There’s a book I recently read called "A Thousand Barrels a Second." What a read. I don’t think I’ve ever in my life read such a dense book as quickly as I read this one.'1000 Barrels a Second' is a great read for anyone interested in the energy markets, and in particular oil.
Interspersed with interesting historical information about our search for energy (we sailed to the ends of the earth in search of sperm whale oil - nearly driving the species to extinction before the introduction of kerosene) and based on a lot of data and industry experience, this book is a must read for those interested in getting beyond the headlines to understand why we’re in the debacle we’re in.
While Tertzakian is biased in the sense he runs a energy consulting firm with interests in the oil producing regions of Alberta, he's unbiased in the sense that he lays decades worth of information out without twisting or manipulating data in an effort to move the reader beyond the numbers. He's conservative in his estimates of how far and how quickly we'll move away from oil (I think thanks to his industry position), but he does not beat around the bush in saying that our country is strategically disadvantaged (to countries like China, Japan, and Britain) so long as we are as heavily reliant upon oil as we are.
Countries like Britain, France, and Japan all enacted policies (taxes, incentive programs, mass transit programs) after the major oil break point of 1973 that allowed them to grow without a reliance upon oil. These countries are consuming little to no more oil today than they were back in 1973 - it seems impossible to think such a story could be true here in the US. We need to make sure we respond to this major oil break point in the same way these countries did back in 1973 to ensure we free our economy and our foreign policy from oil.
About the title: at the time of publication in 2005, the world was demanding ~1000 barrels of oil a second, or the equivalent of 42,000 gallons of gasoline a second, or the equivalent of 5500 Olympic-sized swimming pools of oil a day. It's no wonder such pressures are driving oil producers to the middle of the sea and into the oil sands of Canada. Long gone are the days of cheap light, sweet, crude oil.
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment