Originally posted by: charrison
More jobs for US citizens, less oil from foreign sources. Good deal right?
If only it would be true.
I'm sure all more Bullsh1t and won't see anything come of this other than massive destruction up there.
Originally posted by: charrison
More jobs for US citizens, less oil from foreign sources. Good deal right?
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Originally posted by: charrison
More jobs for US citizens, less oil from foreign sources. Good deal right?
If only it would be true.
I'm sure all more Bullsh1t and won't see anything come of this other than massive destruction up there.
Originally posted by: Engineer
Pump that oil out boys. Oh, and if we're going to open up Alaska to get the oil, let's not be stupid and sell it to Japan or even worse, give it to another country (North Korea, etc) in return for favors or a better relationship. Keep your own oil for yourself if you're importing the stuff.
Actually, most of the oil from Alaska will end up in Japan (lets hope they are paying top dollar for it) because it is not the sweet crude type the US prefers to make gasoline. I beleive the Alaskan reserves are the high sulfur type, which there is more of a market for in Japan and Asia. The good news is it will decrease our trade deficit with Asia.Originally posted by: Engineer
Pump that oil out boys. Oh, and if we're going to open up Alaska to get the oil, let's not be stupid and sell it to Japan or even worse, give it to another country (North Korea, etc) in return for favors or a better relationship. Keep your own oil for yourself if you're importing the stuff.
The sooner the stuff runs out, the better. Maybe we can then develope something else and the ME can eat the sand that fills their empty oil pits.
theres this nice thing already in place, its called the Alaskan Pipeline, maybe youve heard of it?Originally posted by: dullard
...
As it is, this oil won't go to the US anyways (no way to get it to US refineries). Oh well.
Originally posted by: Train
Actually, most of the oil from Alaska will end up in Japan (lets hope they are paying top dollar for it) because it is not the sweet crude type the US prefers to make gasoline. I beleive the Alaskan reserves are the high sulfur type, which there is more of a market for in Japan and Asia. The good news is it will decrease our trade deficit with Asia.Originally posted by: Engineer
Pump that oil out boys. Oh, and if we're going to open up Alaska to get the oil, let's not be stupid and sell it to Japan or even worse, give it to another country (North Korea, etc) in return for favors or a better relationship. Keep your own oil for yourself if you're importing the stuff.
The sooner the stuff runs out, the better. Maybe we can then develope something else and the ME can eat the sand that fills their empty oil pits.
theres this nice thing already in place, its called the Alaskan Pipeline, maybe youve heard of it?Originally posted by: dullard
...
As it is, this oil won't go to the US anyways (no way to get it to US refineries). Oh well.
Originally posted by: nergee
"There is so little refining capacity on the West Coast (on purpose of course) that the Oil thugs have been shipping most of the Oil from Alaska to Japan for years just as somebody said. "
There is more than enough West coast refining capacity to handle Alaska's oil now and even if ANWR becomes a reality.........
Look Here
Originally posted by: nergee
"There is so little refining capacity on the West Coast (on purpose of course) that the Oil thugs have been shipping most of the Oil from Alaska to Japan for years just as somebody said. "
There is more than enough West coast refining capacity to handle Alaska's oil now and even if ANWR becomes a reality.........
Look Here
pull the wool off your eyes Dave.Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Yeah right. It hasn't happened all these years and it's not going to happen.
I think it's talking about heating oil (one fraction of oil distillate), though it's hard to say for sure.Originally posted by: 0marTheZealot
err oil is about 1.00 a gallon. 42 gallons in a barrel.
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: Yzzim
Originally posted by: 0marTheZealot
Ethanol is an energy loser and therefore will always need to be subsidized by an energy winner (re oil).
that's what I've understood too. Haven't looked for anything to back it up, but many people have told me that, and I'm from a farming community.
People run from trying to back it up. You see, the study and/or figures they cite are oldI'd like to see something cited from the last decade from the people who continue to claim this.
CsG
Omar? Anyone?
CsG
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
1-25-2005 Bush Admin OKs Drilling Plan for Rare New Mexico Desert Land
Overriding objections by New Mexico's governor, the Interior Department announced a final plan Monday for expanding oil and gas drilling on Otero Mesa, a rare desert grassland and one of a handful of places in the western U.S. where opposition to drilling had united ranchers, property rights advocates, hunters and conservationists.
On Monday, Richardson lashed out at the Bush administration's "one-way, oil-only energy policy."
"I am very disappointed by the Bush administration's failure to respect New Mexico's position on oil and gas leasing in this precious, sensitive and world-renowned area"
"The bottom line continues to be we are talking about destroying the largest remaining desert grasslands in America for at best a few days worth of oil and gas. That is shortsighted"
The potential energy yield from the area is unclear.
According to the BLM, about 100 wells have been drilled in the last century and two have produced oil or gas.
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Originally posted by: miketheidiot
Originally posted by: Train
Dave your an idiot (jeeze I feel like I've said that a thousand times)
so you can find one place that has -20 degree temperatures, wow, guess what , no one lives there.
note that 80% of US heating oil is consumed in the northeast, which is having pretty warm temps for this time of year.
get a clue, really
HEY! I live were its -20BRRRRR!
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It's on the western side of the Great Lake States today, don't worry Ohio, Indiana etc will be in the deep freeze tomorrow.
Those that know me know that I have predicted major Weather events many many days before even a hint by the big Pros.
Here is the promised Mamoth storm and cold I saw forming last week:
1-5-2005 Nation's midsection will get 1-2-3 punch
Moisture-laden storms from the north, west and south are likely to converge on much of America over the next several days in what could be a once-in-a-generation onslaught, meteorologists forecast Tuesday.
The "Pineapple Express," a series of warm and storms heading east from Hawaii, drenching Southern California and the far Southwest, which already are beset with heavy rain and snow. It could cause flooding, avalanches and mudslides.
An "Arctic Express," a mass of cold air chugging south from Alaska and Canada, bringing frigid air and potentially heavy snow and ice to the usually mild-wintered Pacific Northwest.
An unnamed warm, moist storm system from the Gulf of Mexico drenching the already saturated Ohio, Tennessee and Mississippi valleys. Expect heavy river flooding and springlike tornadoes.
All three are likely to meet somewhere in the nation's midsection and cause even more problems, sparing only areas east of the Appalachian Mountains.
"You're talking a two- or three-times-a-century type of thing," said prediction center senior meteorologist James Wagner, who has been forecasting storms since 1965. "It's a pattern that has a little bit of everything."
The combo storms could damage property and cause a few deaths.
"It's a situation that looks pretty potent," said Ed O'Lenic, the Climate Prediction Center's operations chief. "A large part of North America looks like it's going to be affected."
The last time a similar situation seemed to be brewing, especially in the West, was in January 1950, O'Lenic said. That month, 21 inches of snow hit Seattle, killing 13 people in an extended freeze.
The entire state of NM along I-40 is a desert grassland. Pretty, but hardly rare. I have pics if anyone wants themOriginally posted by: dmcowen674
1-25-2005 Bush Admin OKs Drilling Plan for Rare New Mexico Desert Land
Overriding objections by New Mexico's governor, the Interior Department announced a final plan Monday for expanding oil and gas drilling on Otero Mesa, a rare desert grassland and one of a handful of places in the western U.S. where opposition to drilling had united ranchers, property rights advocates, hunters and conservationists.
On Monday, Richardson lashed out at the Bush administration's "one-way, oil-only energy policy."
"I am very disappointed by the Bush administration's failure to respect New Mexico's position on oil and gas leasing in this precious, sensitive and world-renowned area"
"The bottom line continues to be we are talking about destroying the largest remaining desert grasslands in America for at best a few days worth of oil and gas. That is shortsighted"
The potential energy yield from the area is unclear.
According to the BLM, about 100 wells have been drilled in the last century and two have produced oil or gas.
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: Yzzim
Originally posted by: 0marTheZealot
Ethanol is an energy loser and therefore will always need to be subsidized by an energy winner (re oil).
that's what I've understood too. Haven't looked for anything to back it up, but many people have told me that, and I'm from a farming community.
People run from trying to back it up. You see, the study and/or figures they cite are oldI'd like to see something cited from the last decade from the people who continue to claim this.
CsG
Originally posted by: 0marTheZealot
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: Yzzim
Originally posted by: 0marTheZealot
Ethanol is an energy loser and therefore will always need to be subsidized by an energy winner (re oil).
that's what I've understood too. Haven't looked for anything to back it up, but many people have told me that, and I'm from a farming community.
People run from trying to back it up. You see, the study and/or figures they cite are oldI'd like to see something cited from the last decade from the people who continue to claim this.
CsG
David Pimental, a Cornell University researcher, has spent the last few decades studying Ethanol. He concludes that, after everything, including harvesting and purification which are generally omitted from most studies, ethanol has an EPR of .3 at best.
http://www.soilassociation.org...ble_library/NT0002E072
http://designer96.tripod.com/facts1.htm
However, many biodiesal options are energy positive, indicating that they can be a source of energy. However, non-trivial technical problems still need to be worked out.
Originally posted by: jai6638
when do u think the next snowstorm with snow accumulations of more than 5-6 inches gonna be in New England ( especially Connecticut ) ? ( not tryin to be sarcastic or anythin.. )
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
1-2-2005 Firewood Sales Up As Oil Prices Rise
Seasoned firewood is now selling for roughly $180 to $230 a cord compared to between $140 and $160 a year ago
Ray Colton of Pittsfield, Vt., said his company has sold more than 4,000 cords this season, about 1,000 more than last year: "We're selling as fast as we produce," he said.
A cord is a stack of firewood 4 feet wide, 8 feet long and 4 feet high.
Oil prices are hovering at close to $2 a gallon in Maine, up more than 30 percent from a year ago. At $2.18 a gallon, kerosene is 56 cents more than last year. And propane averages $2.06 a gallon, up 43 cents from a year ago.
Prices are also up out West, including in Colorado, where local hardwood begins at $180 per cord and imported oak costs $300.
"Firewood at $180 a cord is still a deal compared to what it costs to heat your home with oil," he said.