oil prices are getting higher! So what's the best, cheap,and updated fuel source to replace oil. Post solutions pls.=peak+oil&oid=f54e60060454053ec8b12ab1dfb489b3&fr2=&fr=yfp-t-711&tt=%253Cb%253EPeak%2BOil%2B%253C%252Fb%253EStudy%2BLeaked%2Bby%2BGerman%2BMilitary%2BThink%2BTank&b=0&ni=128&no=13&ts=&tab=organic&sigr=12o2vlpq0&sigb=132gvuha3&sigi=11olrnvvb&.crumb=fhE6udOUV7g&fr=yfp-t-711" alt="http://ph.images.search.yahoo.com/images/view;_ylt=A2oKiHAzsE5RNXMAdKa1Rwx.;_ylu=X3oDMTBlMTQ4cGxyBHNlYwNzcgRzbGsDaW1n?back=http%3A%2F%2Fph.images.search.yahoo.com%2Fsearch%2Fimages%3Fp%3Dpeak%2Boil%26ei%3DUTF-8%26fr%3Dyfp-t-711%26tab%3Dorganic%26ri%3D13&w=1024&h=768&imgurl=8020vision.com%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2010%2F09%2FPeak_Oil_2.png&rurl=http%3A%2F%2F8020vision.com%2F2010%2F09%2F03%2Fgerman-military-study-warns-of-potential-energy-crisis%2F&size=88.1+KB&name=%3Cb%3EPeak+Oil+%3C%2Fb%3EStudy+Leaked+by+German+Military+Think+Tank&=peak+oil&oid=f54e60060454053ec8b12ab1dfb489b3&fr2=&fr=yfp-t-711&tt=%253Cb%253EPeak%2BOil%2B%253C%252Fb%253EStudy%2BLeaked%2Bby%2BGerman%2BMilitary%2BThink%2BTank&b=0&ni=128&no=13&ts=&tab=organic&sigr=12o2vlpq0&sigb=132gvuha3&sigi=11olrnvvb&.crumb=fhE6udOUV7g&fr=yfp-t-711" />
Seasonal demand and inflation, more than anything else.
Horizontal drilling, fracking, and the boon in natural gas means we'll be in oil for a long time yet. Oil fields in North Dakota, Canada, and in South America have been discovered in the last several years, and will provide oil for many years to come.
None of the radical alternatives to oil have any market viability. Remember Solyndra?
Horizontal drilling, fracking, and the boon in natural gas means we'll be in oil for a long time yet. Oil fields in North Dakota, Canada, and in South America have been discovered in the last several years, and will provide oil for many years to come.
I wish they would hurry up and start tapping the oil in North Dakota so prices go down... Oh wait! They'll probably sell it all to China for 20$ a barrel, they buy it from OPEC or wherever for 90$ a barrel... I love that.
Fracking is still fairly new so far as extraction procedures go, so it's not entirely implausible that there are protests and the the technology itself is under question. So far as I know, as of yet there has been no concrete evidence that links fracking water pollution nor has there been anything that disavows fracking of the problem.
World oil for the most part is run by a monopoly through OPEC, this means that price fluctuations can and will happen for a myriad of reasons. Crisis in any one of the nations that are a part of OPEC, a political point of contention between a consumer and a OPEC nation, etc.
Oil and natural gas will probably be the norm for many years to come. Wind and solar are too environment-dependent(I'd rather not suffer from a blackout just because we had a wind drought or had an extended period of cloud cover. Ways to get around that would just increase the costs for such technologies as well.)
After Oil, maybe nuclear fusion and hydrogen will be the standard.
Oil and natural gas will probably be the norm for many years to come. Wind and solar are too environment-dependent(I'd rather not suffer from a blackout just because we had a wind drought or had an extended period of cloud cover. Ways to get around that would just increase the costs for such technologies as well.)
Not necessarily. Our Federal Institute of Technology is working on a way to provide much of the worlds consumers with renewable energy thanks to a global grid. The idea is to produce the energy in areas where the wind always blows strong, or the sun always shine, and transport it through a fast line that could even cover the peak consumption shifts between Europe and America, so that the energy doesn't have to be stored using extensive and costly methods.
Sounds like the way to go, if you ask me. Nuclear energies still have a huge unresolved problem, the waste.
helium-3 is they way we go whit that. we have the technology. just not the resource yet.
We have sufficient wind and sun ressources. With the right organisation it is feasible, technically and economically. We should focus on that first, and do it now.
About He3, are there any known sources? Are they technically accessible? Are they economically conceivable? Have there been studies about the mechanism and possible waste/risks?
If you answer no to any of the questions, gimme a better reason why we should explore He3 as energy source.