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Chapter 11 Fossil Fuels

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Chapter 11 Fossil Fuels Overview Energy Sources and Consumption How Fossil Fuels are Formed Coal Coal Reserves and Mining Environmental Impacts Oil and Natural Gas ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 11 Fossil Fuels


1
Chapter 11Fossil Fuels
2
Overview
  • Energy Sources and Consumption
  • How Fossil Fuels are Formed
  • Coal
  • Coal Reserves and Mining
  • Environmental Impacts
  • Oil and Natural Gas
  • Exploration for Reserves of Oil and Natural Gas
  • Environmental Impacts
  • Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
  • Synfuels
  • US Energy Strategy

3
Energy Sources and Consumption
  • Energy sources used to be local
  • Now they are worldwide
  • Fossil fuels (55.5 imported)
  • Nuclear energy
  • Electricity
  • Energy consumption is different between
    developing and developed nations
  • 20 of worlds population use 60 of the worlds
    energy sources (developed uses 8xs more than
    developing)

4
  • Per capita energy consumption of selected
    developed and developing countries

5
  • Energy consumption in the US
  • Industries (production) use the most
  • Heating, cooling, and illuminating building is 1/3

6
Fossil Fuels
  • Combustible deposits in the Earths crust
  • Composed of the remnants (fossils) of prehistoric
    organisms that existed millions of years ago
  • Includes coal, oil (petroleum) and natural gas
  • Non-renewable resource
  • Fossil fuels are created too slowly to replace
    the reserves we use
  • We will have to transition to other sustainable
    fuels in the future

7
How Are Fossil Fuels Formed?
  • 300 million years ago
  • Climate was mild
  • Vast swamps covered much of the land
  • Dead plant material decayed slowly in the swamp
    environment

Plants include giant ferns, horsetails, and club
mosses
8
How Are Fossil Fuels Formed
  • Over time, layers of sediment accumulated over
    the dead plant material
  • Coal
  • Heat, pressure and time turned the plant material
    into carbon-rich rock (coal)
  • Oil
  • Sediment deposited over microscopic plants
  • Heat pressure and time turned them into
    hydrocarbons (oil)
  • Natural Gas
  • Formed the same way as oil, but at temperatures
    higher than 100 C

9
Coal
  • Occurs in different grades
  • Based on variations in heat and pressure during
    burial
  • Lignite
  • Subbitumimous
  • Bituminous
  • Anthracite
  • Most, if not all, coal deposits have been
    identified
  • Primarily in northern hemisphere

10
Coal Types and Quality
  • Lignite poor quality, dark brown, 30 carbon,
    11.41 (per 2000 lbs to mine), heat value 6000
    btu/lb
  • Subbituminous Poor quality but better, dull
    black, 40 carbon, 7.12, heat value 9000 btu/lb
  • Bituminous also called soft coal, high sulfur ,
    50-70 carbon, 24.15 to mine, 13000 btu/lb
  • Antracite- black, high quality, low sulfur,90
    carbon, 40.90 to mine, 14,000 btu/lb (fig 10.1)

11
Coal
  • US has 25 of worlds coal supplies
  • Known coal deposits could last 200 years
  • At present rate of consumption

12
2 Types of Coal Mining
  • Surface mining (right)
  • Chosen if coal is within 30m of surface
  • mineral and energy resources are extracted near
    Earths surface by first removing the soil,
    subsoil, and overlying rock strata
  • Subsurface mining
  • Extraction of mineral and energy resources from
    deep underground deposits

Surface mine near Wyoming
13
Environmental Impacts of Mining Coal
  • Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act (1977)
  • Requires filling (reclaiming) of surface mines
    after mining
  • Expensive!
  • Reduces Acid Mine Drainage
  • Requires permits and inspections of active coal
    mining sights
  • Prohibits coal mining in sensitive areas
  • Mountaintop Removal
  • Fills valleys and streams with debris
  • Most land destructive tecnique

14
Environmental Impacts of Burning Coal
  • Releases large quantities of CO2 into atmosphere
  • Greenhouse gas
  • Releases other pollutants into atmosphere
  • Mercury
  • Sulfur oxides
  • Nitrogen oxides
  • Can cause acid precipitation

Dead trees enveloped in acid fog on Mt. Mitchell,
North Carolina
15
Making Coal Cleaner
  • Scrubbers
  • Fluidized Bed Combustion (below)
  1. Coal and limestone suspended
  2. Coal burns and limestone neutralizes most of
    sulfur dioxide
  3. Heat converts water to steam
  4. This powers industrial processes

16
Oil and Natural Gas
  • Oil and gas provide 60 of worlds energy
  • They provide 63 of USs energy, 23 provided by
    coal

17
Petroleum Refining
  • Numerous hydrocarbons present in crude oil
    (petroleum) are separated
  • Based on boiling point
  • Natural gas contains far fewer hydrocarbons than
    crude oil
  • Methane, ethane, propane and butane

18
Oil and Natural Gas Exploration
  • Oil and natural gas migrate upwards until they
    hit impermeable rock
  • Usually located in structural traps

19
Oil Reserves
  • Uneven distribution globally
  • More than half is located in the Middle East
    which includes Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar,
    Saudi Arabia, Syria, Yemen, and the United Arab
    Emirates

20
Natural Gas Reserves
  • Uneven distribution globally
  • More than half is located in Russia and Iran
    (app. 48 of worlds deposits)

21
How long will Supplies Last?
  • Difficult to determine and estimates vary
  • Depends on
  • How many more deposits will be located
  • What technology might be available to extract
    deeper resources
  • Changes in global consumption rates
  • Experts indicate there may be shortages in 21st
    century

Long lines at gas station as a result of the OPEC
oil embargo in 1973
22
Environmental Impacts of Oil and Natural Gas
  • Combustion
  • Increase carbon dioxide and pollutant emissions
    (nitrogen oxides/photochemical smog)
  • Natural gas is far cleaner burning than oil
  • Production
  • Disturbance to land and habitat
  • Transport
  • Spills- especially in aquatic systems
  • Ex Alaskan Oil Spill (1989)

23
1989 Alaskan Oil Spill
Water currents caused the oil to spread hundreds
of miles
24
1989 Alaskan Oil Spill
  • Exxon Valdez hit a reef and spilled 260,000
    barrels of crude oil into sound
  • Largest oil spill in US history
  • Led to Oil Pollution Act of 1990

Worker attempting to cleanup rocky shoreline of
Eleanor Island
25
Case in Point - Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
26
Synfuel and Other Fossil Fuel Resources
  • Synfuel
  • A liquid or gaseous fuel that is synthesized from
    coal and other naturally occurring sources
  • Used in place of oil or natural gas
  • Include
  • Tar sands
  • Oil shales
  • Gas hydrates
  • Liquefied coal
  • Coal gas (right)

27
US Energy Strategy
  • Objective 1 Increase Energy Efficiency and
    Conservation
  • Requires many unpopular decisions
  • Examples
  • Decrease speed limit to conserve fuel
  • Eliminate government subsidies
  • Objective 2 Secure Future Fossil Fuel Energy
    Supplies
  • 2 oppositions environmental and economic

28
US Energy Strategy
  • Objective 3 Develop Alternative Energy Sources
  • Who should pay for this? Gas taxes?
  • Objective 4 Meet the First Three Objectives
    Without Further Damage to the Environment

29
National Energy Policy (2005)
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