Populations (was Re: [ZION] umbrella)

2002-11-14 Thread Mark Gregson

 in such a meagerly populated nation as yours? They might even outnumber
 you!

Is Canada a small country population-wise?

I get bored and annoyed hearing about how small our population is.  Let's get the 
facts straight.

Populations of Some Countries (in millions)
=
1.) China 1300 
2.) India 1000 
3.) United States 285
(yes, that's right, the US has the world's third largest population.  That puts a lot 
of things into perspective for me.)
4.) Indonesia 231 
5.) Brazil 176 
6.) Pakistan 147 
7.) Russia 145 
8.) Bangladesh 133 
9.) Nigeria 130
10.) Japan 127 

So where is Canada in the great heap of nations?  There are 235 countries, more or 
less - it gets tricky in some cases.  

35.) Canada 31 

That puts Canada in the top 15% of all countries in the world by population.  So 
Canada is not a small country by population; it is only small compared to the US who 
just happens to be its nearest neighbour.

(Have a look at this interesting graph of country by population size: 
http://www.geohive.com/global/gen_popsize.php )

Canada does have one of the lowest population densities in the world (about 224th) at 
3.36 people per square km.  Compare that with Bangladesh at 949 (12th) or the US at 
29.77 (172nd).

Oh, and as an interesting side note, proven oil reserves have increased over the past 
decade.  In other words, the world continues to use oil at a phenomenal rate (75 
million barrels per day = about 28 billion barrels per year) and yet the amount left 
over continues to _increase_ (from 1 trillion to 1.05 trillion in about ten years).  
At this rate, we will never run out of oil but will rather have more and more all the 
time.  A barrel is equal to 159 litres (42 gallons).  And the proven reserves do not 
even include the Alberta Oil Sands which have more oil than the rest of the world put 
together, one quarter of which is believed to be economically and technically 
retrievable.

(BTW, Gary, I'm laughing with your jokes here, so this wasn't an angry outburst 
against this statement of yours.  I just found it an opportune moment to go off on a 
tangent.)

=  Mark Gregson  [EMAIL PROTECTED]  =

   
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Re: Populations (was Re: [ZION] umbrella)

2002-11-14 Thread Rick Mathis
At 12:57 AM 11/15/2002 +0800, Mark wrote:


So where is Canada in the great heap of nations?  There are 235 countries, 
more or less - it gets tricky in some cases.

35.) Canada 31

Wow! That's almost as many people as California!

Rick Mathis

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Re: Populations (was Re: [ZION] umbrella)

2002-11-14 Thread John W. Redelfs
After much pondering, Mark Gregson favored us with:

Oh, and as an interesting side note, proven oil reserves have increased 
over the past decade.  In other words, the world continues to use oil at a 
phenomenal rate (75 million barrels per day = about 28 billion barrels per 
year) and yet the amount left over continues to _increase_ (from 1 
trillion to 1.05 trillion in about ten years).  At this rate, we will 
never run out of oil but will rather have more and more all the time.  A 
barrel is equal to 159 litres (42 gallons).  And the proven reserves do 
not even include the Alberta Oil Sands which have more oil than the rest 
of the world put together, one quarter of which is believed to be 
economically and technically retrievable.

Not only that, it is meaningless to talk about proven oil reserves without 
linking it to the price of crude.  As the price of crude goes up, oil 
reserves that are not commercially viable become viable.  Raise the price 
of crude enough, and this earth has many times it current viable oil 
reserves, many times our needs for that matter, because as the price goes 
up, the demand goes down.


John W. Redelfs   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: Populations (was Re: [ZION] umbrella)

2002-11-14 Thread Steven Montgomery
At 06:16 PM 11/14/2002, you wrote:

After much pondering, Mark Gregson favored us with:

Oh, and as an interesting side note, proven oil reserves have increased 
over the past decade.  In other words, the world continues to use oil at 
a phenomenal rate (75 million barrels per day = about 28 billion barrels 
per year) and yet the amount left over continues to _increase_ (from 1 
trillion to 1.05 trillion in about ten years).  At this rate, we will 
never run out of oil but will rather have more and more all the time.  A 
barrel is equal to 159 litres (42 gallons).  And the proven reserves do 
not even include the Alberta Oil Sands which have more oil than the rest 
of the world put together, one quarter of which is believed to be 
economically and technically retrievable.

Not only that, it is meaningless to talk about proven oil reserves without 
linking it to the price of crude.  As the price of crude goes up, oil 
reserves that are not commercially viable become viable.  Raise the price 
of crude enough, and this earth has many times it current viable oil 
reserves, many times our needs for that matter, because as the price goes 
up, the demand goes down.


John W. Redelfs   [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Also, as the price goes up so does the demand for more drilling and 
exploration, hence more reserves.



--
Steven Montgomery
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Nations are defined by their founders. George Washington set a standard of
selfless public service and heroic private virtue against which American
politicians continue to be measured - and found wanting - even today. 
--Steven W. Mosher 

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