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Fossil Fuels and Carbon Sequestration in a Global Previous HitEnergyNext Hit Context*

By

Scott W. Tinker1

 

Search and Discovery Article #70040 (2008)

Posted June 7, 2007

 

*Witness statement submitted respectfully by Dr. Tinker to U.S. Republican Conference at the “More American Previous HitEnergyNext Hit Forum,” June, 2008.

 

1 State Geologist of Texas, Director, Bureau of Economic Geology, Jackson School of Geosciences, The University of Texas at Austin ([email protected]).

 

Introductory Statement

Mr. Chairman and Senators,

Thank you for inviting me as a witness to provide a statement today on the very important topic of Previous HitenergyNext Hit.

I am Scott Tinker and I wear several hats. I am the Director of the Bureau of Economic Geology at the University of Texas at Austin; the state Geologist of Texas; hold the Allday Endowed Chair in the Jackson School of Geosciences; and beginning in July I am the elected President of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists, at 33,000 members, the largest professional association of geologists in the world.

I was born into the Previous HitenergyNext Hit industry and have worked in it my whole career. I am also the father of four children and as such am passionate about the Previous HitenergyNext Hit future of our nation and the world.

My statement follows the packet in front of you. When I am finished, I hope to have conveyed to you that fossil fuels are vital to US and global Previous HitenergyNext Hit supply for several decades to come, and as such represent the stable Previous HitenergyNext Hit and economic bridge to a non-fossil Previous HitenergyNext Hit future.

 

uIntroduction

uPresentation

uUS Previous HitenergyNext Hit

uGlobal Previous HitenergyNext Hit

uEconomy

uGlobal trends

uElectricity

uCarbon emissions

uSequestration

uStacked sinks

uEOR

uCO2 sources & sinks

uFinal thoughts

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

uIntroduction

uPresentation

uUS Previous HitenergyNext Hit

uGlobal Previous HitenergyNext Hit

uEconomy

uGlobal trends

uElectricity

uCarbon emissions

uSequestration

uStacked sinks

uEOR

uCO2 sources & sinks

uFinal thoughts

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

uIntroduction

uPresentation

uUS Previous HitenergyNext Hit

uGlobal Previous HitenergyNext Hit

uEconomy

uGlobal trends

uElectricity

uCarbon emissions

uSequestration

uStacked sinks

uEOR

uCO2 sources & sinks

uFinal thoughts

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

uIntroduction

uPresentation

uUS Previous HitenergyNext Hit

uGlobal Previous HitenergyNext Hit

uEconomy

uGlobal trends

uElectricity

uCarbon emissions

uSequestration

uStacked sinks

uEOR

uCO2 sources & sinks

uFinal thoughts

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

uIntroduction

uPresentation

uUS Previous HitenergyNext Hit

uGlobal Previous HitenergyNext Hit

uEconomy

uGlobal trends

uElectricity

uCarbon emissions

uSequestration

uStacked sinks

uEOR

uCO2 sources & sinks

uFinal thoughts

 

Presentation

Slide 1. US Previous HitEnergyNext Hit Mix
U.S demand for Previous HitenergyNext Hit can be broadly divided into three sectors, transportation, heat and electricity. The transportation sector, representing approximately 30% of Previous HitenergyNext Hit demand, is dominated by oil, which is required for refined fuels. The heating sector, also representing approximately 30% of Previous HitenergyNext Hit demand, is dominated by oil and natural gas, and the electricity sector, representing the remaining approximate 40% of Previous HitenergyNext Hit demand (and growing), has a diverse portfolio of fuel options, but is still heavily represented by coal and natural gas. The U.S. imports nearly 2/3 of our oil and approximately 1/5 of our natural gas today.

Slide 2. Global Previous HitEnergyNext Hit Mix
The U.S. economy and Previous HitenergyNext Hit, here represented by oil, are inextricably linked. Previous HitEnergyNext Hit independence, depending upon how it is defined, must be couched in today’s Previous HitenergyNext Hit, economy and infrastructure realities:

  • we import over 1/3 of our Previous HitenergyNext Hit.
  • fossil fuels represent over 85% of the Previous HitenergyNext Hit mix.
  • healthy economies require stable and reasonably affordable Previous HitenergyNext Hit to compete.
  • the transportation sector is dependent upon oil and will take time to transition.

Slide 3. US Economy and World Price
The rest of the world is also dependent upon fossil fuels. Although the proportions vary quite a bit by geopolitical region as a function of resource availability, fossil fuels represent 87% of global Previous HitenergyNext Hit consumption today.

Slide 4. Global Trends
a. In 1980, fossil Previous HitenergyNext Hit represented 91% of Previous HitenergyNext Hit demand versus 87% today. The interesting “oil peak” actually happened in 1979 when oil as a percent of total Previous HitenergyNext Hit peaked at just below 50% and has been decreasing steadily since that time. The fossil Previous HitenergyNext Hit mix is different today than it was 28 years ago, with less oil, more natural gas and slightly more coal. As we move forward, global demand for Previous HitenergyNext Hit will continue to increase, at rates perhaps as low as 1.25% per year if certain efficiency measures are deployed. Oil as a percentage is likely to continue to decrease and natural gas and coal will retain stable percentage positions. Fossil fuels combined will still represent a vital 80% of the total mix in 2030.

b. Because global Previous HitenergyNext Hit demand will rise, actual production of oil will plateau at or near today’s levels, and production of natural gas and coal, along with other non-fossil sources, will continue to rise in terms of produced units, with the greatest percentage increases coming from non-fossil sources including nuclear, wind, Previous HitsolarNext Hit, geothermal and perhaps biomass. Most natural resource experts recognize that production of conventional oil is reaching a plateau and that global demand pressure, which is straining conventional oil production capacity, is driving oil price up. Increased price will dampen demand and allow for new technology to be deployed that will lead to development of additional conventional and unconventional oil reserves. This economic–industrial cycle is both common and predictable. Thus, although production of conventional oil is flattening, near-term “peak oil” is perhaps less about oil resource limits and more about ever-stronger global demand coupled with limited access to known resources.

Slide 5. Electricity Options
In the coming century, the world will most likely transition from vehicles that run on liquid fuels to vehicles that run on something else—perhaps electricity or hydrogen—and electricity will represent an ever-increasing percentage of end-use Previous HitenergyNext Hit consumption, exceeding 50% in the next decade. Options for base-load electricity-generation fuels today include coal, nuclear, natural gas, and to some degree hydro, which combined represent over 95% of present-day electricity generation fuels. Other non-fossil options for electricity generation include wind, Previous HitsolarNext Hit, biofuels, tides, and hydrothermal. Each of these fuels has challenges, as outlined on the figure before you.

A grand challenge in the power sector is the efficient storage and transmission of electricity. Substantial government research investment in these areas would then allow the markets to work in terms of determining “clean” and affordable generation options.

Slide 6. Global Carbon Emissions
CO2 is produced naturally by photosynthesis, volcanic eruptions, and other natural processes. Anthropogenic (man made) CO2 is caused by combustion of fossil fuels from mobile sources (planes, trains and automobiles) and stationary sources (power plants, refineries, chemical plants, iron and steel plants, cement plants, and natural gas processing plants). CO2 is required for life, is sold as a commodity for enhanced oil recovery and food production, and is also a greenhouse gas, which serves to hold heat and enhance warming. Anthropogenic emissions of CO2 are increasing in every major geopolitical sector, but most steeply in Asia.

Slide 7. What is Sequestration?
Reduction of anthropogenic CO2 requires some combination of efficiency and conservation, switching to cleaner alternatives and/or capture and long-term storage (sequestration). Sequestration options include terrestrial, oceans and geologic. Terrestrial options have certain volume and storage-time restrictions. Oceanic options have promise, but must consider life in deep ocean environments and possible sudden releases. With obvious bias as a geologist, geologic options, including enhanced oil recovery and brine reservoirs, have great volume potential, are perhaps the most permanent and least risky.

Slide 8. Stacked Sinks
Geologic sequestration is done today as part of enhanced oil recovery processes. Although the intention is not permanent storage, but rather to make money through increased production of incremental oil, the dual result of more oil and CO2 storage is a good thing for the U.S. and the world. CO2 infrastructure (pipelines, compression, producing and injection wells) is very expensive. One sensible approach to geologic sequestration is to encourage enhanced oil recovery as an initial means to sequester CO2, produce more oil and build significant CO2 surface infrastructure. The same infrastructure can then be used for brine reservoir injection and sequestration. The Gulf Coast Carbon Center at the Bureau of Economic Geology pioneered this concept and coined the term “stacked sinks.”

Slide 9. EOR & Brine Sequestration
This provides a simple illustration of the volume and timing of the stacked sinks approach to CO2 sequestration.

Slide 10. CO2 Sources and Sinks
The Gulf of Mexico region has the greatest potential to establish large-scale, stacked sink sequestration in the U.S. There are other regions in the world with similar potential.

 

 

Final Thoughts

Fossil fuels are variably distributed and all geopolitical regions have, and for a while will, satisfy their Previous HitenergyNext Hit demands with a significant component of fossil fuels. Well-considered Previous HitenergyNext Hit and carbon policy requires that the entire world must play. Global interdependence—of commodities, economies, financial markets, food, human resources, and Previous HitenergyNext Hit—is becoming the norm in a flattening world. Perhaps this is not a bad thing—education, trade, sharing of ideas and transfer of knowledge have historically served to enlighten and improve humankind—and we might reframe the U.S. Previous HitenergyTop conversation accordingly.

Thank you.