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ANWR drilling no solution to gasoline costs, Kerry says
adn.com ^ | March 31, 2004 | LIZ RUSKIN

Posted on 03/31/2004 11:41:20 AM PST by KQQL

Edited on 07/07/2004 4:49:14 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]

WASHINGTON -- While blaming President Bush for the high price of gasoline, his Democratic challenger, Sen. John Kerry, on Tuesday reiterated his opposition to drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, saying it is no solution.

"We deserve an administration that doesn't fake it to the American people and pretend that somehow by drilling in the Alaska wildlife refuge we can deal with the problems of America," Kerry, D-Mass., told university students in San Diego. "We can't provide the supply of oil America needs from the Alaska wildlife refuge or from any other source in the United States, because we only have 3 percent of the world's oil reserves."


(Excerpt) Read more at adn.com ...


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Alaska
KEYWORDS: 2004; 2004election; alaska; anwr; carbontax; dumbassalert; election2004; energy; gasprices; hoffa; issues; jameshoffa; jamesphoffa; jimmyhoffa; johnkerry; kenyanbornmuzzie; kerry; lurch; methane; oil; opec; petroleum; teamsters
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To: KQQL
Too bad the Bush people don't have the moxey to nail Kerry with this....
61 posted on 03/31/2004 12:31:34 PM PST by Spirited
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To: farmfriend
BTTT!!!!!!
62 posted on 03/31/2004 12:31:34 PM PST by E.G.C.
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To: Dr. Frank fan
"It could help, but really not very substantially.

Because.....? "

Because, relative to our long term needs, it's not a large source. Not to mention that it's not like it's free. There is a cost involved, and that cost isn't substantially less than sources we have now.

"Our nation contains much land under which is oil, that we're not getting. Can you explain why not?"

Sure. It's not true. Well, maybe true, if you have a different definiton of "much" than I do.

"...and people like you say "no, that's not gonna work". ????"

Which I said where?

I said it's not a substantial long term solution, and it's not.

Note that I didn't say don't do it.

It's not a hard distinction to make, if you try.





63 posted on 03/31/2004 12:32:13 PM PST by HarryCaul
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To: RightWhale
I have a friend (a geologist) that just retired from J.R. McDermott. He said that the surveys he studied show far more oil than you allude to. Until a test well is drilled, it's anyone's guess. Bottom line.....lets find out!

LLS
64 posted on 03/31/2004 12:33:09 PM PST by LibLieSlayer (We point out Kerry's record and the facts, and they just THINK it's attack politics.)
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To: RightWhale
China is already taking oil from Kazakhstan by rail, and looking at building a pipeline. Meanwhile they are negotiating another pipeline from Siberia. Feeding oil to China is going to be a big project for someone.

But the oil is there. And they are investing in Kazakh fields.

As for synfuels, the technology works, the South Africans built two huge facilities to produce oil back in the glory days. The problem is that its expensive. But the higher oil goes in price, the less the difference. Higher oil prices help make alternative technologies feasible. But mostly it just brings new oilfields on line and it all evens out.
65 posted on 03/31/2004 12:37:24 PM PST by marron
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To: knarf
You are on the right track. I have an uncle who is a reservoir engineer for an independent oil company and he explained much of our dependence on foreign oil along these terms: We do have pools that are available, but only accessible when technology improves; fed regs limit our ability to dvelop these technologies on our own soil; the fed regs push domestic costs to the point that it is cheaper for an oil company to build tankers and infrastructure overseas to ship oil to the US. My uncle's company is working on making the most efficient use of US pools that already have wells. Heck, they have discovered new pools linked to existing pools.
66 posted on 03/31/2004 12:37:44 PM PST by Army Air Corps (Communism failed because people like to own stuff)
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To: HarryCaul
We will abandon petroleum as an energy source ONLY when another source is:

1. Economical to produce
2. Equal to or more reliable than oil.
3. Simple enough for the average person to operate and a safely.
4. Produces as much horsepower as does the internal combustion engine

None of the alternative energy supplies can match/surpasse oil in these characteristics.


Until then, short of putting a gun to the consumer's head, we will continue to use oil.


67 posted on 03/31/2004 12:37:55 PM PST by RedMonqey (Its is dangerous to be right when your government is wrong)
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To: KQQL
"We can't provide the supply of oil America needs from the Alaska wildlife refuge or from any other source in the United States, because we only have 3 percent of the world's oil reserves."

So John F'em Ke(rr)y's idea is to wait until that's the last oil on Earth before thinking about (and ultimately rejecting) the notion of tapping into it? Or, is it to enrich a bunch of murderous Islamists? Either way, bad idea, Ketchup Boy.

68 posted on 03/31/2004 12:41:13 PM PST by steveegg (Radical Islam has more in common with Islamic populations than the mainstream media has with America)
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To: Army Air Corps
"Nothing like GROWING your own fuel to allow us to thumb our noses at OPEC; they can't eat oil."

I like that ideal but at the rate we are losing farm acrage to development, it may come to late to make much of a difference.
69 posted on 03/31/2004 12:41:29 PM PST by RedMonqey (Its is dangerous to be right when your government is wrong)
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To: KQQL
(CNSNews.com) - Teamsters union chief James Hoffa Jr. has left both environmentalists and free-market advocates confused after declaring that Democratic front-runner John Kerry would "drill like never before" for oil and gas if elected president.

Hoffa made the comments during a Feb. 17 segment on Hardball with Chris Matthews . Matthews had asked Hoffa why the union chose to endorse the Massachusetts senator even though Kerry opposed drilling for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR).

"Well, we talked about that," Hoffa responded. "He says, look, I am against ANWR, but I am going to put that pipeline in and we're going to drill like never before."

The union supports drilling in ANWR and the creation of a natural gas pipeline that could stretch from Alaska to Chicago. Neither plan draws much support from Kerry's environmentalist base, however.

[snip]

70 posted on 03/31/2004 12:42:00 PM PST by Oldeconomybuyer (The democRATS are near the tipping point.)
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To: RightWhale
It's months, not decades.

ONLY if it's the only place we get oil.

71 posted on 03/31/2004 12:42:31 PM PST by steveegg (Radical Islam has more in common with Islamic populations than the mainstream media has with America)
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To: RightWhale
It's months, not decades. We're still going off the cliff in 3-13 years. 3-12.5 years without ANWR.

Where are you getting your information on decades.

This is what I have found.

MAKING THE CASE FOR ANWR DEVELOPMENT
Too Much Imported Oil: Bad for the Economy

As domestic oil production continued its decline, the U.S. imported 60% of its petroleum needs in 2001. These oil imports cost more than $100 billion and robbed tens of thousands of steady, high-paying jobs from American workers.

More than 20,000 foreign supertankers (most single-hulled) offloaded oil at east, west and gulf coast refineries last year; they carry from 700,000 to 1.2 million barrels a day from Iraq alone. Foreign oil is produced and shipped under less strict environmental standards than domestic oil. Alaska’s oil fields are the cleanest in the world, second to none.

Through shortsighted actions, Congress and federal agencies have banned oil activity from more than 300 million acres of federal land onshore and more than 460 million acres offshore in the past 20 years. An estimated 67% of oil reserves and 40% of natural gas reserves are on federal lands in America’s western states.

Eighty-eight percent of the energy for America’s transportation, industry, government and residential needs comes from oil, gas and coal. No combination of conservation, technology or alternatives can come close to replacing these fossil fuels. It will take years for research, testing, permitting, construction, and distribution systems for replacement alternatives to be realized. When alternative energy sources become practical and economical, Americans will use them. Until then, fossil fuels must be relied upon.

Today’s domestic oil production comes from more than 150,000 wells scattered throughout the country; they average 15 barrels a day. There have been no new major discoveries in the 48 contiguous states in thirty years. As the U.S. population increases, the nation must either produce more or import more. Alaska’s Arctic is the most promising area for the largest supply with the smallest physical impact.

The U.S. economy benefits from domestic production when new construction, service, manufacturing, and engineering jobs are created. These jobs occur in all 50 states. A national impact study by Wharton Econometrics estimates total employment at full production in ANWR to be 735,000 jobs. Federal revenues would be enhanced by billions of dollars from bonus bids, lease rentals, royalties and taxes.

Alaska’s Experience as an Energy Supplier

Discovery of the gigantic Prudhoe Bay oilfield was announced in July 1968, the largest deposit ever found in North America. (Environmentalists called it a "few months’ supply.") Nine years, 7.7 billion dollars, and 1,347 government permits later, Americans cheered as oil began flowing through the 800-mile Trans-Alaska Pipeline System.

Since July 1977, the pipeline has carried more than 13 billion barrels of oil from Alaska’s North Slope. During that time Alaska oil has supplied 20% of domestic production, amounting to nearly a $300 billion offset to the national trade deficit. Natural gas, produced with the oil, continues to be reinjected pending studies to determine feasibility of a pipeline to U.S. markets. Prudhoe Bay gas reserves are 30.9 trillion cubic feet.

Today the Alaska oil pipeline carries less than half its capacity; thus the search continues for new supply to keep it operating. (Without it, the entire system must eventually be decommissioned and removed.) The coastal plain of ANWR, 60 miles east of Prudhoe Bay and with similar geology, is America’s most prospective area for another giant oil field.

Studies of the ANWR coastal plain indicate it may contain between 6 and 16 billion barrels of recoverable oil (between 11.6 and 31.5 billion barrels in-place). With enhanced recovery technology, ANWR oil could provide an additional 30 to 50 years of reliable supply. Natural gas, produced with the oil, could be reinjected or added to a new gas pipeline originating in Prudhoe Bay.

Petroleum development at Prudhoe Bay has not negatively affected wildlife. For instance, the Central Arctic caribou herd is at home with pipeline facilities and has grown from 3,000 to as high as 27,100 in the last 20 years. Drilling activity in ANWR would be limited to winter months when wildlife does not frequent the coastal plain.

Constantly improving technology has greatly reduced the footprint of Arctic oil development. If Prudhoe Bay were built today, facility designs show the footprint would be 64% smaller.

72 posted on 03/31/2004 12:44:14 PM PST by N. Theknow (John Kerry is nothing more than Ted Kennedy without a dead girl in the car.)
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To: KQQL
KERRY'S SOLUTION:
STAY DEPENDENT ON MIDDLE EAST SHEIKS!

73 posted on 03/31/2004 12:46:34 PM PST by Recovering_Democrat (I'm so glad to no longer be associated with the Party of Dependence on Government!)
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To: RedMonqey
Currently, i live in a farming/petroleum community. The farmers here don't care if they sell a few acres because technology (biotech, chemistry, etc) allows them to generate more per acre than they ever have in the past. Soybeans grow rather quickly and you can grow tons and tons of the stuff per acre. Also, we still have enormous amounts of farmland. If we were still using 1920s farming technology, I would be worried. We are using technologies that allow an acre of land to be five times, or more, productive than it was a generation ago.
74 posted on 03/31/2004 12:48:04 PM PST by Army Air Corps (Communism failed because people like to own stuff)
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To: Paulie
Well, he HAS been in touch with foreign leaders who want him to win. A wink and a nod.
75 posted on 03/31/2004 12:48:55 PM PST by savedbygrace
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To: HarryCaul
Because, relative to our long term needs, it's not a large source.

That doesn't mean it "won't help substantially".

A 10% raise in your salary will help substantially, I would assume. However, "relative to your long term needs" it's not very much. Relative to the national GDP it's even less. Relative to the national GDP summed over 100 years it's even less than that.... You can play this game forver if you keep dividing by larger and larger numbers....

Where the heck did this idea come from that unless an oil-source will Power The Entire Nation For A Century (or however long), we *shouldn't get the oil from there*? Truly bizarre.

[why we're not getting oil] Sure. It's not true. Well, maybe true, if you have a different definiton of "much" than I do.

Apparently I do. To you, anything less than Will Power The Nation For A Century, is "not much". I'm talking more realistically.

On the flip side, if the reserves in, say, ANWR, are really "not much", I gotta wonder why the opposition to drilling there. Ok fine it's a teeny tiny amount under a teeny tiny patch of land. Who could possibly object to allowing some foolish company to start drilling there then?

I said it's not a substantial long term solution, and it's not. Note that I didn't say don't do it. It's not a hard distinction to make, if you try.

Good, then we both agree, let's do it.

Sorry for my confusion, caused by the fact that into a discussion about Whether we should drill in ANWR, you brought up this stuff about it not being a long-term solution. That made it seem like you were disagreeing (because otherwise, it's a complete non sequitur). So I guess I don't know why you brought in this extraneous issue of whether it's a "long term solution" into the discussion. No one was claiming it was in the first place. What people are saying is, Let's open ANWR (and other places like it) to drilling.

76 posted on 03/31/2004 12:49:47 PM PST by Dr. Frank fan
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To: Army Air Corps
They’re not the only ones disgusted.
I’m disgusted too!

I’m disgusted with our spineless Congress’ constant capitulation to the tree-hugging snail-darter-loving whale-kissing spotted-owl-petting SUV-burning nutbags in this country.

(There, now I feel better)
77 posted on 03/31/2004 12:52:28 PM PST by tractorman
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To: knarf
For the next few years we can use the military if necessary to secure oil/gas reservoirs. After that, though, there won't be any areas to occupy that have enough resources to be worth the trouble.
78 posted on 03/31/2004 12:59:44 PM PST by RightWhale (Theorems link concepts; proofs establish links)
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To: N. Theknow
Not only that, but the DemocRATS opposition to Anwar cost the Teamsters and other unions ove 10,000 jobs. Yet they support the RATS! go figure.
79 posted on 03/31/2004 1:00:28 PM PST by stubernx98
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To: Dr. Frank fan
"So I guess I don't know why you brought in this extraneous issue of whether it's a "long term solution" into the discussion. "

It's not extraneous. See the title of the thread.

80 posted on 03/31/2004 1:01:01 PM PST by HarryCaul
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