Redstate...
North
America’s Energy Bounty, By the
Numbers
Debunking The Big Energy Lie™
Posted by Steve Maley
Friday,
December 9th
On
Tuesday, the Institute for Energy
Research issued its North American Energy Inventory (.pdf link), a
report which
documents the government’s own estimates of oil, natural gas and coal
resources
for the U.S., Canada and Mexico. (The IER is a non-profit, non-partisan
501(c)3
organization that is dedicated to advancing America’s supply using free
market
principles.)
In
a nutshell, North America contains
a vast bounty of energy sources in the form of oil, natural gas and
coal.
Reports that we are “running out” of energy sources use semantics and
terminology to play with the facts. Simply put, we have chosen not to
exploit
potential sources close to home, finding it more expedient or
convenient to
depend on faraway sources for our energy.
Based
on the ongoing tangible
successes in North Dakota and Pennsylvania, one would think that the
jobs/growth potential presented by aggressive energy development would
tantalize any politician who is truly interested in helping the
economy. One
would think.
The
following video (click below) will
give you a quick run-down of the key points of the report, but I would
encourage anyone interested to download and read the full report. It is
extremely well-documented and although it is chock-full of facts and
figures, I
found it to be an easy read.
Excerpt
from the report’s executive
summary:
The
amount of oil that is technically
recoverable in the United States is more than 1.4 trillion barrels,
with the
largest deposits located offshore, in portions of Alaska, and in shale
in the
Rocky Mountain West. When combined with resources from Canada and
Mexico, total
recoverable oil in North America exceeds 1.7 trillion barrels.
That
is more than the world has used
since the first oil well was drilled over 150 years ago in Titusville,
Pennsylvania. To put this in context, Saudi Arabia has about 260
billion
barrels of oil in proved reserves. For comparative purposes, the
technically
recoverable oil in North America could fuel the present needs in the
United
States of seven billion barrels per year for around 250 years.
Moreover,
it is important to note that
that “reserves” estimates are constantly in flux. For example, in 1980,
the
U.S. had oil reserves of roughly 30 billion barrels. Yet from 1980
through
2010, we produced over 77 billion barrels of oil. In other words, over
the last
30 years, we produced over 150 percent of our proved reserves. …
Proved
reserves of natural gas in the
United States and throughout North America are enormous, and the total
amount
of recoverable natural gas is even more impressive. The EIA estimates
that the
United States has 272.5 trillion cubic feet of proved reserves of
natural gas.
The total amount of natural gas that is recoverable in North America is
approximately 4.2 quadrillion (4,244 trillion) cubic feet.
Given
that U.S. consumption is
currently about 24 trillion cubic feet per year, there is enough
natural gas in
North America to last the United States for over 175 years at current
rates of
consumption.
A
key point of the IER report: We have
been told repeatedly by our President, liberal members of Congress and
our
environmental community that the U.S. consumes 24% (or somesuch) of the
world’s
energy, but we have only 2% (or somesuch) of the world’s proved
reserves. It’s
just not fair!
However,
IER explains how lying liars
lie:
RESOURCES
AND RESERVES: WHY TERMS
MATTER WHEN JUDGING ENERGY POTENTIAL
A
frequent source of confusion about
America’s energy potential is the terminology used, primarily the
enormous yet
poorly understood difference between “resources” and “reserves.” The
term
“reserves” typically refers to a country’s known, proved and presently
economic
energy supplies, but a country’s resources are much larger,
representing a
nation’s total potential energy. The debate over whether a country has
only a
few years’ supply of a particular energy source or centuries’ worth can
hinge upon
the terms employed. It is merely semantics—not a scientific assessment
of what
America has the capacity to produce—that allows critics to claim
repeatedly
that America is running out of energy.
Hmmmm….
Sounds familiar….
See
the video, and read this column
and others at Redstate
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