Slate Magazine / moneybox

Fracking, Oil Sands, and Deep-Water Drilling
The dangerous new era of "extreme energy."

By Daniel Gross

Posted Sunday, June 6, 2010, at 6:01 AM ET

The ongoing debacle in the Gulf of Mexico is a sign of many things:
the incompetence of BP, poor oversight, and an industry that places
too much emphasis on production technology and too little on safety
technology. But it also highlights a larger truth. We've entered an
age in which the production of energy, especially from fossil fuels,
demands ever-more-expensive environmental trade-offs. We've entered
what Michael Klare, professor at Hampshire College, calls the era of
"extreme energy."

Consider how oil production in the United States has evolved. In Texas
in 1901, wildcatters didn't have to work very hard to tap into the
great Beaumont gusher. The oil was essentially at the surface, all but
seeping out of the earth's crust. When the land-based oil was
exhausted, American prospectors went to sea. And when the
shallow-water oil was exhausted, they went farther out. In 1985, only
21 million barrels, or 6 percent of the oil produced in the Gulf of
Mexico, came from wells drilled in water more than 1,000 feet deep. In
2009, such wells produced 456 million barrels, or 80 percent of total
Gulf production. Today, deep-water Gulf wells account for about
one-quarter of the oil the United States sucks from the earth. The
webcams broadcasting images from the spill provide a real-time measure
of the environmental cost of this effort.

The Gulf of Mexico isn't the only place where such so-called tough oil
is to be found in North America. The environmental hazards of drilling
in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge are so obvious that even the
Bush-era Congress and White House wouldn't go there. Analysts have
enthused about the rapid development of the Alberta tar sands in
Canada—friendly, nearby, democratic, non-terrorist-promoting Canada.
An Alberta government Web site notes that the oil sands are "the
second largest source of oil in the world after Saudi Arabia." The
reserves there—171.8 billion barrels—amount to 13 percent of the
global total and are about what Iraq and Russia combined have. But the
gunk in the tar sands isn't really oil. It's bitumen. And it has to be
ripped out of the earth, or pushed to the surface in a process that
itself consumes a lot of water and natural gas. Producing a barrel of
oil from tar sands creates more than twice as many emissions than
old-school oil drilling.

Natural gas is supposed to be an easy form of energy—it burns more
cleanly than petroleum, and the United States has vast supplies. In
recent years, discoveries of reserves locked in shale rock in Texas
(the Barnett Shale) and in the Appalachians (the Marcellus Shale) have
spurred a boom. But shale gas is also tough energy. The gas is
produced via fracking—fracturing the rock with water and chemical
solvents to loosen up the gas molecules. The environmental risk? The
water mixed with solvents could filter into underground aquifers.
Inconveniently, the Marcellus Shale overlaps with the watershed of the
New York City region. And then there's the matter of earthquakes. Last
year, experts in Texas grew concerned when rare seismic activity was
detected in areas where natural-gas drillers had been fracking.

Even the cleanest sources come with trade-offs. The wind-turbine farm
off of Cape Cod aroused the ire of waterfront homeowners whose views
would be marred by giant propellers in the distance, but also by
environmentalists concerned about its potential impact on wildlife.
Proposals to put huge solar arrays in the Mojave Desert have provoked
similar green concerns.

Thus far, we've deemed these risks—oil spills, more emissions,
polluted water, the odd earthquake—to be worthwhile, in large measure
because of the laws of supply and demand. "As the price of energy
keeps drifting higher, we're going to do more and more dubious
things," says Joseph Romm, an assistant energy secretary in the
Clinton administration and editor of the influential Climateprogress
blog.

But the response to the age of tough oil shouldn't be engineering
feats that allow us to drill deeper or to liberate hydrocarbons from
rocks. Rather, we should apply our collective engineering smarts to
figuring out ways to use less energy. If we want to avoid extreme
energy, we need extreme efficiency.

Daniel Gross is the Moneybox columnist for Slate and the business
columnist for Newsweek. You can e-mail him at [email protected] and
follow him on Twitter. His latest book, Dumb Money: How Our Greatest
Financial Minds Bankrupted the Nation, has just been published in
paperback.

Article URL: http://www.slate.com/id/2255906/

Copyright 2010 Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive Co. LLC
-- 
Jim Devine
"Those who take the most from the table
        Teach contentment.
Those for whom the taxes are destined
        Demand sacrifice.
Those who eat their fill speak to the hungry
        of wonderful times to come.
Those who lead the country into the abyss
        Call ruling too  difficult
        For ordinary folk." – Bertolt Brecht.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to