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I'm not sure what I'm missing but the producers need to shut down wells and go into hibernation just like the rest of the global economy??
Why is this not happening ??
I'm not sure what I'm missing but the producers need to shut down wells and go into hibernation just like the rest of the global economy??
Why is this not happening ??
I'm not sure what I'm missing but the producers need to shut down wells and go into hibernation just like the rest of the global economy??
Why is this not happening ??
Because it isn't an off switch.
Australia says first in line to buy crude to store in U.S. strategic reserve
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Australia is at the head of the queue to buy oil and store it in the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), taking advantage of a glut that has hammered oil prices to 21-year lows, Energy Minister Angus Taylor said on Wednesday.
Australia is close to finalizing an agreement announced in March with the Trump administration to lease capacity in the SPR, part of an effort by Canberra to meet its fuel security obligations with the International Energy Agency and a U.S. effort to help U.S. crude producers.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-store-in-u-s-strategic-reserve-idUSKCN2240AA
probably makes strategic sense when that is where all the factories and workers are locatedIs it just me, or is it incredibly stupid to store emergency reserves on the other side of the planet?
We're just paying the bills to big brother - I don't think any of this is for our benefitIs it just me, or is it incredibly stupid to store emergency reserves on the other side of the planet?
I'm not sure what I'm missing but the producers need to shut down wells and go into hibernation just like the rest of the global economy??
Why is this not happening ??
Was going to answer but @Smurf1976 had the answer already.some of the wells are "helped with injection of water gas to build a flow thru porous rocks.it are that for the lower pressure wells, stopping production has a good chance of killing it outright which then means a huge cost to restart.
Is it just me, or is it incredibly stupid to store emergency reserves on the other side of the planet?
There's a lot of ways overall energy production could be curtailed but they mostly have the same basic economics.
Is it just me, or is it incredibly stupid to store emergency reserves on the other side of the planet?
Not only that but if the US wants the oil anyone think they will hand it over?
A lot of power stations have strategic reserve oil tanks, one would assume they are being filled ATM, which most operators would never have seen in their careers.Posting this just as one of many possible examples which illustrates the concept of substitution in the energy industry. For illustration of the point only - there are numerous comparable examples globally.
In south-west Victoria there's an underground natural gas storage facility, Iona, currently 72% full. Pipelines from this connect to both Melbourne and Adelaide.
Victoria and SA both have a number of gas-fired power stations which are technically capable of firing fuel oil, diesel and/or jet fuel instead of gas. The reason to not do so normally is economic but from a technical perspective the switch is easy, indeed in some cases it can be done whilst the plant remains at uninterrupted full production. Likewise some manufacturing plants have boilers or furnaces able to switch between various fuels most commonly oil and gas.
To cut a long story short, if oil was used to generate power, fire boilers in industry etc and the gas saved was put into Iona then the gas required to fill it completely is equivalent to 1.2 million barrels of oil.
That amounts to effectively downgrading the resource. Take 1.2 million barrels of oil, burn it in power stations, industry etc and store the gas that was saved. Since gas normally has a lower value per unit of energy than does oil that would normally make zero sense financially but it sure would if the oil price dropped low enough. It's another way to store something, albeit one that involves getting rid of the oil as such and replacing it with lower value gas but it does provide a solution which retains some value.
That is just one example, there are others in Australia and plenty more globally where instead of storing oil physically it's a case of burning the oil and storing the gas, coal or water (hydro) that was saved. It effectively downgrades the resource, you can't turn it back into oil, but it's better than not being able to do anything with it at all.
So if the price for physically delivered oil gets low to the point that the economics stack up then some other physical options for what to do with it do open up.
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