Originally posted by: JSt0rm01
we could probably do 1 and 3 without touching 2. I like 1 and3 I just feel like our generation and the next 3 shouldn't consume all the oil there is.
Originally posted by: BoomerD
Oddly enough, oil shale made sense to many of the oil companies in the 70's and 80's when they were building like mad in Western Colorado...until the price of oil dropped and they shut down the operational plants. (I'm not sure if the Unocal plant outside Parachute is still in operation or not)
If these plants made sense when oil was between $15 and $25/bbl, why don't they make sense NOW?
Originally posted by: BoomerD
Oddly enough, oil shale made sense to many of the oil companies in the 70's and 80's when they were building like mad in Western Colorado...until the price of oil dropped and they shut down the operational plants. (I'm not sure if the Unocal plant outside Parachute is still in operation or not)
If these plants made sense when oil was between $15 and $25/bbl, why don't they make sense NOW?
The Senate Appropriations Committee today narrowly defeated Sen. Wayne Allard's attempt to end a moratorium related to oil shale development in Colorado.
It was a big day for Colorado energy issues on Capitol Hill as Gov. Bill Ritter testified before a senate committee asking lawmakers to move cautiously on oil-shale development until more is known about the environmental impact and other issues.
Meanwhile downstairs, the appropriations committee was considering a massive Emergency Supplemental Spending Bill. Allard, a member of the committee, attempted to insert an amendment that would reverse the moratorium that lawmakers approved late last year.
The moratorium prevents the Department of Interior from issuing regulations so that oil companies can move forward on oil-shale projects in Colorado and Utah. Allard said the moratorium has left uncertainties at a time when companies need to move forward and in the long term make the United States more energy independent.
Originally posted by: techs
Some of what he said was typical neo-con propaganda. It's illegal to drill for oil in the atlantic and pacific oceans? Thats news to the oil companies that already have oil producing platforms in those oceans.
And oil shale? Seems Newt forgets the West is already short of water and oil shale into oil requires huge amounts of water.
His idea to use the strategic petroleum reserve to counterbalance speculation used to be the policy under the Democrats, specifically Clinton did it. And the Republicans are vehemently against it, and Bush has completely ruled it out.
Originally posted by: techs
It's illegal to drill for oil in the atlantic and pacific oceans? Thats news to the oil companies that already have oil producing platforms in those oceans.
And oil shale? Seems Newt forgets the West is already short of water and oil shale into oil requires huge amounts of water.
His idea to use the strategic petroleum reserve to counterbalance speculation used to be the policy under the Democrats, specifically Clinton did it. And the Republicans are vehemently against it, and Bush has completely ruled it out.
In May, President Bush reluctantly signed bipartisan legislation that stops him from stockpiling oil in the nation's emergency reserve through the end of this year. Supporters of the bill said it would reduce gas prices by 5 cents to 25 cents a gallon by keeping 70,000 more barrels of oil a day on the market beginning July 1.
Originally posted by: Genx87
And knowing some of these dirtbag speculators they will have the scoop on the president doing this and get out of the market.
Only to buy in at a lower rate and rape even more!