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Science

Iceland to Voluntarily Go Oil Free in 30-40 Years 813

scottennis writes "Yahoo is carrying a story about Iceland's plan to wean itself from fossil fuels. The article states that Iceland is giving itself 30-40 years to kick the oil habit completely. Of course some researchers estimate that in 30-40 years we won't have much of a choice."
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Iceland to Voluntarily Go Oil Free in 30-40 Years

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  • this doesn't strike me as being a Big Deal, you know?
  • by Limburgher ( 523006 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:12PM (#3611289) Homepage Journal
    We could stand to take a page from Iceland's book on this one. They need to now to end heavy energy dependance, and we should to the same for that reason alone, to say nothing of the stacks of environmental benefits.
    • Of course, it's worth mentioning that Iceland has abundant geothermal energy sources and a small population, so YMMV if you try this in a country without these two attributes...
  • by FortKnox ( 169099 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:12PM (#3611296) Homepage Journal
    Saudi Arabi, Iran, Iraq, and Kuwait plan an invasion of Iceland in 30-40 years...
  • sometime in the foreseeable future. Link: The Hubbert Curve [hubbertpeak.com].

    It's a good goal to minimize oil usage, but I'd hate to see how America will eventually have to make it happen. Not sure if I'll live long enough to see that.

  • Sure, it will start out slow, but once they have the infrastructure to support hydrogen-based cars, it could move very quickly. If the hydrogen cars aren't more expensive (due to tarrifs on gas cars, perhaps), consumers will buy them. The government could place an outright ban on the import of gas-powered cars. I'm not sure what the statistics are for Iceland, but that would probably eliminate 90% of gas-powered cars in a decade.
    • ...but once they have the infrastructure to support hydrogen-based cars,...

      Ahem... gasoline IS hydrogen fuel, i.e., hydrocarbon.

      If the hydrogen cars aren't more expensive (due to tarrifs on gas cars, perhaps), consumers will buy them. The government could place an outright ban on the import of gas-powered cars.

      Whoa! Hold the phone there Commrade! You ain't messin with the prices of the vehicles I want just to support some crackpot theory of yours!!!

      I'm not sure what the statistics are for Iceland, but that would probably eliminate 90% of gas-powered cars in a decade.

      Whew!!! Sorry man, thought you were talking about the USA there for a bit! Mental note: only 30-40 years of fun time left before Iceland becomes a dreary SUV-free mess :(

      As for the quip about only having 30 - 40 yrs of oil left anyway, I have been hearing that one since the 1970's. The wacky prediction is always 30 - 40 years away and the *inflation adjusted* price keeps dropping. Thanks but, I will stick with my trusty Hydrogen Powered Jeep ;-)
  • relying instead on hydrogen made using the power of its roaring rivers

    So... the more we pollute and contribute to the greenhouse effect (melting of polar ice caps anyone), the better they are for it? Everyone's a winner!
  • by southpolesammy ( 150094 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:16PM (#3611340) Journal
    They benefit from sitting on one great big source of geothermal energy for a limited population. This isn't going to work for the rest of the world. Natural sources of energy are limited and the world's energy needs are exploding, which points to a shortage in the years to come.

    I'm happy to see the alternatives being used and discussed, but we have got to start getting really serious about getting cold fusion to work, or else we're in big trouble in about 40 years.
    • Granted.. but perhaps it's more of an example to the world that they are bettering themselves. It may come to pass that certain areas of the world best run off of energy for that area.

      I wouldn't exactly expect wind mill technology to be used in NY, much less solar energy be used by Iceland. Geothermal for them, perhaps solar for us.
  • Long term goals (Score:5, Insightful)

    by cat_jesus ( 525334 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:16PM (#3611341)
    It would be nice if the U.S. started making some long term goals. I think one of the biggest problems the government has is its band-aid approach to everything. We should be setting long term goals. Where should we be 20 years from now, 100 years from now, 1000 years from now? Much of who you are derives from the direction you take and the goals you set. How do you view someone who has no long term goals and no clear direction?

    Cat
    • This is a great idea on paper, but it'll never work...

      Why?

      Because the goals change every four/eight years.

      Just ask NASA how easy it is to accomplish their objectives when the administration gets recycled once or twice a decade.
    • Re:Long term goals (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Silverhammer ( 13644 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:42PM (#3611591)

      The US federal government is supposed to be merely a custodial bureacracy overseeing the day-to-day administration of national defense and infrastructure. That's why we have a constitution, to restrict the government's power to "plan" the lives of the people or the direction of the economy. That's why we have elections, to keep any single group or ideology from becoming entrenched. That's why we have a (mostly) free market, to give us the speed and flexibility to adapt to changing circumstances and technologies.

      I don't think you'd like it very much if the government actually had the power you ascribe to it.

      • Re:Long term goals (Score:4, Insightful)

        by cat_jesus ( 525334 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @04:44PM (#3612214)
        There is no conflict with a custodial bureacracy overseeing the day-to-day administration of national defense and infrastructure and planning ahead. Certainly national energy policy falls within the parameters you define, why cannot long term energy policy fall within those parameters as well? I submit that it can(as can other things within the parameters you defined). Unfortunately our leaders and the average Joe are simply too myopic to consider the future.

        This is the main reason I am against things like drilling for oil in Alaska. Shouldn't we be saving some of our finite resources for our grandchildren? Drilling in Alaska shows a complete lack of planning for the future generations at best, a complete disregard for them at worst.

        Cat
  • by elmegil ( 12001 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:16PM (#3611342) Homepage Journal
    So they'll stop using direct oil products.

    Are they going to stop using plastics? Other products made as further generation processing of oil? Products transported to iceland with the use of oil or derived products? What are they going to run their planes on?

    Don't get me wrong, reducing oil dependance is a good idea, even if I don't believe the people saying we're running out in 30-40 years (in case you weren't paying attention, they've been saying that for...oh...30-40 years). But is it practical to say they will outright stop? I don't think so.

    • by zenyu ( 248067 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:41PM (#3611584)
      Iceland gets about 40% of it's energy from fossil fuels, this is what it wants to get away from. All of this fuel is for cars, busses and ships. It has a huge electricity surplus from hydro and geothermal plants built after it got it's independence when European colonialization collapsed in the 40's. A lot of this energy is exported in the form of aluminum but you can't easily burn that, so hydrogen just makes a lot of sense. Iceland was also burned by leaded gas, they kept using it until some time in the 80's or early 90's, and it became the number one pollutant in the capital. This was discovered in the city playgrounds, which had hundred of times the safe limits for lead. Just image the media fiasco.

      The whole running out of oil was based on the continental US oil reserves running down, but then the middle east oil was discovered. If you listen carefully the experts don't say we'll run out but that the cost will increase to a point where other fuels cost less. There will still be plenty of oil for candles and plastics, but it will be too expensive to simply burn for fuel just like we no longer burn whale blubber for fuel.

      We can also make candles and plastics out of agricultural oils, and eventually we will. Whether that will be in 200 years or 2000 I can't tell you, and frankly don't care.
      • by ajs ( 35943 ) <{ajs} {at} {ajs.com}> on Thursday May 30, 2002 @07:24PM (#3613684) Homepage Journal
        "If you listen carefully the experts don't say we'll run out but that the cost will increase to a point where other fuels cost less."

        Well, that's sort of double-speak isn't it. Are you asserting that if supply-and-demand did not function, and the price remained steady that the supply would not run out, or are you asserting that the supply won't have a chance to run out because when it gets low enough the price will sky-rocket?

        The USGS certainly does assert that the supply will dwindle. Their expectation is (perhaps unreasonably) that the global oil community will curtail oil sales sometime between 2030 and 2060 in order to maintain a 10:1 reserve to production ratio (which is where the US has always been, but the world market is up around 50:1 right now). As that ratio drops, something will have to happen. It would be more disasterous to suddenly "run out" then to curtail sales and strech the budget of oil out into the latter part of the century.

        And just to nail the point home, these studies also take into account the discovery of new sources of oil and new techniques. This is factored into the equations as an annual growth in the oil reserves (which cannot accomodate the exponential growth in demand, of course, but every little bit helps).
        • Way off topic, baby! (Score:4, Interesting)

          by zenyu ( 248067 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @11:03PM (#3614796)
          Oil will probably never run out, it will get more expensive as the supply of it dwindles. The price will rise, but while energy demand will rise other sources of energy will displace it. So the price won't quickly become astronomical, simply because other energy sources will displace the demand. Stationary uses like power plants will move to other sources first, but planes and cars will continue using it, then cars will move to natural gas(which will have it's own rise and fall curve), etc.

          I think the biggest shocks will not come from producers, there are more joining the global market, like Russia & co. The biggest shocks will be as demand is curtailed. At some point gas stations will just cease to exist because there won't be enough demand to support them. The loss of infrastructure will cause more drivers to switch and all of a sudden oil will be dirt cheap for maybe a decade or so. This is many many years out but it is almost inevidable (unless it turns out bacteria are making most of the oil or something. Then, ugh, government will be needed to get us of the tit.)

          My biggest fear is that oil will run out before doing enough preliminary research, even solar power can be very destructive of the environment if it uses up land inefficiently. But just image if we switched to Coal in all US and Chinese power plants, we'd all be caughing up gallons of flegm. Or used windmills to the extent that it wiped out bird populations, or disrupted local weather patterns in a negative way. The funny thing is the pure market people infesting ./ might have a point when it comes to things like farm subsidies which keep way too much land in agricultural production. If we depopulated the less productive farming (which happen to be more energy and water intensive) areas now it would be easier to carve up parks and 'energy farms' out of them a hundred years or two hundred years hence.
  • zerg (Score:4, Funny)

    by Lord Omlette ( 124579 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:17PM (#3611349) Homepage
    Slashdot to go redundancy free for 30-40 seconds: whee! [slashdot.org]
  • How many times have we heard we are going to run out of oil? And guess what: it never happens. I'm sure it will happen eventually, but I don't see it happening any sooner than running out of other important resources like vandium, molybdenum, etc.. New deposits are always being found, and the majority of the world's oil is still present in oil sands (which are becoming much more economical to extract)

    The environmental reasons for switching away from oil are a lot more reasonable, however I imagine the replacement is really going to be more fossil fuels, probably hydrogen harvested (or reformed) from natural gas for fuel cells. So keep those oil rigs pumping.

    Websurfing done right! StumbleUpon [stumbleupon.com]
  • Oil from Seaweed (Score:3, Interesting)

    by wsherman ( 154283 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:18PM (#3611366)
    An alternative to geothermal would be huge mats of seaweed in the oceans that have been genetically engineered to convert the CO2 back into oil or ethanol.

    At any rate, Iceland probably has a better chance with geothermal than with solar given its location.
  • by ergo98 ( 9391 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:22PM (#3611399) Homepage Journal
    I find it humorous that oil supply graphs always show the supply peaking at the present, so it's not surprizing to see the including graph showing oil supply peaking in 2002, when suddenly it'll perilously start dropping as the world's supply of oil disappears. As much as I advocate and hope for advances in alternatives (or even just greatly increased efficiency), I find these graphs all to be universally a bunch of BS : Hell we're just starting to process the tar sands in Alberta, tar sands which have more oil than all of Saudi Arabia (interesting fact: The US gets more oil from Alberta than it gets from Saudi Arabia, yet watch the fascinating ass kissing the US plants on the asses of the Saudis. Very odd, and unjustifiable). When I was in Grade 4, some 20 years ago, I remember them showing us a similar graph perilously showing the drop that was imminent as the Earth's supply of oil was forseen to be gone within 10 years (no kidding).

    Just a bit of pessimism about, well, pessimism.
    • There's a theory that the U.S. is committed to keeping Mideast oil flowing not so much for it's own consumption, but for that of Asia and Europe. So long as Asia and Europe get their oil, they don't need larger militaries, that could challenge our own. I think I saw it at the atlantic, to lazy to look up link right now...
    • They had data to back up their claims.

      You say "always" and give no references.

      I'm buying their story, not yours.

      The fact that the American Petroleum Institute's own estimates of discovered and undiscovered reserves, and probable consumption increase rates, show pretty much exactly what that website showed, just makes me all the more certain.

      --Blair
    • by edremy ( 36408 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:41PM (#3611585) Journal
      We've got lots and lots and lots of oil. The problem comes in how much it costs to get that oil. We live in a world of cheap oil because Arabia is sitting on a lake of crude- drill a hole and oil appears. We can get it from lots of other places, but the price begins to creep up.

      Case in point: ANWR. ANWR oil is going to cost more than Arabian oil, a fact that Bush+Co don't like to point out. The USGS assessment is that there is *no* oil in ANWR that is recoverable for less than $15/barrel. $20/barrel lets you extract maybe a 3rd of the reserve. Get up to $30/barrel and you can get most of it.

      How much does it cost Saudi Arabia to get that same barrel? About 2 dollars [bloomberg.com].

      (Current spot price is about $25/barrel due to mideast tension, but it's been as low as $17.5 earlier this year.)

      We aren't going to run out of oil anytime soon. What will happen is that the price will go up as we use up the easy stuff.

      Eric

      • $2 a barrel? So?

        The price today to produce a barrel of Syncrude Sweet blend synthetic crude is about $7 a barrel, and sells for about $32USD a barrel. Right out of the ground from northern Alberta.

        And there is a pipeline that carries it 500 KM to be refined and another pipeline to carry it to the US market. How much shipping does it take to get that barrel of Saudi oil to the US market?

        Oil shipped from northern Alberta currently makes about 20% of all oil produced in Canada, therefore it makes about ~2% of the US market. And growing every year.

        So whay again does the US kiss Saudi tush, and ignores it friends to the north?

        • by LinuxParanoid ( 64467 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @04:39PM (#3612156) Homepage Journal
          We kiss Saudi tush because they are the only major oil "swing producer". A swing producer is someone who has a large amount of excess capacity who can influence world oil supply (and thus prices) significantly by turning on their pumps. Within weeks, if they want, the Saudis can start pumping a lot more oil and thus they can cause the spot price of oil to drop a lot. (They did this for six months right after 9/11 by the way, which had the nice effect of mitigating its' impact on our economy. Give em some credit.)

          The Saudis could also swing the other way easily, reducing their oil exports and thus causing oil prices to go up (since nobody else has much spare capacity to make up for the lack of supply). However the Saudi's ability drive up prices this way has constricted somewhat since the 1970s due to a number of factors: 1) the Saudi's domestic welfare program has greatly expanded and still requires oil revenues to keep their citizens happy, 2) Saudi Arabia is now a net debtor nation so net revenue shortfalls require borrowing and creditors, 3) the number of oil substitutes at a given price has risen, 4) long term price rises drive conservation response which reduces long-term demand, not in the Saudi interest 5) the US has a Strategic Petroleum reserve at its disposal that was not present in 1973.

          As for ignoring friends to the north, I'm not sure we do. (If we did, I'd agree it'd be a stupid mistake.) The northern Alberta oil sands are great, and I think they are novel enough to have not really entered the generic political dialogue. Since I've had people in the oil industry mention them to me since 9/11, I'm sure the oil crowd in power in Washington knows about them. I suspect we just don't advertise it, unless we're in private talks and want to wield a big stick.

          The other problems with the oil sands are, as you noted, that it only supplies 2% of our oil and it can't expand production rapidly (without throwing vast sums of money at it, as one might do in a world war.) And while the reserves are apparently huge, they can't all be extracted at that $7 price you mention. It'll get more economical as chemists and others learn how to extract the tar and refine it more efficiently, no doubt. But that takes time. And the Saudis can turn the spigots on or off at their whim, and nobody else has lots of spare capcity they can bring online rapidly at that lower price.

          Except perhaps the Russians, as they start exporting more and building more facilities. This came to light a little bit more when certain middle-eastern countries started talking about using the 'oil weapon' against the US a month or two back. Iraq cut its shipments for a month, and I believe Russia boosted theirs. Which is clearly the implied threat we've been delivering to the Saudis since 9/11. Don't screw us or we'll turn to the Russians (and ensure that they have enough pipelines?) to make them the second major swing producer.

          All of which is sort of ironic since we used the Saudis to squeeze the Russian economy to collapse back during the Gorbachev era (search Amazon or another equivalent for the book "Victory!" for the full story on that one.)

          Verify what I say; I'm not an expert, but I have definitely been reading up on all this and thinking about it more since 9/11.

          --LP
          • Your reading is paying off!

            But let me give you a little bit of my experience. I worked in the oil sands for the better part of a decade. Back then, the oil cost about $17 a barrel to produce, and production was around 100,000 barrels a day. Now it's $7 a barrel to produce and about 400,000 barrels a day. In the next year or two when some new projects are finished, it will half the price, and double production again.

            Oil sand does have to be strip mined, but it used to be a process using large draglines. Now the "Truck and Shovel" method is more economical. As well, for deep deposits, SAGD (Steam Assisted, Gravity Driven) is the preferred process. Basically, drill a hole, pump down steam, melt the tar and suck up the liquid.

            If you want to further your reading, check:
            http://www.syncrude.com/
            http://www.suncor.com/bins/content_page.asp?cid=54
            http://www.shell.ca/code/products/oilsands/dir_oil sands.html

            I'm sure the US has it's eye on us, because soon we will be a swing producer.

    • The dire predictions that oil will run out, such as those by the USGS, are typically made based only on currently known supplies. The oil industry is constantly discovering new reserves that they don't accounted for. Furthermore, as technology improves, areas that weren't cost effective to explore become accessible.
  • renewable! (Score:5, Funny)

    by mikec ( 7785 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:24PM (#3611415)
    They will probably switch to whale oil.
  • by jcapell ( 144056 ) <john@capell.net> on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:25PM (#3611426)
    (By Bruce Bartlett)

    On April 16, Newsday, the Long Island newspaper, published a startling report that old oil fields in the Gulf of Mexico were somehow being refilled. That is, new oil was being discovered in fields where it previously had not existed.
    Scientists, led by Mahlon Kennicutt of Texas A the remaining 60 percent, which is known to exist, cannot be produced economically and is therefore not included in proven reserve estimates. However, higher prices and advanced technology can easily make it profitable to expand production in existing fields.
    Higher prices also encourage exploration into areas that geologists strongly suspect to have oil, but where drilling costs are too high at present. Only a small portion of the Earth's surface has ever been explored for oil, and there is no reason to believe that there are not many large deposits yet to be discovered.
    If oil were really becoming more scarce, we would expect to see prices rising over time. In fact, the real price of oil, adjusted for inflation, has been remarkably stable at around $15 per barrel. Temporary price spikes by OPEC (the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries) have not proved sustainable because they brought forth new supplies, encouraged substitution of oil with coal or gas, and stimulated conservation by consumers and businesses.
    In short, even if the new scientific evidence about oil is wrong, one can still say the world will never run out of it. Higher prices will always bring new supplies to market. As Bjorn Lomberg points out in his new book, The Skeptical Environmentalist (Cambridge University Press), $40 per barrel oil will immediately increase world reserves from a 40 years supply to 250 years because vast known oil shale deposits will become economically viable.
    Of all the things we have to worry about in this day and age, running out of oil should not be one of them.

    Bruce Bartlett, a senior fellow for the National Center for Policy Analysis in Washington, D.C., writes for Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century, Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif. 90045.
  • Much easier for them than in many places in the world. They allready manage to heat almost of their homes with the abundance of the islands' geothermal power [rochester.edu]. And they are working vigorously to increase the amount of the elictricity they produce from it as well.

    Don't get me wrong, it's very cool that they are making the most of their situation, but not many places in the world have it quite as easy as they do.
  • by FatRatBastard ( 7583 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:26PM (#3611438) Homepage
    Of course some researchers estimate that in 30-40 years we won't have much of a choice.

    And others tend to disagree [detroitnews.com]. Ever since the oil industry has come into existance there has been dire predictions of oil running out "real soon now," none of which have come true. Most estimates come from provable, recoverable reserves which are not static. New discoveries are made, as are new, cheaper methods to extract oil that was previously thought to be uneconomical.

    I'd wager that we'll still be swimming in oil in 30-40 years.
    • by southpolesammy ( 150094 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:30PM (#3611473) Journal
      I don't doubt that the Detroit News would run a piece like this, since the Detroit economy is heavily based on automobiles, and since most automobiles run on gasoline, which comes from oil....
  • It's time for Bjorn Lomborg [lomborg.com] to make a visit to Iceland. The world is not running out of fossil fuels [detroitnews.com]. But its really hard to tell an "environmentalist" anything [greenspirit.com] because they are under the spell of the noted environmental scientists like Woody Harrelson, Cher, Sting and Bono. Because as we all know, if a rock star or movie star makes a scientific claim, it must be true! (Liberacé's Law of Relativity) They would never use your emotional attachment to clean air and water to boost their careers [disinfo.com].

    If you think you are running out of oil, Iceland, instead of acting like a silly celebrity thinking the sky is falling, call my friends down in Texas. I am sure they will be happy to sell you some oil from the massive underwater oil fields in the Gulf of Mexico. Its so abundant in the Gulf that if you SCUBA dive to the bottom you can see oil leaking from the sea floor all by itself. After that call, give Sting a ring and see where all that money that was donated to his Amazon forest campaigns went because it sure didn't go to the trees (the trees have no wallets or bank accounts...believe it or not).

    • MacOS X [apple.com]: UNIX for people that bathe daily.

      You've got that right. We've got this Solaris guy who smells like the county fair... damn. The guy with the Ti Powerbook? - He smells like a GQ magazine.
      • You've got that right. We've got this Solaris guy who smells like the county fair... damn. The guy with the Ti Powerbook? - He smells like a GQ magazine.

        You should smell an AS/400 admin! PU! :)

    • First of all, there is a finite supply of fossil fuels on the planet. So it's not a question of if we will run out, but when. Second, developing hydrogen-based energy systems is a good idea even if fossil fuels aren't going to run out soon. Hydrogen systems are cleaner (yes, even if the hydrogen is extracted from fossil fuels, because the messy extraction steps can be done in a centralized location where there is room and money to make sure the pollutants don't escape into the environment) and more flexible (there are many ways to make hydrogen, but only one way to obtain fossil fuels).


      What's amazing to me is how many people acknowledge all the flaws in the current energy system, and nevertheless refuse to think seriously about ways to improve it. Being short-sighted is their right, of course, but it's the people (and countries) whose imaginations haven't been shackled to the status quo that will make the world a better place, and get rich in the process.

      • First of all, there is a finite supply of fossil fuels on the planet.

        There is a finite supply of air on the planet so I suggest you stop breathing.

        What's amazing to me is how many people acknowledge all the flaws in the current energy system, and nevertheless refuse to think seriously about ways to improve it.

        Its not that we love fossil fuels but currently they are the only economically viable fuel source we have. I would love to have a Porche powered by a Solar Panels but it ain't going to happen today or in the next 20 years.

        My rule is strive for Utopia but deal with reality.

    • You know, I'm from Texas. And if i remember right, the REASON all of this oil just laying around Texas isn't being mined is because it isn't cost-effective to do so.

      If i remember right, all those countries in the middle east can pump oil out of the ground so much cheaper than the Texans can, that huge as the Texas oil market is, by and large the *bulk* of the Texan oil supplies just aren't worth the bother of tapping unless for some reason the global price of oil rises so high that it makes pumping oil out of Texas profitable. If i remember right, this is why whenever oil prices rise, while the rest of the economy starts suffering from the suddenly increased cost of producing just about anything, the Texas economy starts doing really well. If i remember right, this is why Beaumont just hasn't been the same since the 70s arab oil embargo ended.

      Maybe Iceland is doing this less for environmental reasons than that they don't want to send money to texas? Maybe they don't like trade deficits, and they want to take all that money that was being sent to import coal and oil and such and make it stay within their relatively small economy? Maybe they like the idea of having an economy that isn't tied to the (extremely fragile) political situation in the Middle East at a base level, because it is independent of the fuel supply the countries in the Middle East provide?

      "We have to get off fossil fuels before there aren't anymore!", well, i don't know, but that's a bit alarmist and is maybe not reasonable. But despite this, "We have to get off fossil fuels before they become so scarce and expensive that the oil companies are having to tap their wells in places like Texas again" makes quite a bit more sense, at least to me.

      Just a thought.
      • You know, I'm from Texas. And if i remember right, the REASON all of this oil just laying around Texas isn't being mined is because it isn't cost-effective to do so. If i remember right, all those countries in the middle east can pump oil out of the ground so much cheaper than the Texans can, that huge as the Texas oil market is, by and large the *bulk* of the Texan oil supplies just aren't worth the bother of tapping unless for some reason the global price of oil rises so high that it makes pumping oil out of Texas profitable

        Well Howdy! I grew up in Beaumont before moving to Yankeeland, so you know, I know oil. :) The main reason its so expensive to pull oil out of the ground in America is due to the Greenies and their Government mandated regulations which the Arabs do not have to deal with. I find it ironic that the Greens do everything they can to make domestic production expensive but don't complain that our oceans have fleets of oil tanker carrying crude across the Atlantic to Texas for processing.

        Maybe Iceland is doing this less for environmental reasons than that they don't want to send money to texas? Maybe they don't like trade deficits, and they want to take all that money that was being sent to import coal and oil and such and make it stay within their relatively small economy?

        Well if they don't want my oil, I don't what to buy what they export. By the way, what does Iceland export besides Bjork albums and its own citizens (my good friend is Icelandic)? :)

    • by TGK ( 262438 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:55PM (#3611721) Homepage Journal
      For those of you that care the editorial written by Mr Bartlett referenced above is the result of work done by the National Center for Policy Analysis. A rather conservitive group whos self proclaimed mission statement includes the following:

      The NCPA's goal is to develop and promote private alternatives to government regulation and control, solving problems by relying on the strength of the competitive, entrepreneurial private sector.


      I think it's safe to say that any thinktank looking for a way to turn the worlds problems over to private corporations has a vested interest in demonstrating that there is no energy crisis.

      Also please note that the theory upon which all of this argument is based is one put forth by a Mr Thomas Gold. An Astronomer. Not a geologist... an Astronomer.

      Furthermore I should point out that no one said we were running out of fossil fuels at a frightening rate. There's lots of coal down there. It's a pain in the arse to get out and will cause more environmental problems than we know what to do with (coal has all kinds of fun trace elements in it) but it's there.

      Finaly, in an attempt to address the issue of the ever peeking graph. Remember that the amount we can extract at a given level of economic benefit is changing as technology improves. But also, remember that as technology improves our desire for MORE oil has also increased (historicaly). The trend is inescapable. Oil CAN NOT be infinite. Not unless we start seriously rethinking the fundamental makeup of the earth ("The continents float on a layer of petrolium?")

      Sooner or later we're going to run out of this stuff. It might be in 40 years or 100. Either way it will happen eventualy. We also know that burning this stuff puts all kinds of lovely chemicals into the air which kill people. Oil has so many more practical uses than burning it. We should be putting some money into energy sources like fusion (it's not as far off as we think) and saving this suff for future use as plastics etc.

  • Gee, ya think the world would be coming to an end. Here's an article about how much oil we really have:
    Potential oil supply refill?

    by Bruce Bartlett

    On April 16, Newsday, the Long Island newspaper, published a startling report that old oil fields in the Gulf of Mexico were somehow being refilled. That is, new oil was being discovered in fields where it previously had not existed.
    Scientists, led by Mahlon Kennicutt of Texas A&M University, speculate that the new oil is surging upward from deposits well below those currently in production. "Very light oil and gas were being injected from below, even as the producing was going on," he said.
    Although it is not yet known whether this is a worldwide phenomenon or commercially important, the new discovery suggests there may be far more oil and gas within the Earth's core than previously thought.
    Mr. Kennicutt is not the first to suggest that vast hydrocarbon deposits may lie well below those currently known. In 1995, the New York Times reported that geochemist Jean Whelan of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts had also found evidence that oil was moving upward into reservoirs from somewhere far deeper.
    With growing improvements in technology that are making possible oil drilling at greater and greater depths, it may soon be economically feasible to explore and produce oil from these deep deposits.
    The existence of oil much farther below the surface than it was previously thought to exist raises new questions about the origins of oil and natural gas. It has commonly been thought they are the decayed remains of long dead plants and animals. However, as hydrocarbons are found at extreme depths, this explanation becomes increasingly implausible.
    Astronomer Thomas Gold of Cornell University has long been dissatisfied with the dead dinosaur theory of oil's origins. He argues that oil and gas are in fact the remains of methane left over from the Earth's origin. Methane, he points out, is one of the most common minerals in the universe. When the stars and planets were formed eons ago, it was one of the central building blocks from which matter formed.
    If Mr. Gold's theory is true, it makes sense we would continue to find hydrocarbons everywhere within the Earth's core, and not just at the surface, where plants and animals exist. Thus the new research is at least consistent with Mr. Gold's theory, even if it still remains to be proven.
    The new scientific evidence that energy supplies may be vastly greater than previously imagined is only the latest blow to the doomsayers. Such people have been around for 200 years, preaching that mankind has reached the limit to growth because we have found all the oil there is to be found. For at least a century, for example, the U.S. Geological Survey has consistently reported that America had only about 10 years worth of oil left.
    In defense of the Geological Survey, it was referring only to proven reserves. These are fields that have been explored, and where estimates have been made regarding their size and production potential. But of course, exploration is a continuing process, so that new reserves are discovered all the time.
    Economist Julian Simon long made the point that the size of proven reserves cannot be divorced from the price of oil. At current price levels, only about 40 percent of oil can be extracted from existing fields. The remaining 60 percent, which is known to exist, cannot be produced economically and is therefore not included in proven reserve estimates. However, higher prices and advanced technology can easily make it profitable to expand production in existing fields.
    Higher prices also encourage exploration into areas that geologists strongly suspect to have oil, but where drilling costs are too high at present. Only a small portion of the Earth's surface has ever been explored for oil, and there is no reason to believe there are not many large deposits yet to be discovered.
    If oil were really becoming more scarce, we would expect to see prices rising over time. But in fact, the real price of oil, adjusted for inflation, has been remarkably stable at around $15 per barrel. Temporary price spikes by OPEC have not proved sustainable because they brought forth new supplies, encouraged substitution of oil with coal or gas, and stimulated conservation by consumers and businesses.
    In short, even if the new scientific evidence about oil is wrong, one can still say the world will never run out of it. Higher prices will always bring new supplies to market. As Bjorn Lomberg points out in his new book, "The Skeptical Environmentalist" (Cambridge University Press), $40 per barrel oil will immediately increase world reserves from a 40 years supply to 250 years because vast known oil shale deposits will become economically viable.
    Of all the things we have to worry about in this day and age, running out of oil should not be one of them.

    Source: Washington Times [washtimes.com]
  • while the country waits for long-term storage solutions, such as carbon nanotubes.

    I can't wait to take a picture of that [slashdot.org].
  • Is Oil Exhaustible? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by nick_davison ( 217681 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:32PM (#3611497)
    According to an article on Detroit News [detroitnews.com], oil may actually not be exhaustible - at least in the way we currently view it.

    Thomas Gold of Cornell University says oil deposits may not actually be from decaying animal life but from methane left over from the Earth's origin. If that is the case, vast deposits would apparently exist throughout the earth, not just the surface deposits we are using now.

    What that says about man's ability to destroy his environment, given a potentially limitless supply of tools, I hate to even think. No idea whether Gold'll be proved correct or not, but it's an interesting counterpoint.

  • Is it 2012 Yet? (Score:3, Informative)

    by ink ( 4325 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:35PM (#3611513) Homepage

    I'm a child of the 80s, and every time we had a lecture on petroleum in grade school we were always going to run dry by 2012. When I debated in high school, we were at most going to have enough oil to last until 2020. Now I see that the date has been pushed back yet again -- these sorts of games do not rally confidence to the cause. Now that oil fields are being refilled [washtimes.com], perhaps they'll have to re-hash their guesses yet again?

    Now, I'm all for real, workable renewable resources -- and the best bet right now is with nuclear and crop-derivated oils -- but when a doomsday case is misstated repeatedly it does the cause no good at all.

  • "some researchers" (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Freedom Bug ( 86180 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:35PM (#3611519) Homepage
    In 1939 the Department of the Interior predicted we had 13 years of oil left.

    Current predictions say we have 40 years of oil left (Fairhead and Leach 1998). That's "known reserves", and assumes that technology will stagnate, the price will stay constant and more oil will not be found. If you believe that, I've got a bridge to sell you.

    They're still not counting the oil sands as part of known reserves: even though they are now profitably extracting. I've heard estimates that there are 100 years of oil in the Alberta oil sands alone.

    Bryan
  • The statement and link that show that petroleum supplies may be finite -- interesting, since this article here [detroitnews.com] states the exact opposite.

    Guess it depends upon who paid for the study....

  • that airplanes flying into/out of Iceland have to bring their own refill fuel?
  • by suss ( 158993 )
    Iceland.
    Population: 277,906 (July 2001 est.)

    There's more people in an average city.
    Anything Iceland does is not really relevant on a world scale.

    In other news: Grandma Fluegelbaum decides not to buy any more prunejuice!
    Let's all follow her example!
    There will be a prunejuice shortage in 30 years anyway!
  • IIRC, Iceland has already sold every citizen's DNA to some Pinky and the Brain operation here in the US for genetic research. What are they selling to whom to cover the R&D costs of this project?

  • WOW (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Hugonz ( 20064 ) <hugonz@NoSpam.gmail.com> on Thursday May 30, 2002 @03:54PM (#3611711) Homepage
    WoW I just have to say, this is great. You know that oil is the excrement of the devil...

    I'm from Venezuela and I can tell you how oil wealth can ruin a country's economy. I currently live in Mexico City and I can tell you how how oil can ruin the air.

    And it's not true that we don't have a choice, the fact is that we use way too much enegy, only a change of lifestyle is necessary.

  • So most Icelanders use geothermal energy to heat their homes, and mroe is on the way with the plan to kick the oil habit. But where does this energy come from?

    As I understand it, it comes from the warmth of the earth, which in turn is created by the gravitational pressure cooking our core and the sun. If we start depleting this energy, what could be the side effects? Maybe Iceland alone isn't enough to have a noticable effect, but neither would Iceland have a big effect if they were the only fossil-fuel-exhaust producing nation.

    Would rampant geothermal use (say as high as our current fossil fuel usage) cool the earth to some damaging end?
  • Space based Oil (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Jboy_24 ( 88864 )
    There was a very interesting article in a recent issue of Astronomy. To summarize (from memory)...

    Carbon Stars (A particular period in the life of a star where the carbon produced in the core has reached the surface), seem to produce complex hydrocarbons in great numbers. This is suggested by spectrograms of the light produced. Some of these spectrograms seem to indicate that the building blocks of coal and oil (ketones) are being produced as well. The numbers, from memory are around 1 million Earth masses a year.

    If the star previous to our sun had a carbon cycle (which i believe from reading this its quite common) then the deposits we are finding could be the remnants of what was deposited on the earth during the formation of it, rather then from organic matter.

    If that were to be the case, then this could be the source that this article [detroitnews.com] mentions.

    That would mean that hydrocarbon energy could be nearly limitless.

    Personally, I always had a hard time beliveing that enough plant matter could die in the same spot and be covered over to create oil fields that would hold millions and millions of barrels of oil. I mean, what plant matter/animal matter could possibly have died under the sea floor in those great #'s?. I can see the amazon rain bason, but there's alot of oil and gas and coal just about everywhere on earth.

    The downside to this abundance, would be that everyone would just get SUV's and gas guzzlers and our air would go to shit. But we might just have to have the strength to let that be the reason to use less rather then keep talking about how the sky will fall. But the hydrocarbon family of molecules is a very efficiant energy store, and it just happens to be in the dirt.
  • by Rogerborg ( 306625 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @04:21PM (#3611982) Homepage

    You're right that the long term point isn't about whether oil is going to run out, but it's also not about how high the price goes.

    In the long term, the point is about how much easily accessable oil we leave for our descendants to use. I mean the descendants that will need to bootstrap themselves after the next ice age or big asteroid impact. Because we're going to do squat to prepare for the first one; it's only after it happens (and it will) that our descendants will realise that we'd better get the hell off the planet while we still can.

    Let's leave them some easily accessible resources, huh? This isn't some hypothetical piece of science fiction. We either care enough to plan for it, or we don't. What's it to be?

  • by Zen Mastuh ( 456254 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @05:03PM (#3612423)

    ...but we created the CIA instead. Its inaugural mission (c.1954) was to depose the democratically elected leader of Iran because he nationalized American and British oil installations. In case you have been hiding in a box, the political instability in the region hasn't ceased since then. Just as a butterfly flapping its wings in the Canary Islands may create a hurricane that wipes out Miami, a single act of nation wrecking can lead to the collapse of two skyscrapers 47 years later.

    We built the atomic bomb in just a few years. Don't you think we also have the brain power to wean ourselves off of oil? Think about it: no Iran-Contra, no Gulf War, no 9/11 attacks, no coming world economic collapse when/if the oil supply suddenly runs out.

    • by GCP ( 122438 )
      the political instability in the region hasn't ceased since then

      It hasn't ceased for millenia. This was a mere five years after the bloody Israeli war of independence, yet you pick an incident in 1954 and blame it for the region's instability.

      Just as a butterfly flapping its wings in the Canary Islands may create a hurricane that wipes out Miami, a single act of nation wrecking can lead to the collapse of two skyscrapers 47 years later.

      If you are claiming that something as insignificant and unnoticed as a butterfly flapping its wings can create such an enormous impact on something far away and apparently unrelated, then what makes you think you have any credibility in claiming your 47 year chain of causality? What goofy reasoning. Bin Ladin ISN'T killing to encourage democracy in the Muslim world, Iran or elsewhere.

      Think about it: no Iran-Contra, no Gulf War, no 9/11 attacks, no coming world economic collapse when/if the oil supply suddenly runs out.

      Let's join hands and sing John Lennon songs.

      No, we would have wars about other things, like Communism or religion. Oil has only mattered for a century. Did war exist before that? Oh, wait, I forgot. War started with the creation of the CIA.

      And as for the oil supply "suddenly" running out, where do I even begin? Does the name Jeremy Rifkin ring a bell? The more technology improves, the more years-worth of oil we can prove we have. The economics of oil will slowly change, and so will the technologies. We'll be able to manufacture it before the end of this century, if we still need it (we won't). Long before we ever run out, the amount of oil in proven reserves will have gradually become irrelevant.

  • by crovira ( 10242 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @05:27PM (#3612738) Homepage
    Won't they miss the threats, the terrorism?
  • by MoNsTeR ( 4403 ) on Thursday May 30, 2002 @06:12PM (#3613134)
    ...unless decided unanimously by individuals.

    If by "Iceland" we mean "Iceland's government", then this is the exact opposite of voluntary, because anything a government does is by nature and definition coercive.

Arithmetic is being able to count up to twenty without taking off your shoes. -- Mickey Mouse

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