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  • Uncle Ted
    replied
    Originally posted by Walter Sobchak View Post
    Yep, the solution to climate change has been sitting there all along... The damn nuclear protesting hippies (and that pencil-neck Bill Nye, the anti-science guy) are to blame.



    I hope you choke on your CO2, Bill Nye!

    Leave a comment:


  • Walter Sobchak
    replied
    Originally posted by Uncle Ted View Post
    Nuke baby, nuke!


    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/21/op...ower.html?_r=0



    Those opposing nuclear power are causing global warming.

    Leave a comment:


  • Uncle Ted
    replied
    Wind, solar produce 10 percent of US electricity for first time


    Wind, solar produce 10 percent of US electricity for first time
    Wind and solar produced 10 percent of the electricity generated in the United States for the first time in March, federal energy officials said Wednesday.


    The Energy Information Administration’s (EIA) monthly power report for March found that wind produced 8 percent of the electricity produced in the U.S. that month, with solar producing 2 percent.


    The two sources combined to have their best month ever in terms of percentage of overall electricity production, EIA said. The agency expects the two sources topped 10 percent again in April but forecasts that their generation will fall below that mark during the summer months.
    [...]
    http://thehill.com/policy/energy-env...for-first-time

    Surprisingly most of this renewable energy is generated in red states...

    In Trump Country, Renewable Energy Is Thriving

    Two years ago, Kansas repealed a law requiring that 20 percent of the state’s electric power come from renewable sources by 2020, seemingly a step backward on energy in a deeply conservative state.


    Yet by the time the law was scrapped, it had become largely irrelevant. Kansas blew past that 20 percent target in 2014, and last year generated more than 30 percent of its power from wind. The state may be the first in the country to hit 50 percent wind generation in a year or two, unless Iowa gets there first.


    Some of the fastest progress on clean energy is occurring in states led by Republican governors and legislators, and states carried by Donald J. Trump in the presidential election.


    The five states that get the largest percentage of their power from wind turbines — Iowa, Kansas, South Dakota, Oklahoma and North Dakota — all voted for Mr. Trump. So did Texas, which produces the most wind power in absolute terms. In fact, 69 percent of the wind power produced in the country comes from states that Mr. Trump carried in November.
    [...]
    https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/06/c...st-states.html

    Leave a comment:


  • Northwestcoug
    replied
    Originally posted by Dwight Schr-ute View Post
    LOL. Best Nauvoo Pageant ever.
    I knew that routine looked familiar!

    Leave a comment:


  • myboynoah
    replied
    Originally posted by Northwestcoug View Post
    That's pretty awesome.

    Leave a comment:


  • Dwight Schr-ute
    replied
    Originally posted by Northwestcoug View Post
    LOL. Best Nauvoo Pageant ever.

    Leave a comment:


  • Northwestcoug
    replied

    Leave a comment:


  • Green Monstah
    replied
    Originally posted by Dwight Schr-ute View Post
    Neat!

    [ATTACH]7688[/ATTACH]
    A terrible idea on many levels. Rick Perry was a successful governor of Texas because Texans are resistant to change, and Perry never really got much done. Perfect Texas governor; terrible policy maker and bureaucrat.

    Leave a comment:


  • Green Monstah
    replied
    Originally posted by Katy Lied View Post
    Actually I am interested in these reasons. Is there an explanation less than 5 paragraphs?


    Also I've been invited to the Middle East Heavy Oil Congress in Bahrain. Not that I'm going, but when did "heavy" become a common term? With the advent of massive shale oil extraction? Fracking?
    Re: heavy: https://labs.weatherford.com/service...ry/api-gravity

    A lot of the oil coming from the Uinta basin is heavy. The oil from the Williston basis/Bakken shale is heavy. As Mol said, not only is some of the stuff in the Permian basin not heavy, but it's surprisingly light, which is more valuable due to the increased quantity of higher-end refined products.

    Leave a comment:


  • Dwight Schr-ute
    replied
    Neat!

    Rick Perry.jpg

    Leave a comment:


  • Katy Lied
    replied
    Originally posted by Moliere View Post
    Btw, this is causing nightmares for accountants...for really boring reasons.
    Actually I am interested in these reasons. Is there an explanation less than 5 paragraphs?


    Also I've been invited to the Middle East Heavy Oil Congress in Bahrain. Not that I'm going, but when did "heavy" become a common term? With the advent of massive shale oil extraction? Fracking?

    Leave a comment:


  • Moliere
    replied
    The oil being fraced out of the Permian is not heavy oil.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

    Leave a comment:


  • Northwestcoug
    replied
    Originally posted by Green Monstah View Post
    "conventional"
    Thanks

    Leave a comment:


  • Green Monstah
    replied
    Originally posted by Northwestcoug View Post
    I should have said traditional wells. My FIL did work in the oil sands of Alberta long before it became profitable. I know there is a lot of heavy oil available for extraction. He is now involved with offshore drilling, and I'm pretty sure he means that all the large 'traditional' (or whatever you call it) wells have been discovered.
    "conventional"

    Leave a comment:


  • Northwestcoug
    replied
    Originally posted by Uncle Ted View Post
    Was that before or after the shale oil discovery in west texas?


    http://amarillo.com/news/local-news/2016-11-16
    I should have said traditional wells. My FIL did work in the oil sands of Alberta long before it became profitable. I know there is a lot of heavy oil available for extraction. He is now involved with offshore drilling, and I'm pretty sure he means that all the large 'traditional' (or whatever you call it) wells have been discovered.

    Leave a comment:

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