Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byRhett Duffy Modified over 9 years ago
1
Vince Matthews Director Colorado Geological Survey The Global Scramble for Minerals and Energy— Its Impact on Colorado
3
Harris D. Sherman, Executive Director
4
YOUR Geological Survey !!! Geology of Water Resources Promote Mineral and Energy Resources Colorado Avalanche Information Center Geologic Hazards Educate Assist State and Federal Agencies
5
Everything you need to know about Mineral and Energy in Colorado
6
Production of Natural Resources is an Important Part of Colorado’s Economy $12.0 billion
7
Revenue comparison of Colorado’s Important Economic Sectors (2005) Minerals & Energy Agriculture $ Billion Tourism 48% 96%
8
Distribution of Colorado Mineral & Energy Value 2007 ($ Billions) CO2 0.5 Natural Gas7.0 Oil 1.5 Minerals 1.8 Coal 1.1 Uranium 0.00
9
Production of Natural Resources has Always been an Important Part of Colorado’s Economy
10
Just off 51 st Street Boulder 1902
11
China India U.S.
12
Population Comparison China U.S. India
13
Land Area Comparison ChinaU.S. India
14
GDP Comparison - 2007 China U.S. India Source: World Bank
15
GDP Growth Comparison 2004-06 China U.S. India Source: World Bank
16
World Electrical Growth World 8.3 terawatts increase (+70%) China/India/U.S. 4.4 terawatts
17
World Electrical Growth India 0.5 U.S. 1.1 China 2.8
18
World Electrical Growth Africa Asia- Pacific Europe- Eurasia Middle East South & Central America North America
19
Industrial minerals: Cement 45 1 Fluorspar 51 1 Rare earths 96 1 Metals: Aluminum 24 1 Antimony 86 1 Copper 16 2 Gold 9 4 Lead 32 1 Magnesium 75 1 Molybdenum 22 3 Silver 12 3 Steel, crude 31 1 Tin 35 1 Tungsten 87 1 Zinc 26 1 China’s Share of World Mineral Production in 2005 Source: USGS, Menzie and Tse % Rank
20
China’s Production and Consumption of Copper Production supplemented by imports Source: USGS, Kenzie, et al
21
Global Impact 457%
22
Global Impact
23
307%
24
Global Impact 457% 307%
25
Colorado Impact Difficulty in manufacturing of copper products Increased copper thefts Increased costs to the consumer Copper mine reopening
26
Industrial minerals: Cement 45 1 Fluorspar 51 1 Rare earths 96 1 Metals: Aluminum 24 1 Antimony 86 1 Copper 16 2 Gold 9 4 Lead 32 1 Magnesium 75 1 Molybdenum 22 3 Silver 12 3 Steel, crude 31 1 Tin 35 1 Tungsten 87 1 Zinc 26 1 China’s Share of World Mineral Production in 2005 Source: USGS, Menzie and Tse % Rank
27
Leading Importers of Iron Ore— 1980–2003 Sources: U.S. Geological Survey Minerals Yearbook; United Nations Conference on Trade and Development.
28
Trends in Demand for Steel Source: International Iron and Steel Institute.
29
China 2005 – Opened 70,000 new supermarkets 2006 – Became #3 car manufacturer – 42% increase in capital investment 11 th Five-year plan - Plan to build the equivalent of three Manhattan Islands
30
Price of Scrap Iron 559%
31
Ball mill gets real Leadville welcome Image courtesy of Leadville Herald Democrat
32
U.S. molybdenum exports
33
MOLYBDENUM Price 997%
34
Ball mill gets real Leadville welcome Image courtesy of Leadville Herald Democrat
35
MOLYBDENUM Price 997%
36
MOLYBDENUM Price
38
~ 100 Known Occurrences of Molybdenum
39
Precious & Base Metal Increases 01/03 - 01/09 Silver 367% Platinum 255% Gold 205% Palladium 284% Zinc 497% Lead 800% Aluminum 144% Nickel 630% Tin 229% Average Price Increase 379%
40
Selenium GermaniumIridiumManganese Titanium CadmiumChromiumCobalt TungstenVanadium 671% 908% 719% 581% 531% 159% 1620% 8 Tellurium 1123%600% 2060% 193% 411% Magnesium 354%580% Rhenium 685% AntimonyBismuth Average Price Increase 746%
41
Increase in Coal Spot Price 2005 2004
42
2005 Coal Price Spot versus Contract Spot Contract 2007 $29.75
43
Metal prices fall further than during Great Depression The price of key industrial metals has fallen further over the last four months than occurred during the worst years of Great Depression between 1929 and 1933, according to research by Barclays Capital. By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard Last Updated: 7:29AM GMT 03 Dec 2008
44
“Chinese companies and their rivals are scouring the globe from Australia to Africa for access to the raw materials needed to sustain the Asian nation’s growth as commodity prices surge.” --June 23, 2006 (Bloomberg)
45
Renewable Energy WIND - Neodymium - Molybdenum - Iron Ore SOLAR - Cadmium - Tellurium - Indium - Germanium - Gallium - Selenium - Silicon - Copper
46
CommodityPrimary SourcesApplications in Alternative Energy AntimonyChinaThermoelectric/paraelectric materials BariumChinaThermoelectric/paraelectric materials BismuthChina, MexicoThermoelectric/paraelectric materials CobaltKinshasa,AustraliaPhotovoltaics (solar cells) GalliumChinaPhotovoltaics, paraelectric materials GermaniumBelgium,CanadaPhotovoltaics (solar cells) IndiumChina, CanadaSolar cells, thermo/paraelectric materials ManganeseGabon, S. AfricaPhotovoltaics NickelCanadaFuel cells Platinum groupSouth AfricaFuel cells, para/thermoelectric mtrls Rare EarthsChinaFuel cells, para/thermoelectric mtrls ScandiumChina, RussiaThermoelectric/paraelectric materials SeleniumCanadaSolar cells, thermoelectric materials StrontiumMexicoThermoelectric/paraelectric materials TantalumBrazilThermoelectric/paraelectric materials TelluriumBelgium, GermanySolar cells, thermoelectric metrls, semiconductors TinPeruThermoelectric materials TitaniumAustralia, S. AfricaSolar cells VanadiumCzech Rep., S. AfricaFuel cells ZincCanada, MexicoPhotovoltaics, fuel cells, thermoelectric mtrls Strategic and Critical Materials with uses in Alternative Energy applications for which the U.S. is dependent on imports for 50% or more of consumption
47
Percent imported
48
REE = Rare Earth Elements = 15 + 2 neodymium, lanthanum, terbium, dysprosium
49
Toyota Prius Rare Earths “The biggest user of rare earths of any object in the world!”
50
HONG KONG — China is set to tighten its hammerlock on the market for some of the world’s most obscure but valuable minerals. --August 31, 2009 ( The New York Times )
51
World faces hi-tech crunch as China eyes ban on rare metal exports –August 24, 2009 (London Telegraph) China Tightens Grip on Rare Minerals –August 31, 2009 (New York Times) China Considers Rare-Earth Reserve in Inner Mongolia –September 2, 2009 (Bloomberg News) As hybrid cars gobble rare metals, shortage looms –August 31, 2009 (Reuters)
52
22% Imported Cement producers 1.China 2.India 3.U.S. China Consumes ½ of all the concrete in the world 20032004 U.S. cement manufacturing is 81% foreign owned
53
$50/ ton > $200/ ton in 2008 Fertilizers Potash $50/ ton > $500/ ton in one year Sulfur Nitrogen urea $1000/ ton.
54
Dr Colin Thirtle, Professor of Development Economics, Imperial College London
55
U.S. Energy Split Oil Natural Gas Coal Uranium Renewables
56
CommodityPercent of U.S. Percentage Price Percent Imported energy supply Increase 2003-07 (2007 Net) Coal22.83810 Oil39.830667 Uranium 8.448189 Natural Gas23.620616 Hydroelectric 2.5-- Biomass 3.6-- Solar.1-- Wind.3-- Geothermal.3-- 94% 6% Source: EIA, Annual Report 2007 U.S. Energy Split
57
World Coal Consumption
58
COAL Consumption- China 0% imported!
59
China’s Production and Consumption of Coal
60
Coal Spot Price 2/06 – 2/09 China begins importing coal $38 per ton $140 per ton
61
COAL Consumption- India 16% imported!
62
COAL U.S. 0% imported!
63
China/U.S. Coal 51% of world consumption. 54% of world production.
64
Colorado’s Coal is becoming increasingly desirable
66
Colorado has the seventh largest bituminous coal reserves in the nation. Colorado has the largest reserves of bituminous compliance coal in the nation. Colorado is the seventh largest coal producer in the nation. Colorado Impact Colorado Coal Production 1960-2007
67
World Nuclear Consumption
68
NUCLEAR- China
69
NUCLEAR- India
70
China : 32 new plants by 2020 4 per year through 2015 9 GW to 60 GW India: 17 new reactors by 2012
71
NUCLEAR- U.S. The last nuclear power plant came on line in 1996 Since then has U.S. nuclear generation -- Increased? Decreased? Remained flat?
72
NUCLEAR- U.S. Last nuclear power plant came online.
73
And, the largest nuclear power generator in the world?
74
The United States generates as much nuclear energy as— France, Germany, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom combined!
75
World Nuclear Power Consumption 436 Plants Operating 44 Under Construction 50 - 60 Countries Applied to IAEA
76
The world’s existing 436 nuclear reactors currently need 180 million pounds of uranium each year. 80 million pound gap
77
Uranium prices Source: Cameco
78
Uranium-vanadium districts and mines, Colorado
79
10,000+ claims filed on federal lands in Colorado in 2005-6. Three new mines opened in Colorado in 2008 Colorado Impact 10,000+ claims filed on federal lands in Colorado in 2007.
80
World Oil Consumption
81
OIL CONSUMPTION- China Source: BP
82
OIL- CONSUMPTION India Source: BP
83
OIL- U.S. Consumption
84
U.S. OIL PRODUCTION - 1900 to 2050 1.6 billion barrels 40% less DOWN THE OIL “ESCALATOR”
85
U.S. OIL PRODUCTION - 1900 to 2050
86
How do you communicate what “2/3 of something gone” means?
87
In 1969, M. King Hubbert Predicted that World Production would Begin Declining in 2000.
88
5% 1948 1% 1924 10% 1959 20% 1969 30% 1975 40% 1980 50% 1986 60% 1990 70% 1995 80% 2000 90% 2004 50% of the OIL Consumed by the Human Race Used Since 1986 90% of the OIL Consumed by the Human Race Used Since 1959 1094 Billion barrels Consumed Start 1859 (data from Arnulf Grubler, 1998; BP Statistical Review of World Energy, 2008) Copyright J. D. Hughes GSR Inc, 2008
89
(data from Arnulf Grubler, 1998; BP Statistical Review of World Energy, 2008; U.S. Bureau of Census, 2008) Percentage of 2007 Year 5.3 times Population 8.6 times WOOD OIL COAL GAS Year HYDRO Per Capita Consumption Renewable 11% Non-Renewable 89% Year Total Consumption 45 times OIL COAL GAS Copyright J. D. Hughes GSR Inc, 2008
90
85% of the world’s oil comes from just 20 of the 65 producing countries 54 of the 65 producing countries are in decline
91
Mexico’s declining production at Cantarell field accelerating Mexican state oil company Pemex said Wednesday that production at its Cantarell oil field, the world’s second-largest, will drop faster than expected. 08/03/06 2005 producing 2.2 million barrels per day 2009 producing 0.6 million barrels per day
92
1 of 65 producing countries USA Peak 1970 Source: BP Annual Energy Report
93
USA Mexico Norway UK Indonesia Peak 1997 5 of 65 producing countries Source: BP Annual Energy Report
94
45 small producers USA Peak ~2000 50 of 65 producing countries Source: BP Annual Energy Report
95
45 small producers USA 61 of 65 producing countries Brazil Algeria Canada China Kuwait UAE Nigeria Libya Iraq Venezuela Iran Peak 2004 Source: BP Annual Energy Report
96
45 small producers USA Qatar Angola 63 of 65 producing countries Flat 2004 Source: BP Annual Energy Report
97
45 small producers USA Saudi Arabia 64 of 65 producing countries Flat? Source: BP Annual Energy Report
98
FSU Former Soviet Union nations 45 small producers USA Saudi Arabia FSU 65 of 65 producing countries Slight Increase Source: BP Annual Energy Report
99
Crude Oil Prices
100
Wattenberg oil well near Longmont 16th Largest oil field
101
Colorado Impact Rangely still has large reserves (57R/65P). Commerce City refinery will be processing Canadian oil sands. Colorado Oil Production - 1960-2006
102
Oil shale is being seriously re-appraised.
104
World Natural Gas Consumption
105
NATURAL GAS CONSUMPTION - China 6% imported!
106
NATURAL GAS CONSUMPTION - India 26% imported!
107
NATURAL GAS CONSUMPTION - U.S. 11% imported!
108
Natural Gas – America’s Silver Bullet?
109
Natural Gas Electrical Generation vs Natural Gas Imports Electricity from Natural Gas Natural Gas Imports
110
Million Cubic Feet of Gas U.S. Monthly Natural Gas Production Well Completions 8,90030,180 Average Initial Production Rockies Trends
112
Colorado Drilling Permits Approved
113
Colorado Drilling Rigs
114
Source: Baker-Hughes
116
Colorado has the fifth largest gas reserves in the nation. Colorado has the largest reserves of coalbed methane in the nation. Colorado is the seventh largest gas producer in the nation. Colorado Impact Colorado Natural Gas Production 1960-2007
117
Location of the 78,000+ wells that have been drilled for oil and gas. About half are dry holes.
118
Natural Gas Prices $2.00 +/- $0.50 $6.50
119
21 st Century Natural Gas Prices
121
Colorado has all, or parts, of seven of the top 50 natural gas fields in the nation!
122
Gas Price Needed to achieve a 10% IRR Piceance Basin Morgan Stanley EncanaIHS4/08/09
123
Delta Petroleum Drilled 163 Colorado wells Last month announced a loss of $459.7 million Next day stock dropped 41%
124
Natural Gas – America’s Silver Bullet?
125
(data copyright IHS Energy, Diagram prepared and copyright by EOG Resources Inc., 2006) 60% From Most Recent FOUR YEARS
126
Natural Gas – America’s Silver Bullet?
127
Oil Geothermal Solar Wind Coal Natural Gas Efficiency Conservation Hydro Nuclear Biomass
128
Hydro Generation - China
129
Hydro Generation – U.S.
130
Geothermal Energy Direct Use Electric Generation Geoexchange Heat Pumps
131
Below the 690 apartments—not to mention the gyms, bars, dry cleaners and movie theater—that make up the 15-acre Linked Hybrid residential complex in Beijing, China, are 660 geothermal wells that eliminate the need for air conditioners and boilers. Each well funnels water 325 feet beneath the ground into bedrock, where the constant 55ºF temperature either heats or cools it before it’s pumped back to the surface and piped through the building’s concrete floors. The system will reduce energy costs by up to 30 percent in the summer and up to 40 percent in the winter.
132
The Escalator Dilemma Natural Forces are Working Against Our Goals Depletion of Natural Resources Demand for Energy Demand Greenhouse Gas Reduction
133
The future is here! Are we ready?
134
Overall Impacts Coloradans will suffer from effects of inflation Coloradans may see increasing shortages of critical raw materials Conflicts may arise with multi-national corporations operating in Colorado Pressures will mount to develop more of Colorado’s natural resources How do we turn lemons into lemonade?
135
So– Working with GEO on geothermal electrical generation. Encouraging the use of Geoexchange heat pumps. Studying the potential of alternative energy minerals in Colorado Studying the potential of CCS. Trying to reduce our energy consumption Trying to increase public understanding of our energy situation. What is CGS doing?
136
“The world is a football field now and you’ve got to be sharp to be on the team which plays on that field. If you’re not good enough, you’re going to be sitting and watching the game. That’s all.” --Rajesh Rao, founder and CEO of Dhurva Interactive
137
The End! Of the talk, that is.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.