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Peak Oil Future Energy Scenarios Dr. Robert J. Brecha University of Dayton Chautauqua Course, May 22-24, 2006
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World Energy Use Coal Nuclear Oil Gas Hydro Biomass Geothermal, wind solar, etc. RE Total ~400 Quadrillion Btu
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US Energy Use Industrial Commercial Residential Transportation Light vehicles Med./hvy trucks Air (Water, pipeline, rail, buses) ~2/3 of oil use is transportation
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US Yearly Petroleum Production US Energy Information Agency: http://www.eia.doe.gov/oil_gas/petroleum/pet_frame.html
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Finding Norways R.C. Duncan and W. Youngquist, “The World Petroleum Life-Cycle” http://www.dieoff.com/page133.pdf
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Driving Habits vs. Hybrids Scenario one: Fleet grows by 0.5%/yr; no hybrids; driving amount remains const. at 11,600 mi/veh/yr Scenario two: Fleet grows by 0.5%/yr; hybrids incr. at 25%/yr.; driving amount remains const. at 11,600 mi/veh/yr Scenario three: Fleet grows by 0.5%/yr; no hybrids; driving cut by 10% one time to 10,440 mi/veh/yr Scenario four: Fleet grows by 0.5%/yr; no hybrids; driving cut by 2%/yr from 11,600 mi/veh/yr But … if the decline rate is 3 – 5 %/year?
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Fuel Economy by Speed Transportation Energy Data Book, 24 th Ed. Driving at 60 mph instead of 70 mph could save roughly 500,000 barrels of oil each day
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Ethanol Yield for ethanol from corn is ~70 GJ/ha (@9000 kg corn /ha) Automobile + light truck transportation uses ~1.7×10 10 GJ/a Quick calculation: we would need 2.4×10 8 ha of land Currently we have in the US 1.2×10 8 ha of cropland total But … the key point missing is the energy input. Ethanol from industrial-scale corn farming is barely an energy break-even. Energy return on Energy invested (EROEI) ratio is ~1. GHG emissions are only slightly less than for conventional gasoline. D.Pimentel and T. Patzek, Natural Resources Research 14, 65-76 (2005) Shapouri - USDA “The Energy Balance of Corn Ethanol: An Update” Ag. Econ. Report 813 Farrell et al., Science 311, 506-508 (2006)
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Four Scenarios
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Effects of Peak Oil – Scenario I Million boe/d
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Scenario I Parameters First scenario, which could be referred to as a moderately changed business-as-usual energy future. Natural gas and oil peak in consumption in five years; the decline rate for each being 3%/year. Solar and wind energy grow at 10%/year, while nuclear power and coal as energy sources grow at 1%/year as is currently the case. Non-conventional oil and gas production increases are based on current optimistic estimates: shale oil and methane hydrates beginning commercial production in 10 years and increasing at 0.15 million boe/day/year, while tar sands oil production increases from the current level of 1 million boe/day by 0.2 million boe/day/year.
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Green Energy Future – Scenario II Million boe/d
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Scenario II Parameters Second scenario, which could be referred to as a green energy future. Natural gas and oil peak in consumption in five years; the decline rate for each being 3%/year, considered as a lower limit. Solar and wind energy grow at 20%/year, while nuclear power and coal as energy sources grow at 1%/year as is currently the case. Finally, non-conventional oil and gas development proceeds more slowly than in the first scenario: shale oil and methane hydrates beginning commercial production in 10 years and increasing at 0.05 million boe/day/year, while tar sands oil production increases from the current level of 1 million boe/day by the same 0.05 million boe/day/year.
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Nuclear Technology known Technology known Good for environment – at least for CO 2 emissions Good for environment – at least for CO 2 emissions Electricity, not transportation Electricity, not transportation Back to Hirsch Back to Hirsch Waste disposal, etc. Waste disposal, etc. Non-renewable (~50 years at CROC?) Non-renewable (~50 years at CROC?)
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Nuclear Future – Scenario III Million boe/d
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Scenario III Parameters Third scenario, nuclear-supplemented fossil-fuel energy future. Natural gas and oil peak in consumption in five years; the decline rate for each being 3%/year, as in the first scenario. Solar and wind energy grow at 10%/year and coal grows at 1%/year, while nuclear power as an energy source increases at 10%/year beginning in 10 years to allow for ramp-up. Finally, the prognoses for non-conventional oil and gas are based on current optimistic estimates: shale oil and methane hydrates beginning commercial production in 10 years and increasing at 0.15 million boe/day/year, while tar sands oil production increases from the current level of 1 million boe/day by 0.2 million boe/day/year.
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Life-cycle CO 2 emissions H. Hondo / Energy 30 (2005) 2042–2056
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The Coal Future – Scenario IV Million boe/d
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Scenario IV Parameters Fourth scenario, coal energy future. Natural gas and oil peak in consumption in five years; the decline rate for each being 8%/year, leading to a strong increase in the use of coal, at a rate of 5%/year. Solar and wind energy grow at 10%/year, while nuclear power grows at 1%/year as is currently the case. Finally, the prognoses for non-conventional oil and gas are based on current optimistic estimates: shale oil and methane hydrates beginning commercial production in 10 years and increasing at 0.15 million boe/day/year, while tar sands oil production increases from the current level of 1 million boe/day by 0.2 million boe/day/year.
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Coal Production http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/aer/coal.html Energy Information Administration – Annual Energy Review 2005
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Coal Production
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