Stories tagged with "methane hydrates"

Hydrates updated

This is a guest post by Jean Laherrère.

I was asked recently by e-mail, referring to a 2002 paper on hydrates:

I read your excellent questions. Do you have any answers posted?

I decided to update my past papers on hydrates.

Will Unconventional Natural Gas Save Us?

Here we go again, this story is about natural gas supplies in North America and the US in particular. Lately, TOD has had some posts on Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) imports as the way to solve the North American natural gas crisis (here, here and here). The point of these posts concerning LNG is that there are real unavoidable concerns that LNG imports will not provide us with sufficient supply to meet inelastic demand soon enough by 2010 or even come anywhere close to meeting these supply problems in the period beyond the end of this decade. Beyond oil and the apparent world-wide peak in light sweet crude, the more I think about our energy problems, the more I come to the conclusion that natural gas shortages in North America are imminent in the timeframe beginning now and for the forseeable future (perhaps 5 to 10 years out or beyond). The damage this could do to the US economy is enormous. In my view, there is a real crisis pending so this post examines another whole part of the equation in future projections for providing natural gas to meet projected demand involving drilling for Unconventional Natural Gas Resources (pdf)-- an overview of what these resources are. The importance of unconventional gas (pdf) is expected to grow out to 2025.

I hope you'll bear with me here. This is one of those really long posts I do from time to time to try to understand an important issue I didn't know much about. I even try here and there to emulate HO's "techie talk" tradition here on TOD though with, I'm sure, limited success.

One must expect dissent . . . .

There is a slow but steady increase in the reports that discuss the problems of oil supply and that appear in the national press.  This has, in turn, led to more critics of the concept that we are heading into a crisis.  On Tuesday there was an article in the St Louis Post Dispatch by Barclay Jones, a Professor of nuclear, plasma and radiological engineering at the U of I Urbana-Champaign.  And to go along with the TIME magazine feature on the Future of Energy there were opposing viewpoints from Ken Deffeyes and Peter Huber.

Turning first to Dr. Jones's comments, he begins his piece with the comment

In the national debate over energy, the idea that world oil production may peak within the next few years is gaining currency.But this notion rests on two persistent misconceptions about the oil situation: first, that there is not much oil left to be discovered and, second, that new technology won't make much of a difference.