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Forum Index : Other Stuff : big oil

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electrondady1
Senior Member

Joined: 12/02/2009
Location: Canada
Posts: 208
Posted: 03:18pm 07 Feb 2013
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congratulations to my commonwealth cousins on the discovery of such a huge oil reserve.
but be prepared of an onslaught by the petroleum industry to hijack your entire county,

that's what has happened here in Canada.
 
VK4AYQ
Guru

Joined: 02/12/2009
Location: Australia
Posts: 2539
Posted: 08:06pm 07 Feb 2013
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The further offshore commercialization of Australia with the associated enviro damage to be justified by the mighty dollar.
And so Australia will sink further into the mire of globalisation.

When will they ever learn.

Bob
Foolin Around
 
sPuDd

Senior Member

Joined: 10/07/2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 251
Posted: 01:48pm 08 Feb 2013
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"Big oil" exists because you continue to buy it.
It peeves me to see idiots driving massive fuel guzzling
vehicles around shouting about the price of oil. If you
used less of it the price would drop and its power would too.

sPuDd..
It should work ...in theory
 
VK4AYQ
Guru

Joined: 02/12/2009
Location: Australia
Posts: 2539
Posted: 03:40pm 08 Feb 2013
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Back to the horse and cart or the push bike, with the distances we have in australia it is difficult to not have some form of gas guzzler, small solar powered electric cars may be the answer for city dwellers, but with limited range no good in the country.

All the best

Bob
Foolin Around
 
sPuDd

Senior Member

Joined: 10/07/2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 251
Posted: 05:19pm 08 Feb 2013
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Use efficient vehicles, drive efficiently, consider the reason for travel.

/begin rant

I recently purchased a new van ($80k) because it is the most efficient
on the market while being the most capable at carrying all my tools &
stock over the average 800klm/week I do. It means I can cover my large
region with everything I need onboard while keeping fuel costs down.
I average 8L/100km with ~2.5T combined vehicle & load hiway & city.
You don't need an electric (or fuel powered hybrid) to get low consumption.
Plenty of efficient vehicles available now.

Tradies driving Landlubbers around with a hammer & lunchbox in the tray
spewing black unburnt diesel from the exhaust while complaining about
filling it with 200L of diesel for 500klm range are clueless.

That and parents dropping & picking up kids every day from school.
Road clogging, time & fuel wasting idiots. Ride the damm bus! I used
to ride my bike 20klm each day to school and take the bus if it was
pouring rain.

/end rant.


sPuDd..

It should work ...in theory
 
electrondady1
Senior Member

Joined: 12/02/2009
Location: Canada
Posts: 208
Posted: 07:43am 09 Feb 2013
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domestic consumption ? sorry, no.
all that oil has already been allocated for export to ..............
 
VK4AYQ
Guru

Joined: 02/12/2009
Location: Australia
Posts: 2539
Posted: 01:44pm 09 Feb 2013
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More oil for china et al, that's all our stupid government and the commercial masters think of, maximum profit for the corporation maximum royalty for the government to waste and screw the real owners of the asset the people of Australia. Our gas has gone the same way, sold at discount prices overseas while we pay maximum price for it here, it could be used for the benefit of the transport industry but no, only for maximum profit.

Spudd, your comments on the use and misuse of cars is an interesting concept that will only be trained into the populace by common sense, the most uncommon thing in our society.

All the best

Bob
Foolin Around
 
sPuDd

Senior Member

Joined: 10/07/2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 251
Posted: 03:00pm 09 Feb 2013
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  VK4AYQ said  Spudd, your comments on the use and misuse of cars is an interesting concept that will only be trained into the populace by common sense, the most uncommon thing in our society.

Bob



Or just raise the price of oil. That’s what sparked the current run on efficient vehicles. Same goes for coal fired electricity. Raise the price & people will scramble to turn off air cons & lights in empty buildings etc. While the price is low people will treat it like water.

sPuDd..

It should work ...in theory
 
Downwind

Guru

Joined: 09/09/2009
Location: Australia
Posts: 2333
Posted: 03:37pm 09 Feb 2013
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  Quote  While the price is low people will treat it like water.



Aint the real problem being the planet is running out of fresh water faster than natural resources.
My concern is the waste of fresh water, not so much the use of energy, as energy is a man made product and man will/can find other ways to produce energy, but fresh water is a basis of all life on land and is not a renewable man made resource.

We often dont even use fresh water once, and pour it down the drain while waiting on the hot water, or leave the tap running while brushing your teeth, etc......

Pete.
Sometimes it just works
 
Gizmo

Admin Group

Joined: 05/06/2004
Location: Australia
Posts: 5078
Posted: 04:07pm 09 Feb 2013
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  sPuDd said  

While the price is low people will treat it like water.

sPuDd..


Exactly. Fuel ( petrol, diesel ) is dirt cheap. It has been for decades. You look at the amount of work you can get for a dollars worth of petrol!

$10 will push me in my ton and half of vehicle at over 100kmh for about 70km, thats enough to get into town and back, in air conditioned comfort. What else could you buy for $10? A burger and coke. So compare a burger and coke to the wonder of traveling at 100kmh for 70km. Petrol is cheap.

But we have been conditioned into taking this sort of convenience for granted, and cant imagine life without it.

A more sensible approach would be to increase the price of fuel dramatically, and then....

Use electric vehicles in cities where you wouldn't travel more than 100km a day, or use public transport like electric trains or electric/fuel cell buses. Conventional fuel burning vehicles become un-economical to drive, encouraging the buy up of electric vehicles or hybrids. A boom industry in EV conversions would create a lot of employment.

Use fuel for long distance travel and city freight, where you would drive more than 100km a day. These would get a discounted fuel price.

Use electic rail for freight between major cities.

Use diesel trucks and road trains for freight between the major cities and smaller towns. Again these would use discounted fuel.

Scale back on coal burning power stations, build new solar power stations. Coal provides night time off peak power and base load, solar for day light power, and make that the cheaper time to use power, encouraging people to charge vehicles, heat water, run pool pumps, etc, during the day instead of night.

These changes would slash our dependance on fuel, clean up the air, and mean we have fuel reserves for much longer into the future.

It also means the coal industry, oil industry and truck transport industry and its jobs remain in business. But instead of using a growth business model, they adopt a sustainability model. Share holders can get screwed.

GlennEdited by Gizmo 2013-02-11
The best time to plant a tree was twenty years ago, the second best time is right now.
JAQ
 
sPuDd

Senior Member

Joined: 10/07/2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 251
Posted: 01:54am 15 Feb 2013
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Glenn,
my thoughts 100% on everything you just said.

No need for continuous expansion of housing etc.
Our unsustainable growth model is wrong.
We need to innovate to correct mistakes & improve.

Its a shame politicians & the public are stuck in last century.

sPuDd..

It should work ...in theory
 
Ron B
Newbie

Joined: 26/04/2013
Location: Australia
Posts: 5
Posted: 12:22am 27 Apr 2013
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I guess this threaded started out talking about the northern shale oil deposits? The same oil resource Peter Beattie,as Qld premier gave to the American Link corporation for $2 million? . There is no chance Australia will ever get any benefit from anything dug out of the ground or grown in it (Australian wheat board now belongs to overseas investors...as a prime example ) This isn't Norway and we dont have anyone with the norwegian mind set with regards to finance or investments in our government. It resembles Nero's Rome actually.
 
electrondady1
Senior Member

Joined: 12/02/2009
Location: Canada
Posts: 208
Posted: 01:56am 03 May 2013
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here's part of it.
"the Arckaringa Basin in South Australia contain between 133 billion and 233 billion barrels of shale oil trapped in rocks. It is likely that only 3.5 billion barrels, worth almost $359 billion at today’s oil price, could be recovered."

just a heads up warning , when the oil starts to flow, the value of your money goes up.then all the other stuff your industries are trying to export will become less competitive.
your government is taken over by oil companies and whatever they need to increase production is just what the government does.
environmental laws are rescinded.
scientists are muzzled.
every thing other than oil is put on the back burner

your right about Norway, they seem to have gotten a handle on what to do with the money and have billions in the bank.






Edited by electrondady1 2013-05-04
 
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