Re: Bottomless well
In a message dated 2/15/05 6:17:49 PM Pacific Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: >What hemisphere, exactly? If that include South America (Venezuela) >it is probably true. There is also a lot of oil in Canada and >Alaska. Of course it would cost a fortune to extract it. If he means >oil at $500 per barrel, There's allot of oil in Michigan under the Great Lakes, but conservationists do not want the lakes to get damages by oil wells. Baron Von Volsung, www.rhfweb.com\baron, Email: www.rhfweb.com\emailform.html President Thomas D. Clark, Email: www.rhfweb.com\emailform.html, Personal Web Page: www.rhfweb.com\personal New Age Production's Inc., www.rhfweb.com\newage Star Haven Community Services, at www.rhfweb.com\sh. Radiation Health Foundation Trust at www.rhfweb.com Making a difference one person at a time Get informed. Inform others.
Re: Bottomless well
thomas malloy wrote: and Jed Rothwell responded; Michael Medved, michaelmedved.com interviewed Peter Huber author of The Bottomless Well. What hemisphere, exactly? If that include South America (Venezuela) it is probably true. There is also a lot of oil in Canada and Alaska. Of course it would cost a fortune to extract it. If he means oil at $500 per barrel, He said $20 per barrel, this compares with $5 per barrel for Saudi oil. Huber finds it unfortunate that we are continuing to fund the middle east, but that's economics. These prices do not include the cost of war for oil, ill-health and early deaths from pollution, You can argue that the flow of petro dollars fueling Wahabi fundamentalist violence is a classic example of unintended consequences, or stupidity, or a conspiracy. Unfortunately, people are likely to use coal instead, which is even worse by every measure. Huber agrees with you on that. If Huber is saying there is plenty of oil lying around at today's costs in the US, Canada and Mexico, he should tell you oil companies about it. They are paying a fortune to He's not saying that, his thesis is that there is plenty of oil we're just going to have to pay more to get it. - Jed
Re: Bottomless well
thomas malloy wrote: Michael Medved, michaelmedved.com interviewed Peter Huber author of The Bottomless Well. Huber poopooed Hupert's Peak thesis. According to him, there are enough petroleum resources in this hemisphere to last the entire world for a century. What hemisphere, exactly? If that include South America (Venezuela) it is probably true. There is also a lot of oil in Canada and Alaska. Of course it would cost a fortune to extract it. If he means oil at $500 per barrel, I am sure there is enough to last a century. At $2,000 per barrel it will last forever, because no one can afford to burn it. These prices do not include the cost of war for oil, ill-health and early deaths from pollution, accidents in which gasoline powered vehicles explode, and other add-on costs. If you include this sort of thing, oil already costs roughly ~$200 per barrel, I think. If you include the cost of worst-case global warming I suppose each barrel will eventually cost us something like ~1,000 lives or maybe $20 million. From that point of view, the total remaining supply is the least of our problems. In a sense, it would be a blessing if we ran out quickly and we were forced to invent replacement sources. Unfortunately, people are likely to use coal instead, which is even worse by every measure. If Huber is saying there is plenty of oil lying around at today's costs in the US, Canada and Mexico, he should tell you oil companies about it. They are paying a fortune to get oil from the North Sea, Russia, the Middle East and other places. They would be delighted to find it closer to the U.S., which is the world's largest market. I doubt he knows more than the oil company experts do. - Jed
Re: Bottomless well
what facts did he cite? At 03:38 PM 2/14/2005 -0600, you wrote: Michael Medved, michaelmedved.com interviewed Peter Huber author of The Bottomless Well. Huber poopooed Hupert's Peak thesis. According to him, there are enough petroleum resources in this hemisphere to last the entire world for a century. Then there is our coal reserves. He ignored my question about the collapse of the dollar. Further information on the book is on Medved's website.
Bottomless well
Michael Medved, michaelmedved.com interviewed Peter Huber author of The Bottomless Well. Huber poopooed Hupert's Peak thesis. According to him, there are enough petroleum resources in this hemisphere to last the entire world for a century. Then there is our coal reserves. He ignored my question about the collapse of the dollar. Further information on the book is on Medved's website.