Oil. What is oil? Petroleum (crude oil) –complex liquid mixture of hydrocarbons, with small amounts of S, O, N impurities Most valuable natural resource.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Energy Resources and Fossil Fuels
Advertisements

CHAPTER 24 PETROLEUM A DANGEROUS DEPENDENCE Drilling for answers after an oil rig explosion.
Conventional Oil Has Advantages and Disadvantages
OIL  Oil is a fossil fuel produced by decomposition of deeply buried organic material such as plants under high temperatures and pressures for millions.
How can changing a light bulb reduce greenhouse gases?
Chapter 18: Part #1 Oil Fossil Fuels and the Environment.
Nonrenewable Energy Oil & Petroleum. Nonrenewable vs. Renewable? nonrenewablerenewableWhat is the difference between nonrenewable and renewable? net energyWhat.
What are the advantages and disadvantages of fossil fuels?
NONRENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES
Energy Resources and Fossil Fuels
ENERGY: Fossil Fuels Primary and Secondary Energy Sources Oil Production, Economics, and Impacts Coal and Other Fossil Fuels Energy Conservation (use less.
Energy from Fossil Fuels. Energy from Chemistry Question –What is “chemical” energy? A form of potential energy Potential energy is stored in the (valence)
1. Coal 2. Oil 3. Natural Gas Section What is it? Mixture 50–90% Methane (CH 4 ) Ethane (C 2 H 6 ) Propane (C 3 H 8 ) Butane (C 4 H 10 ) Hydrogen.
Earth’s Changing Environment Lecture 7 Global and US Fossil Fuel Resources: Oil and Natural Gas.
PERSIAN GULF OIL BY WILL CAMARDA ESS 315. Location  The majority of the Persian Gulf Oil Fields are located in the Persian Gulf Basin  Located between.
THE POINT SHOULD BE MADE THAT MOST OF OUR ENERGY COMES FROM THE SUN. IN FACT, WITH THE EXCEPTION OF NUCLEAR, IT ALL COMES FROM THE SUN. FOSSIL FUELS.
Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright Energy from Fossil Fuels PPT by Clark E. Adams Chapter 12.
Fossil Fuels What is a Fossil Fuel?.
Nonrenewable Energy Sources Environmental Science
Energy Nonrenewable Energy Resources. Energy  Energy Resources  U.S. has 4.6% of world population; uses 24% of the world’s energy  84% from nonrenewable.
Crude Oil Oil directly from the ground which is thick liquid with variety of hydrocarbons, sulfur, oxygen, nitrogen.
Please get out your tree thinking map for a stamp, then RTB. What the frack? Yo – Read the Board!
A Quick Review chapter 15. Oil supplies 1/3 of the world’s energy. Saudia Arabia has the most oil reserves In US, oil supplies 39% of our energy. Fig.
CHAPTER 16 NONRENEWABLE ENERGY.
Welcome!  Please read the board and review your notes for today’s quiz – Obj #6-12 and
Nonrenewable Energy Sources
The lifetime of a resource depends on… 1.How much we have 2.How fast we use it.
NONRENEWABLE ENERGY Chapter 16. Energy Resources Energy is the ability to do work – Flows in a one-way path through the atmosphere, hydrosphere and biosphere.
Nonrenewable Energy Nonrenewable Energy Resources and Locations.
Nonrenewable Energy.
Chapter 17 Part 2. Fossil fuel deposits are not distributed evenly. There is an abundance of oil in Texas and Alaska, but very little in Maine. The eastern.
Fossil Fuels Chapter 19.
Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright
Energy Concepts Energy –“The ability to do ___________”. Energy Laws –neither created or destroyed –High quality to low quality - heat.
Ch 16 Non Renewable Part 1 Oil.
Petroleum and Tars Sands By Cameron Aenlle-Rocha & Chris Parker.
Using Petroleum ONE BARREL crude oil yields ALL OF.
Non-renewable Energy Resources. ZsXZv4 fossil fuelshttps:// ZsXZv4
Nonrenewable Energy Sources Environmental Science
Energy Literacy What does it mean to be a literate person? What comes to mind when I say “energy literate person”? If someone is an “ energy literate citizen”
Ch. 17.1: Energy Resources and Fossil Fuels
Non Renewable Energy #2: Oil. OIL Oil is the #1 used energy resource in the world.
Energy Literacy Energy IQ Game  What questions were most difficult for your group?  What answers surprised you?  What energy topics do you want to learn.
Chapter 11 Fossil Fuels. Overview of Chapter 11  Energy Sources and Consumption  Energy Policy  Fossil Fuels  Coal  Oil and Natural Gas  Synfuels.
Oil: Black Gold Oil Formation Microscopic aquatic protists die  pressurized & heated Seeps through porous rock and trapped under non-porous Many C-H.
Fuels for Different Uses Used for 5 main purposes: Cooking Transportation Manufacturing Heating & cooling buildings Generating electricity to run machines.
Fossil Fuels.
Energy and Oil LT 8A: Describe the importance of net energy and discuss the implications of using oil to produce energy.
IOT POLY ENGINEERING 3-2 DRILL 09 DEC 08 Answer the following in your notebook: If non-renewable fuels come from renewable plants and animals, why do we.
Fossil Fuels. Match Dominant Primary (Left) with Energy Uses (Right) oil-based fuels natural gas coal nuclear power transportation industrial processes.
Non-Renewable Energy SJCHS. Energy Nonrenewable energy: Fuels that take 100’s or 1000’s of years to be replaced Usually are mined or extracted from the.
 ~85% of energy in US comes from Fossil fuels. What are they?  Decomposed remnants of ancient forests and algae buried deep under ground  Solid =
OIL TEACHER. PETROLEUM (CRUDE OIL) Liquid that is removed from the ground before its processed and refined for our use Contains hydrocarbons- molecules.
 Fossil fuel: the remains of ancient organisms that changed into coal, oil, or natural gas  Most of the energy that we use comes from fossil fuels 
RESOURCE TYPEEXAMPLES Nonrenewable Potentially Renewable Renewable.
Pros & Cons Env. Effects General Oil Coal Stages
By: Haley Montgomery. Description of petroleum A thick, flammable, yellow-to-black mixture of gaseous, liquid, and solid hydrocarbons that occurs naturally.
Projected Supplies These are reserves, based on current technology Oil – years Natural gas – year supply Coal – 250 – 900 -year supply.
Fig. 16-2, p. 357 Oil and natural gas Floating oil drilling platform Oil storage Coal Contour strip mining Oil drilling platform on legs Geothermal energy.
Coal & Oil Review. Team with the most points at the end wins.
NON-RENEWABLE ENERGY. Energy Use Five main purposes: Cooking Transportation Manufacturing Heating/Cooling Generating electricity to run machines/appliances.
© Cengage Learning 2015 LIVING IN THE ENVIRONMENT, 18e G. TYLER MILLER SCOTT E. SPOOLMAN © Cengage Learning 2015 Nonrenewable Energy-Fossil Fuels.
Natural Resources. Renewable Resources: are ones that can be replaced in nature at a rate close to their rate of use Oxygen Trees Food Sunlight.
Fossil Fuels. Renewable v. Nonrenewable Renewable: can be replenished over fairly short time spans. (months, years) –Examples: a. Plants - such as trees.
Net Energy Net energy = Higher ratio means greater net energy
Oil in Southwest Asia: How “Black Gold” Has Shaped a Region
Fossil Fuels.
Billy Yogan, Lauren Wong, Teresa Wheeland, and Bryce Bartolomeo
Chapter Nonrenewable Energy.
ENERGY: Fossil Fuels Primary and Secondary Energy Sources
Presentation transcript:

Oil

What is oil? Petroleum (crude oil) –complex liquid mixture of hydrocarbons, with small amounts of S, O, N impurities Most valuable natural resource (?) –Gasoline, heating oil, jet fuel, grease, wax, asphalt, plastics…

Oil (Petroleum) Facts Crude Oil (petroleum) is oil pumped from the ground. –Must be refined into usable products (boiled off at various temperatures) Discovered in 1859 in Pennsylvania! Known reserves expected to last less than 50 years! –Current price per barrel: $54

Formation of Oil

Oil Formation Decomposition of ancient sea plants & animals –Quick burial –Partial decayed (some carbon remains) Intense heat & pressure Time – millions of years to form

Oil Extraction Primary Oil Recovery –Drill well –Pump out oil that flows by gravity into well Secondary Oil Recovery –Inject water into nearby water to force oil into well.

Enhanced (Tertiary) Oil Recovery

Recovery & Net Energy In any oil field, only 1/3 of the heavy oil can actually be recovered by 1 st or 2 nd – ary methods Tertiary recovery uses the energy of 1/3 of a barrel of oil for each barrel it produces (<4min)

Fractional Distillation From extraction, oil travels via pipeline to a refinery Impurities are removed Oil is heated, which separates the various liquids by various boiling points

What is petroleum used for? Fuel – transportation (65%), generating electricity Making products - plastic, fleece, ink, floor wax, soap, carpet, nail polish, aspirin, etc. (over 6,000 products)

Where are Gas & Oil found? Oil Reserves in… United States Middle East Venezuela North Sea Siberia Nigeria Seal Rock Reservoir Rock Source Rock

Oil Reserves Estimated reserves: educated guesses about the location and size of oil or natural gas deposits Proven reserves: how much oil can be economically obtained from the oil field

OPEC Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries –Set up in 1960 so developing countries would get a fair price for the resource. –Control 67% of world’s oil –Saudi Arabia (#1), Iraq (#2), Iran, Kuwait, UAE, Algeria, Libya, Nigeria, Ecuador, Gabon, Indonesia, Qatar, and Venezuela

Oil in U.S. 2.3% of world reserves uses nearly 30% of world reserves; 65% for transportation; increasing dependence on imports. t

Future of Reserves Economically depleted –When 80% of a resource has been used –Cost to extract remaining supply is more expensive than its sale price. At current usage 33 years to economic depletion! How much is undiscovered? Should we conserve?

Why change when you’ve found a good thing? Low oil prices = stimulated economic growth In turn... –discourages improvements in energy efficiency and alternative technologies

Environmental Concerns Pollution - many pollutants created when burned which leads to smog and acid rain Global Warming - releases CO2 when burned Oil Spills - damage to plants and animals

ANWR and offshore drilling GejkLdwAhttp:// GejkLdwA eiOPuqE

Crude Oil Alternatives Greener oil options?

Oil Shale Tar Sand Oil Shale (kerogen) & Tar Sand (bitumen) Different forms of rock/sand that can be transformed (crushed/heated or pressurized) to be use like crude oil.

Global supplies of shale oil may be 200x’s larger than global Conventional Oil supplies

Oil Shales Pros/Cons Pros –US availability –World supplies Cons –Processing Uses ½ barrel of oil to process (heat) Uses large amounts of water (in desert areas!) Surface mining Groundwater contamination (salts, carcinogens, & toxic metals)

t