DRIVING FORCE BEHIND AMERICAN AND WORLD POLITICS.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
BLACK GOLD.
Advertisements

Changing Patterns Of Oil Production And Consumption IB SL.
Current ıssues ın ınternatıonal relatıons. NUCLEAR ENERGY AND NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION OF IRAN.
Wind is the Solution Department of Energy Aaron Grove, Jenni Lee, Liz Zhao, Madeline Grande, Elena Woiciechowska.
WHERE DO WE GET OUR ENERGY? 1OIL COAL 3 NATURAL GAS 4 NUCLEAR 5 WATER 6 WOOD.
ENERGY INTERDEPENDENCE THE NAFTA EXAMPLE By Nathan Hinch
How important is the conflict in Iraq in the geopolitics of energy?
Oil The economics of oil. Oil consumption. Oil production.
This presentation includes forward-looking statements. Actual future conditions (including economic conditions, energy demand, and energy supply) could.
1 Israel's Energy Independence: Long-Term Policy State of Israel Ministry of National Infrastructures.
Asia’s role in the future Randy Kluver Institute for Pacific Asia Texas A&M University.
1 POLS 384 Lec. 12 Energy, Environment & Security.
Why Oil Energy Independence May Not Be a Good Idea Dennis Silverman Dept. of Physics and Astronomy U C Irvine October 30,
Critique of the Pickens Plan for U.S. Energy in the Next 10 Years Dennis Silverman U. C. Irvine Physics and Astronomy
Economic Summit Recent decline in oil prices March 6, 2015 Reza Varjavand Associate Professor of Economics GSM, Saint Xavier University.
MATT CAMPBELL & BRENDAN CARROLL OIL AND THE MIDDLE EAST.
WORLD ENERGY INVESTMENT OUTLOOK
ENERGY: Fossil Fuels Primary and Secondary Energy Sources Oil Production, Economics, and Impacts Coal and Other Fossil Fuels Energy Conservation (use less.
OGT SESSION 1 ECONOMICS.
7th Grade UBD - Unit 3 - Middle East.  Work alone to complete a list of facts you know about Southwest Asia. You should come up with a list of at least.
Oil and OPEC. Oil is a nonrenewable resource A natural resource with economic value that is slow to form and is destroyed by use Another name is fossil.
THE OUTLOOK FOR OIL AND GAS Presentation To OKLAHOMA INDEPENDENT PETROLEUM ASSOCIATION June 11, 2007.
 OPEC – a cartel of countries that join together to make decisions regarding the supply of oil in the world market  GDP – the dollar market value of.
How OPEC Controls the Price of Oil A Lesson in SUPPLY, DEMAND, and PRICE.
International Energy Outlook 2010 With Projections to 2035.
Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright Energy from Fossil Fuels PPT by Clark E. Adams Chapter 12.
Fossil Fuels What is a Fossil Fuel?.
Resource Issues Chapter 14 An Introduction to Human Geography
An Atlantic Basin Energy System? Paul Isbell Calouste Gulbenkian Fellow Center for Transatlantic Relations Johns Hopkins University School for Advanced.
 Today oil supplies about 40% of the world’s energy and 96% of its transportation energy.  Since the shift to oil, the world has consumed over 875 billion.
DEVELOPMENT AND RESOURCE ISSUES YOU GOTTA HAVE MONEY TO MAKE MONEY.
Oil in the Middle East.
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright
The United States and Oil How has America’s growing oil dependency affected US foreign policy toward the Middle East?
TRANSPORTATION CHALLENGES OF THE 21st CENTURY by Robert Q. Riley Ford hybrid-electric concept car.
Honors C.A.D..  We know that our oil supplies are varied, and that we have an INCREDIBLE thirst for oil.  Where does it come from? Where do we get it.
Wind Power. Advantages of Wind Power The Advantages of Wind Power:  US has plentiful supply  Falling costs  Inexpensive to set up  Farmers earn income.
WIND POWER. WHAT IS WIND?!  Caused by uneven heating of the Earth’s surface  Made of very different types of land and water, absorbs sun’s heat at different.
1 Bridging the Gap Between Energy Producers and Consumers Carmen Difiglio, Ph.D. U.S. Department of Energy International Conference on Economics Turkish.
The Outlook for Energy Markets.  World oil markets have become increasingly tight since  Global demand growth, fed by worldwide economic growth,
Location of World’s Future Supplies of Petroleum and Natural Gas.
The Northeast Natural Gas Market in 2030 LNG EXPRESS CONFERENCE Boston, Massachusetts September 21, 2006 William Trapmann Natural Gas Analysis Team Leader.
WORLD ENERGY PICTURE. Figure 1 World Energy Consumption Projections indicate continued growth in world energy use, despite world oil prices that are.
Uses of Wind Energy By: Beau Brannan & Katherine Timmerman.
Energy Use in the Unites States. Where was energy used?
Pamela G Marissa V Jillian W. Motion = kinetic energy. Wind carries kinetic energy. Wind-electric turbines and its blades capture this energy through.
Warm Up Answer the following questions on page 54 of your spiral based on the photo on page 106 of your textbook. – What interesting details do you see?
INVESTIGATING THE SOURCES OF ENERGY ONLINE Pamela J.W. Gore Georgia Perimeter College.
Topic 1= Energy Security The topic is split into 3 key questions: 1.To what extent is the world's energy 'secure' at present ? Energy supply, demand and.
Oil!. Oil What is oil? How is it formed? When scientists learned how to use oil for energy many countries with oil, such as Saudi Arabia, suddenly had.
U.S. Energy Information Administration Independent Statistics & Analysis International Energy Outlook 2016 For Center for Strategic and International.
What have been the main trends in oil consumption and production over the last 30 years?
Current Power and Energy Landscape
OIL.
Petroleum sector in Turkey Petroleum Engineering 2017
Global Patterns of energy supply, consumption and trade
OIL A Natural Resource.
What nations produce the largest amount of oil?
ENERGY: Fossil Fuels Primary and Secondary Energy Sources
NS4960 Spring Term 2018 Renewables Competitive by 2020
China Energy Security Strategy and Implications to US National Security Stephen Alexander.
Oil In the Middle East Today oil supplies about 40% of the world’s energy and 96% of its transportation energy. Since the shift to oil, the world has consumed.
Resource Issues Chapter 14 An Introduction to Human Geography
Project Based Learning Social Studies Mrs. Strope
OPEC.
Highlights of Energy Stats 2016 & Outlook 2035
Natural Resources of the Middle East
OPEC.
Presentation transcript:

DRIVING FORCE BEHIND AMERICAN AND WORLD POLITICS

While the United States consumes roughly 19 million barrels of oil a day, mostly to power its 200 million automobiles, it produces only about 8 million barrels (or 42 percent) of that total domestically. The other 58 percent -- some 11 million barrels a day -- of our oil has to be imported from other countries.

Although the Middle East remains a principal oil supplier for the U.S. market, in recent decades other parts of the world -- West Africa and Central and South America -- have become vitally important as sources of petroleum.

Today, three non-Middle East nations -- Mexico, Venezuela and Nigeria -- combine to provide the United States with almost as much oil as the Persian Gulf region provides. But overall world oil reserves outside of the Middle East appear to be limited, so over the longer term, the United States expects to remain deeply dependent on oil from the Persian Gulf.

Meanwhile, the global demand for oil is growing all over the world, with India, China and South Korea in particular fueling recent sharp increases in demand.

This means that inevitably there will be greater competition among nations for what is by any measure a diminishing world oil supply. This is one reason underlying the strategic deployment of U.S. military resources in and around the Middle East.

The United States is the Saudi Arabia of wind power. Wind power currently accounts for 48 billion kWh of electricity a year in the United States — enough to serve more than 4.5 million households. That is still only about 1% of current demand, but the potential of wind is much greater. A 2005 Stanford University study found that there is enough wind power worldwide to satisfy global demand 7 times over — even if only 20% of wind power could be captured.Stanford University study Building wind facilities in the corridor that stretches from the Texas panhandle to North Dakota could produce 20% of the electricity for the United States at a cost of $1 trillion. It would take another $200 billion to build the capacity to transmit that energy to cities and towns. That's a lot of money, but it's a one-time cost. And compared to the $700 billion we spend on foreign oil every year, it's a bargain.

Studies from around the world show that the Great Plains states are home to the greatest wind energy potential in the world — by far. The Department of Energy reports that 20% of America's electricity can come from wind. North Dakota alone has the potential to provide power for more than a quarter of the country. Today's wind turbines stand up to 410 feet tall, with blades that stretch 148 feet in length. The blades collect the wind's kinetic energy. In one year, a 3-megawatt wind turbine produces as much energy as 12,000 barrels of imported oil.

YES WE CAN CHANGE IS UPON US… set your eyes on the horizon and mover forward There is hope for the future Lets take a look T Boone Pickens Pickens Plan