I don't think they have any like |
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144:01 | specifically, but because it s so think that's kind of like where they |
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144:04 | that up into. But here's Here's geological and petroleum technicians. Where |
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144:09 | you see that? Is it over ? Right here. Right there. |
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144:15 | , yeah, I'm missing. yeah, There it is. There |
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144:17 | is. So they're saying 5% of full time that 35%. Um, |
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144:23 | they're essentially saying it's not going Um, and then the other |
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144:27 | they had this graph it was just and I've got the full picture. |
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144:32 | can send you the actual, like . Whoever wrote this up? I |
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144:36 | it. Just I just screamed, it while they were given their |
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144:38 | But this is the example of skill the skill sets needed, like all |
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144:43 | skills that were getting in this And while why are they is this |
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144:46 | capture? Is that what that Yeah, that's carbon capture, utilization |
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144:50 | storage or utilization and sequestration. like finding containment plumbing, and then |
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144:56 | is, like, extremely relevant for because I've literally just took a job |
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145:02 | with a carbon capture utilization company. , uh, yeah, it's |
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145:09 | This is crazy that you're giving this . So and so this is kind |
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145:13 | what the skill sets that they And And, you know, this |
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145:17 | what the people I guess you were about, and it's exactly it coincides |
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145:21 | what you just They ended up saying gonna be a shortage, right? |
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145:25 | , Exactly what they're saying is, you could hold on if we can |
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145:28 | just hold on Thio, whatever we for the next couple of years, |
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145:32 | gonna be all right. The last , the last time the oil industry |
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145:35 | in this kind of shape Ah, was not 2000 and 2009. It |
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145:41 | about 1999. And, uh, stop doing everything. And then |
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145:48 | uh, 2000 and four, ExxonMobil something just like this and said, |
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145:59 | is we're going to need this many graduates just for our company. And |
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146:07 | listed a big number because a lot people, you know, naturally we're |
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146:11 | to be retiring. And, uh that number was mawr than, |
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146:18 | all of the graduate students put together just the United States. Not across |
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146:25 | world, of course, but just United States. Of course, the |
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146:28 | States might have had 30% of that , or 20% of that output. |
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146:33 | but and that's what's gonna happen this . And, um, a lot |
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146:39 | ah, I don't know what it about people in this program, but |
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146:44 | ah, lot of the alumni that . You guys have been doing very |
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146:51 | . And some of them have even . Fellas even started up his own |
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146:56 | company. I think near Texarkana. wish I could remember his name right |
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147:02 | . I just just escapes me. he's now He got a bunch of |
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147:08 | funding and he's produced this high quality company that apparently is hard to get |
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147:13 | hands on on. There's a big for it. And he just switched |
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147:18 | the oil and gas and went into . And But I think it, |
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147:23 | it kind of underscores the type of to get into this program. You're |
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147:27 | , uh your you're not here because and Dad told you to go to |
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147:32 | . You're here because you really wanna and you want to be successful. |
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147:37 | , uh and my guess is that gonna be successful, So just keep |
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147:42 | the good work. And they really that. By the way, they |
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147:46 | like the carbon credits, like a . And they really liked the the |
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147:51 | , like, you know, of , because, like, I don't |
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147:53 | an MBA and I don't have you know, our you have a |
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147:58 | or c f a. But geologists , I told him in the |
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148:01 | I said geologists are value creators and mitigators. So, like, that's |
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148:06 | what other people other business professionals are right now. Yeah, but I |
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148:10 | know if it's gonna happen this but I think lot of lot of |
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148:15 | reservoir skills they're going toe come into at some point in time. It's |
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148:20 | gonna be putting stuff in instead of it out. E I just thought |
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148:25 | thought I'd share that. I thought was and I'll share those pictures with |
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148:28 | . I think I emailed you Thio you the slots. But yeah, |
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148:34 | two floods are a good way to rid of it too. Okay, |
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148:40 | , with that, I'm gonna let guys, I guess we've kind of |
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148:42 | over. And, uh, since our first Saturday, let's start it |
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148:49 | . 45 instead of 8. Uh, just give me 15 extra |
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148:59 | . I've got I've got all these joints and it takes me at least |
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149:02 | extra 10 minutes to make everything And anyway, I'll see you guys |
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149:11 | . Thank you. Thank you. by the way. It is fantastic |
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149:15 | see all of you again. I miss all of you. Do you |
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149:21 | do you have, like, five after class to talk real quick, |
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149:25 | . Yeah. Could you give me call on my get me to call |
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149:29 | on the phone number you gave Yeah, I'll do that. E |
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149:40 | it's gonna be a specific capstone, if you have a Daniel Daniel, |
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149:45 | can have a separate phone call. , That's what. And send me |
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149:50 | email, and we can set up time tomorrow or not tomorrow, but |
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149:53 | Monday. Okay. Okay. We'll you guys. E have to stop |
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150:00 | |
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