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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Future Colors of Energy
Energy demand and the search for energy sources will also continue to dominate world geopolitics.
By
In early 2000 we published The Color Of Oil, which went on to become a national best seller on the subject of energy. The book used colors to symbolize the various important aspects of the energy enterprise and, among other things, it pointed out that at the start of the new millennium, energy consumption has replaced industrialization as the national trait that separates rich from poor countries. Our conclusion was that the energy industry ultimately deserved the color Purple, that of the imperial cloak: it will stay around and will dominate for a long time.
Energy consumption will continue to increase and conservation,
while it evokes warm sentiments, has never really played a role in
cutting total energy consumption. Conservation always addresses
the old rather than the new. Energy for the world has been a
particularly dynamic process. Energy consumption
per dollar of the gross domestic product (GDP) has
declined steadily for almost a century and, in spite of
their differences in geography and culture, developed
nations such as the United States, Europe, and Japan
use today roughly the same amount of energy per
dollar of their GDP. Even more important is that the
dominant fuel has changed from wood, to coal, to oil
and, now emerging,
natural
gas
, which will eventually
be replaced by hydrogen. The latter, in all likelihood,
will be extracted for centuries from hydrocarbons,
mostly
natural
gas
.
This de-carbonization of fuels is not just motivated
by environmental concerns, which are considerable, but instead
it is a historical imperative, tracing the development of more
refined, more efficient fuels and the "miniaturization" of the
engines of our economy and industry. While energy consumption
has been going up the engines of modern society have
become smaller, more focused, and more individualistic. Gases
in this transformation are superior to
liquids
and certainly far
superior to solids.
The foreseeable future will be dominated by fuel cells, which will be first stationary home units, then micro-engines, and eventually take over the biggest prize of all, mobile engines. Fuels cells will do to the internal combustion engine what it did to the steam engine a century ago. Change of fuels goes with the change of engines. The technological transformation for the society will be nothing short of revolutionary. The economic impact will be in the trillions of dollars.
It is, thus, ironic that politicians the world over try to stem the torrent of energy needs and changes with small dikes of protectionist politics and legislations, in vain attempts to bolster passé energy forms such as coal. Even more outlandish are environmentalist ideologues, who inundated by anachronistic notions of social conflict, propose highly inadequate solutions such as solar and wind energies, or take even more destructive postures without regard to the importance that energy plays on the workings of a modern society. None is more insidious than the rhetoric about global warming and the preposterous claims of its anthropogenic nature. In any case the transformation we envision surely should quiet any such silliness.
We examine here a prudent and constructive national and international
energy policy, one that is free of strident and
non-constructive government regulation and one that will contain
a number of pillars. These will include a full throttle effort
toward deepwater petroleum, a "trillion-dollar" idea, with
emphasis on
natural
gas
. Liquid
natural
gas
(LNG) and a new
variant, compressed
natural
gas
(CNG), will serve to ameliorate
economical production deficiencies among large energy
End_Page 25---------------
consumers by opening up the practically infinite worldwide supply
of
natural
gas
and the huge diversity of its sources.
Energy demand and the search for energy sources will also continue
to dominate world geopolitics. The transition to
natural
gas
will
serve actually to soften future global friction between the current
lone superpower, the United States, and China, the superpower-in-the-making. The diversity and volumes of the fuel stand in stark
contrast to the concentration of oil resources and the geopolitical
vulnerabilities that they breed for all nations.
There is one thing that is certain. Future energy will be colorful and, in turn, will continue to color all facets of human activity and industry.
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