Thursday, December 3, 2009

What? Oil isn't a fossil fuel?

Do dead dinosaurs fuel our cars? The assumption that they do, along with other dead matter thought to have formed what are known as fossil fuels, has been an article of faith for centuries. Our geologists are taught fossil fuel theory in our schools; our energy companies search for fossil fuels by divining where the dinosaurs lay down and died. Sooner or later, we will run out of liquefied dinosaurs and be forced to turn to either nuclear or renewable fuels, virtually everyone believes.

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Today, Russians laugh at our peak oil theories as they explore, and find, the bounty in the bowels of the Earth. Russia’s reserves have been climbing steadily — according to BP’s annual survey, they stood at 45 billion barrels in 2001, 69 billion barrels in 2004, and 80 billion barrels of late, making Russia an oil superpower that this year produced more oil than Saudi Arabia. Some oil auditing firms estimate Russia’s reserves at up to 200 billion barrels. Despite Russia’s success in exploration, most of those in the west who have known about the Russian-Ukrainian theories have dismissed them as beyond the Pale. This week, the Russian Pale can be found awfully close to home.

In a study published in Nature Geoscience, researchers from the Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) in Sweden and the Geophysical Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution of Washington joined colleagues at the Lomonosov Moscow State Academy of Fine Chemical Technology in publishing evidence that hydrocarbons can be produced 40 to 95 miles beneath the surface of the Earth. At these depths — in what’s known as Earth’s Upper Mantle — high temperatures and intense pressures combine to generate hydrocarbons. The hydrocarbons then migrate toward the surface of the Earth through fissures in the Earth’s crust, sometimes feeding existing pools of oil, sometimes creating entirely new ones. According to Sweden’s Royal Institute, “fossils of animals and plants are not necessary to generate raw oil and natural gas. This result is extremely radical as it means that it will be much easier to find these energy sources and that they may be located all over the world.”

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The Nature study follows Kutcherov’s previous work, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, that created hydrocarbons out of water, calcium carbonate and iron — products in the Earth’s mantle. By superheating his ingredients in a pressure chamber at 30,000 times atmospheric pressure, simulating the conditions in the Earth’s mantle, Kutcherov’s alchemy converted 1.5% of his concoction into hydrocarbons — gases such as methane as well as components of heavier oils. The implication of this research, which suggests that hydrocarbons are continuously generated through natural processes? Petroleum is a sustainable resource that will last as long as Planet Earth.

Energy Probe
via
greenspirit

3 comments:

christopher said...

Bother... I've been following this for probably 15 years. It's great to see someone else looking at it. I usually just keep my mouth shut to prevent the ridicule but I was in fact arguing with someone just last week about the incredibly infinite amount of dinosaur martyrs that had to have existed for us to have so much oil. And the supposed emptied drill spots in the Gulf of Mexico that twenty years later have mysteriously refilled with dead dinosaur blood again. Global "warming", "macro"-evolution, "fossil" fuel - all paradigms that are destined to be turned on their heads.

Charles said...

I heard there was a reservoir in the North Sea that mysteriously filled up again after drillers thought it had run dry. Dead dinosaurs indeed...

Did science go post modern in the 20th century? Beginning with eugenics, so much of it has been a fraud - nuclear winter, the hole in the ozone, acid rain, anthropogenic global warming....maybe it's time to revisit Rachel Carson as well....

christopher said...

Seen this? I just found it this morning - http://www.foresight.org/nanodot/?p=3553 It puts the "warming" of the present era in perspective in graph form.