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'O'NO! modifies (flips) stance on offshore drilling
They changed his campaign slogan to, "Appeasement you can believe in"
Of course, all our law makers should have supported drilling and oil shale from the beginning. The sooner we get on track to being energy independent, the better. |
His followers are going to come unglued.....
Here's my effort at depicting BO.... http://img148.imageshack.us/img148/2...lopspinho2.gif Flip Flopping Away Flip Flopping Away You know the nearer your destination The more you'll be Flip Flopping Away Obama Attempts to Explain Shift on Offshore Drilling http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalra...-attempts.html What Obama is really saying: “I’m saying that I didn’t say what you said I said, because today I’m saying what I did say which is different from what you think I said because I didn’t say that, I’m saying I said something different than what I said because today is different and what I say now is different but it’s not different from what I said because I said something different but it’s not different. It’s the same.” Now you know where he stands. |
They already have..........
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I was as angry as any at the fact that Congress took their 5 week vacation without doing a friggin thing on the gas crisis. Then, I see Obama changing his position on off shore drilling. Got me to thinking. I'm thinking I might be willing to place a bet that when their vacation is over, Nasty Peloesi will be willing to let the bill come to the floor for a vote and it will pass. Then, the MSM will suddenly surmize that Obama, not even a Prez yet, was able to do what no one else could do. Get them damn Senators to do what is right for America. Obvioulsy, he is the leader we have been all looking for.
Stay tuned for updates. Any bet takers? Mike (you may address me as you lord after this happens) (thanks Perry for opening this door... I was looking for an excuse to post this thought) |
Sigh...I don't even know why I'm doing this, but here goes:
From Fox News: http://elections.foxnews.com/2008/07...-no-of-energy/ "McCain called Obama the “Dr. No” of energy. But McCain once was too. Just last month, McCain reversed himself after years of opposition and called for lifting the federal ban on oil drilling off the U.S. coast." Flame-on... -Joe |
I don't see new drilling or shale as a fix in the near future, maybe down the road in 5 years it will have a minimum impact, at best. We need to address alternate energy issues, increase our effeciency and additional measures for a long term solution. Planting more corn aint gonna cut it!
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Here's what confuses me. (well, just one of the things) We hear that even if we started drilling today, we wouldn't see the benefit for years. On average, it takes maybe 60 days for the average 'hole in the ground' to determine if it is a producer, perhaps another 30 to cap it and start production, after which the oil can be taken directly to the refinery...perhaps a few days to refine it into gasoline etc.
I make that 3 months, give or take...how come the government tells us 5 years? What am I missing? Glyn |
Its all BS. You hear these liberal f&%ks saying even if we started today, we would not see results for X months or years. So why bother? We need solutions NOW they say! That is pure stupid liberal thinking. Long term thinking and action is what solves the problem. Liberals do not understand the term "invest". I have always been cautious in my terminolgy, but if it is good enough for Jamo, then me too. Liberals are maggots. Maggots do not invest. They just eat what is in front of them. Pigs. And to think they have the testicular fortitude to ask the Saudis to drill more!!!! A$%holes!
Drill now, drill here, pay less tomorrow. Dumb f&@king liberals. Mike (posted with love) |
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Here's part of a web article that need be of interest.... How the Leasing and Exploration Process Works When a company decides to take the financial risk on a promising subsurface structure, they usually bid on a cluster of blocks to include the entire structure and its periphery. But if the first couple of exploratory wells are unsuccessful, the company may judge the remaining blocks as too risky for further drilling, and allow the leases to expire. Much of the 68 million non-producing acres may be in the “risky” category. Legislation to force companies to drill on all leases is superfluous because those leases will eventually expire. The US Minerals Management Service (MMS) can then reoffer expired blocks to see if another company is willing to take the financial risk. In order to discover major oil fields, the industry needs access to extensive areas where exploratory drilling has been minimal. Most such areas are offshore, currently under moratorium. With access to extensive areas, major companies capable of taking big financial risks can conduct and share geophysical surveys, from which they decipher geologic structures. They drill off-structure core holes to analyze sediments for oil-prone organic material. Companies assemble the data to develop hypotheses about the conversion of organic material into oil in source rock, and its migration and accumulation in commercial concentrations in postulated geologic structures. MMS then issues a “call for nominations,” asking companies what areas their studies show are prospective. MMS compiles nominations and selects areas that comply with political and environmental issues. Companies bid competitively on blocks that are mapped in a 3-mile by 3-mile grid. High bid wins the right to drill on each block. MMS sets minimum bids for blocks based on prospective attractiveness, timetables for drilling the first well and subsequent wells, and expiration dates. The “sweaty palms” stage is when a company drills its first well, the ultimate test of their hypothesis for the generation, migration, and accumulation of oil. To maximize data from the well, they conduct detailed seismic surveys to determine the most advantageous path for the well, and to locate depths for capturing samples of rock and fluids. All this takes time and money, but physical information from the subsurface is critical for developing a 3-D geologic picture, to determine subsequent drilling. If the well is a non-producer, the company may recompile all data, revise their hypothesis, and decide that nearby structures are worth testing. But if the sediments do not show promising features, the company may see the weakness of their hypothesis, and decide to abandon the area. No Quick Fixes Congressional leaders use the sound bite, “We can’t drill our way out of this oil mess.” Of course; who ever claimed we could? But we can’t conserve our way out either. Reducing demand is a long-term process; “evolution” may be a more accurate term. Tightening CAFE standards will ease demand, but the benefit would be spread over many years. For long-term reduction, we would have to overhaul our daily travel patterns through societal lifestyle changes while we restructure our cities and suburbs. Such fundamental changes will take a human generation or longer. It took decades for the car culture to evolve in the U.S. It will take that long to reverse it. The popular alternatives (biofuels, wind, solar) could be the subject of another paper, but they have minimal potential to substitute for transportation fuels. We need to recognize the unique nature of liquid fuels, that the US will depend heavily on oil imports for decades, and that “energy independence” is a fanciful hope. Opening prospective areas under moratorium would allow fresh exploration where little previous work has been done. It will offer us the best chance for significant discoveries that could stabilize domestic production. Every barrel of oil we produce domestically is one less barrel that we must import. And while they’re at it, Congress should approve leasing for the coastal plane of ANWR so we can learn what resources are really there. Tom Standing began his career as a chemical engineer in refinery operations and later shifted to work as an engineer for the San Francisco water system. He is self-taught in the sciences of petroleum production, geology and geochemistry. ____ Just think if Clinton had not vetos drilling at ANWR around 10 years ago, we would be in a lot better shape. Let's face it, we are oil users, big time and for our government to place known domestic sources of oil off limits with no viable alternative plan is insane. |
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Since we seem to have trouble building new refineries, we can probably ship the oil from our off shore drilling to some other country that can cut thru the red tape and build refineries, and then ship the gas back here. :rolleyes: |
Here's another web post that rings true to me (responding to BO claim that it would take 10 years to produce more domestic oil).....
As if anything that would take that long is automatically out of the question, because . . . I guess, . . . we are too . . . impatient? His real reason is, of course, that he and his enviro-kook buddies don’t want drilling anywhere, anytime. But let’s call his bluff on the 10 year B.S. just to set the record straight. It turns out that people who actually know what they are talking about, oil company folks, disagree with His Holiness. From The Street. A Congressman followed my segment and suggested that drilling wouldn’t help for 10 years or more. I know this is absolutely untrue, so I called Transocean, the biggest driller in the world. An officer of the company told me that depending on the location of the drilling, oil could be realized in as little as a year. Ultra-deepwater fields might produce in 3-5 years. For the most remote locations, without any prior infrastructure support, that barrel may require a 4-6 year window. I suggested 8 years and he said that he could not envision a situation where it would require more than 6 years to bring a barrel out of the ocean floor. ____ Hmmm. Where is the 10 year figure? It is a figment of the Obama’s imagination. We can get oil in one year. If we started with nothing and sailed out to sea to drill, it’s 4-6 years, max. Another liberal lie to prop up environmental extremism at the expense of normal Americans who can’t afford gas to get to work. The only real question is not how long, but how safe as none of us wants to destroy the environment in the process, but getting to work at a reasonable cost is of real concern, as is the cost of food and every product since transportation costs impact practically everything. |
I don't know if the people that are going on about the 68 million acres really understand the oil business or not. From all the people I have ever talked to,very few have the slightest clue as to how the discovery phase of oil fields take place.
I spent a lot of time managing Seismic Survey Ships that do the Geophysical Surveys. People in this line of business are referred to as Doodlebuggers.:) I found an article that does a good job of explaining the process. You'll see that going out drilling holes on just a trial an error basis just doesn't happen.I think this is what too many people thinks happens. http://science.howstuffworks.com/oil-drilling.htm |
Just like everyone this discussion comes up often while sitting around with friends. One told me there is a huge oil field in Pennsylvania that is capped. At one time to expensive to pull out of the ground. He cleans nuke , and chemical plants for a living. Not known to Bull$hit. At today's prices it would surely be worth pulling some caps off if this is true?....WHAT SAY YOU???????:D
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Ever watch a government road crew fill a pot hole? Think in those terms. Scott S |
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While we're on the subject of rigs, it takes about 16 months to build a medium size jack-up rig (300 foot leg), the cost of the steel is typically $8-$12 million depending on rig size out of a total cost of between perhaps $100 and $170 million for the total cost of a rig. Worst case...start building a new rig today, drill for oil in a KNOWN lease and within 18-20 months we have OIL!!! Quote:
Glyn PS Scott...the difference is that the holes are drilled by REAL companies, NOT by government workers...lol. If REAL companies were filling in potholes they'd take a fraction of the time. |
Someone here mentioned the TV show 'black gold' a while back, in one episode they hit oil in 55 days!. I'm sure it's not always that fast but hey!, they were drilling............
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We need alternatives to oil, period, for long term sustained energy independance. New drilling is a bandaid at best, all though, I do support it. |
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Wait! Don't go off the deep end. :D We need alternative energy sources to free up oil so we CAN drive our Cobras. Home heating oil, for instance, surely there is a more effecient way? And more gas for more Cobra... What we need is more Nuke power stations, uh, in YOUR backyard, not mine! Now thats the American way. :LOL:
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http://www.clubcobra.com/photopost/d...m/DSC00292.JPG :LOL: Scott S |
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