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An Overview of Global Energy Issues

An Overview of Global Energy Issues. Presented by Robert Rapier Merica International, LLC For Orlando Energy Conference November 16, 2009. Outline. My Paradigm The Easy Oil is Gone The Global Oil Picture The Pressure on Prices What will replace oil?

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An Overview of Global Energy Issues

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  1. An Overview of Global Energy Issues Presented by Robert Rapier Merica International, LLC For Orlando Energy Conference November 16, 2009

  2. Outline • My Paradigm • The Easy Oil is Gone • The Global Oil Picture • The Pressure on Prices • What will replace oil? • Understanding energy intensity and scale • Energy Policy in Brazil • A model for the world? • Brazil versus U.S. energy statistics • Energy Policy Mistakes • Solutions that would make a difference • Building a Sustainable Platform • Strategy

  3. My Paradigm • The days of substantial excess oil production capacity are over • Oil price volatility will continue, but long term price trends for oil are much higher • Replacing fossil fuels with biomass will be a huge challenge • Each year we burn >400 years of ancient biomass* • Energy density of oil is 3 times that of biomass • Biomass costs will rise due to competition • Net BTU efficiency will become more important • How many net BTUs can you extract? *Burning Buried Sunshine: Human Consumption of Ancient Solar Energy

  4. The Easy Oil is Gone Graphic Source: Colin Campbell

  5. Global Oil Picture • Global oil production – 85.4 million bpd* • On a plateau since 2005 • Some spare capacity, but… • Projects are being delayed – setting up price surge • Oil exporters building refineries to capture more of the value chain • Saudi Arabia would like to ship finished products • U.S. crude oil production – 5 million bpd • Peak U.S. production was 9.6 million bpd • EIA predicts turnaround is just around the corner • U.S. oil consumption – 19.5 million bpd • U.S. refining capacity – 17.7 million bpd *Source: Energy Information Administration

  6. Global Oil Picture • The good news • U.S. oil demand down by 1.2 million bpd from 2004-2008 • The bad news • Largely recession-induced • Demand from China and India up by 1.9 million bpd • Oil at $80 the new norm • How does the recession end if oil prices remain at recession-inducing levels? *Source: Energy Information Administration

  7. Pressure on Oil Prices • If excess capacity remains constant and substantial, prices are relatively stable and related to the cost of production

  8. Pressure on Oil Prices • However, eroding capacity means higher prices, higher volatility, and sometimes much higher profits for oil producers

  9. My View in July 2007 • When spare capacity is gone, prices will ultimately go much higher • How high? In Europe, consumers pay the equivalent of $250/bbl* - 3x U.S. prices • *Based on Dutch gasoline price in Q1 2009

  10. The Biomass Contribution • The “Billion Ton Study” • Over 1.3 billion dry tons/year of biomass potential • Enough to produce “biofuels to meet more than one-third of the current demand for transportation fuels” • Converting to ethanol at 90 gallons/ton* yields • 117 billion gallons • Correcting for lower energy content yields • 77 billion gallons of gasoline equivalent • This is <45% of the BTUs of the starting biomass • This is not net of energy to harvest and transport biomass • Net energy unknown as no large commercial cellulosic ethanol facilities • U.S. gasoline usage is around 140 billion gal/yr • Is that cup half full? *Source: Private communication from POET.

  11. Key Questions for Alternatives • Is the process enabled by fossil fuels? • Does the process impact food supplies? • Can the process operate without straining water supplies? • Does the process lower the soil quality? • Does the process impact local biodiversity? • What are the emissions from the process?

  12. Sustainable Alternatives? • Renewable electricity • Biomass, solar, geothermal, wind paired up with plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (but some technical issues need solutions) • Micro-CHP • Biogas • Simple systems; lower energy inputs • Pyrolysis oil • Fast and simple • Used for stationary power or upgraded to transportation fuel • Green diesel • Biomass gasification or hydrocracked lipids • Ethanol in some cases • Byproduct of sugar processing • Corn ethanol in Iowa for Iowans? • Renewable petroleum • Microbial or catalytic approaches

  13. The Unsustainable Alternative Graphic Source: Energy Information Administration

  14. A Word on Energy Intensity • The energy balance matters • How many BTUs of fossil fuel to produce a BTU of renewable energy? • If production costs are high because energy inputs are high, you have a receding horizon problem • Cost position may worsen as oil prices increase • The problem of receding horizons • "Oil Shale Development Imminent” – headline circa 1900 • When oil was $20/bbl, oil shale needed $40/bbl • At $80/bbl, oil shale still not economical • Two high-profile examples of energy intensive processes in the renewable energy world • Cellulosic ethanol • Algal biofuel

  15. Understanding Scale • While we have been successful at rapidly ramping up corn ethanol, it barely registers on the scale of our petroleum demand

  16. Energy Policy in Brazil • Sugarcane ethanol has long been a cornerstone of Brazil’s energy policy • Can be produced from byproduct molasses – food and fuel • The key to the process is bagasse • A readily available energy source for fueling boilers • Minimal fossil fuel inputs relative to corn ethanol

  17. Can the World Emulate Brazil? • “As a result [of ethanol], Brazil has virtually stopped importing expensive foreign oil.” – Dan Rather in The Ethanol Solution • “If Brazil can do it, so can we.” – Bill Clinton, promoting California’s Prop 87 • “As Brazil's ‘energy independence miracle’ proves, an aggressive strategy of investing in petroleum substitutes like ethanol can end dependence on imported oil.” – Vinod Khosla and Tom Daschle in Miles per Cob (a New York Times editorial) • “I'm driving a Chevrolet in the middle of Brazil on ethanol, pure ethanol, not a drop of oil, imported oil in this tank. And here is the stuff grown all around us that is the fuel. So I'm thinking, why can't I do this in America? Why aren't we doing it?” – Frank Sesno in CNN’s We Were Warned

  18. Reality Check • Annual ethanol usage in Brazil: 0.33 barrels* per person • Annual oil usage in Brazil: 4.4 barrels per person • Oil still supplies more than 90% of Brazil’s transportation needs • Brazil celebrated energy independence in 2006 • Brazilian President Luiz da Silva made the announcement on the P-50 oil rig in the Albacora Leste field in the Atlantic Ocean * Barrels of oil equivalent (BOE)

  19. Reality Check – It Gets Worse • Annual oil usage in US: 23.4 bbl/person* • Annual oil usage in Brazil: 4.4 bbl/person • Annual oil production in US: 8.1 bbl/person • Annual oil production in Brazil: 3.5 bbl/person • U.S. supply imbalance: 15.3 bbl/person • Brazil’s supply imbalance: 0.9 bbl/person • Consumption and production are: • Grossly unbalanced in the US • Fairly balanced in Brazil • So, how can the US emulate Brazil? • By cutting oil consumption by 2/3rds • Or by tripling oil production * Consumption and production figures are from 2008

  20. Energy Policy Mistakes • Leaders mislead the public • “We can be just like Brazil” • Can create demand for a pseudo-sustainable solution • Leaders change energy policy every year • Uncertainty of tax policies inhibits investment • Lack of long-term planning is detrimental • Leaders attempt to choose technology winners • Which is influenced by: • Misleading arguments from various ‘experts’ • Vested interests • Desire to please constituents

  21. Suggested Solutions • Cease the delusions of ‘cheap gas for everyone’ • Cheap gas encourages fossil fuel consumption • Trade off fossil fuel taxes for income taxes • Rebate income taxes to make it revenue neutral • Encourages energy conservation • Encourages alternatives • Encourages mass transit • Encourage behaviors that reduce energy consumption • Rebates for solar water heaters, fuel efficient cars

  22. Vision of a Sustainable Platform • The Forestry Leg • Managed forest plantations • Utilize trees that can improve soil quality • By managing the biomass, we • Manage the sustainability • Ensure our supplies • The Logistical/Trading Leg • Moves biomass from forestry leg to conversion leg • Potentially sources 3rd party biomass as appropriate • The Conversion Leg • Utilizes appropriate conversion technologies that fit the local biomass resource and local energy need (e.g., torrefaction to displace coal) • The Distribution Leg • Gets fuel into the marketplace

  23. Strategy • Assess the energy profile of a location • Liquid fuels – gas, diesel, jet fuel • Electricity – coal-fired, liquid fueled, natural gas • Heating • Assess the potential renewable resources • Biomass, solar, wind, geothermal, hydropower, etc. • Evaluate the conversion technologies • Is there a match between the biomass, the conversion technology, and the demand? • Conduct the life cycle assessment • Engage the community • Will local jobs be created? • What are the land use impacts? • Execute • Lots of “good ideas” are executed poorly

  24. Thank You

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