Gallons of Oil per Barrel 42 U.S. Crude Oil Production 5,178,000 barrels/day

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Gallons of Oil per Barrel 42 U.S. Crude Oil Production 5,178,000 barrels/day U.S. Crude Oil Imports 10,126,000 barrels/day Top U.S. Crude Oil Supplier Canada - 1,633,000 barrels/day U.S. Petroleum Product Imports 3,588,000 barrels/day - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Gallons of Oil per Barrel 42 U.S. Crude Oil Production 5,178,000 barrels/day

Gallons of Oil per Barrel 42 Gallons of Oil per Barrel 42

U.S. Crude Oil Production 5,178,000 barrels/dayU.S. Crude Oil Production 5,178,000 barrels/day

U.S. Crude Oil Imports 10,126,000 barrels/dayU.S. Crude Oil Imports 10,126,000 barrels/day

Top U.S. Crude Oil Supplier Canada - 1,633,000 barrels/day Top U.S. Crude Oil Supplier Canada - 1,633,000 barrels/day

U.S. Petroleum Product Imports 3,588,000 barrels/day U.S. Petroleum Product Imports 3,588,000 barrels/day

U.S. Petroleum Product Imports from OPEC 771,000 U.S. Petroleum Product Imports from OPEC 771,000 barrels/day barrels/day

U.S. Crude Oil Imports from OPEC 5,587,000 barrels/dayU.S. Crude Oil Imports from OPEC 5,587,000 barrels/day

U.S. Net Petroleum Imports 12,549,000 barrels/day U.S. Net Petroleum Imports 12,549,000 barrels/day

Top U.S. Total Petroleum Supplier Canada - 2,181,000 Top U.S. Total Petroleum Supplier Canada - 2,181,000 barrels/daybarrels/day

Top Oil Producing Country & Exporter (2004) #1 Top Oil Producing Country & Exporter (2004) #1 - Saudi Arabia- Saudi Arabia

Top Oil Consuming Country & Importer (2004) #1 Top Oil Consuming Country & Importer (2004) #1 - United States- United States

U.S. Total Petroleum Exports 1,174,000 barrels/day U.S. Total Petroleum Exports 1,174,000 barrels/day

U.S. Petroleum Consumption 20,802,000 barrels/dayU.S. Petroleum Consumption 20,802,000 barrels/day

Dependence on Net Petroleum Imports 59.8%Dependence on Net Petroleum Imports 59.8%

U.S. Motor Gasoline Consumption U.S. Motor Gasoline Consumption 9,159,000 barrels/day (384.7 million gallons/day) 9,159,000 barrels/day (384.7 million gallons/day)

Share of US Oil Consumption for Transportation (2004) 67% Share of US Oil Consumption for Transportation (2004) 67%

Number of U.S. Operable Petroleum Refineries 149 Number of U.S. Operable Petroleum Refineries 149

Top U.S. Petroleum Refining States #1Top U.S. Petroleum Refining States #1 - Texas 4,241,000 barrels/day- Texas 4,241,000 barrels/day

U.S. Proved Reserves of Crude Oil as of December 31, 2004 U.S. Proved Reserves of Crude Oil as of December 31, 2004 21,371 million barrels21,371 million barrels

Top U.S. Oil Fields as of December 31, 2004 Prudhoe Bay, Top U.S. Oil Fields as of December 31, 2004 Prudhoe Bay, AK AK

Top U.S. Producing Companies as of December 31, 2004 Top U.S. Producing Companies as of December 31, 2004 BP - 827,000 barrels/dayBP - 827,000 barrels/day

U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve 685 million barrelsU.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve 685 million barrels

Total World Oil Supply 84,338,000 barrels/dayTotal World Oil Supply 84,338,000 barrels/day

Total World Petroleum Consumption 83,840,000 barrels/dayTotal World Petroleum Consumption 83,840,000 barrels/dayEnergy information administrationEnergy information administration

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14732611/

        July 3, 2001, 12:45 pm EDT

BUSH PLANS OIL AND GAS DRILLING IN GULF OF MEXICO

Interior Secretary Gale Norton announced yesterday plans to open 1.47 million acres of the eastern Gulf of Mexico to oil and natural gas exploration.

http://www.eia.doe.gov/basics/energybasics101.html

http://www.cutco2.org/facts.php

http://uplink.space.com/showflat.php?Cat=&Board=environment

http://maps.grida.no/go/graphic/temperature_trends_and_projections1

Signs and Symptoms of Signs and Symptoms of ContaminationContamination

• Global Warming – Temperature Increase• Ozone Depletion & Solar Radiation changes• Water Pollution & Disease• Air Pollution• Soil contamination – erosion• Species Overpopulation /extinction ecosystem imbalance• negligent extraction of Natural resource • Non-renewable resource consumption / shortage• Limited natural resources• Civil, political, economic and military confrontation.

Typical hazards introduced when BUILDING A HOME

• CONSTRUCTION MATERIALS OUTGASSING

• BURN FUEL INSIDE BUILDING• FINISHED BASEMENTS• GARAGES IN BUILDINGS• LEAKY MECHANICAL

SYSTEMS IN BASEMENTS OR ATTICS

• THE MISER SYNDROME

What is building Green?

• Environmental responsiveness• Resource Efficiency• Community and Cultural sensitivity• Integration of ecology and real estate• Energy, Indoor air quality, materials,

water conservation, appliances• Sustainable sites, atmosphere,

Innovation and design process.

Sustainability

• The ability of society to continue without being forced into decline through the exhaustion or overloading of the resources on which it depends.

American institute of architectsAmerican institute of architects

Life Cycle Assessment

Source: U.S. Department of Energy High Performance Buildings Database

Expense of Building GreenExpense of Building Green

• Long term vs. short term costs

• Cost trade-off– $ upgrade…….long term pay-off utility bills

Cost ComparisonCost Comparison

• Conventional - Built homes– 1,600 sf x $130/sf =

$208,000

• Green built homes– 1,600 sf x $156/sf =

$249,600– Architect

engineering– permit fees

Conventional vs Green

• Conventional – Ave. Electric/fossil fuel

monthly bill = 250/month + 5%/yr inflation = $199k over 30 years

– combined energy payments in 2034 $1029/month

• Green– Ave. Electric/fossil fuel

monthly bill = 250/month x 60% (40% energy savings) = $150/ month + 3%/yr inflation = $86k over 30 years

– combined energy payments in 2034 $354/month

NYS Tax Credits

• $25 million income tax credit

• Program life-9 years

• Tax credit spread over five years

• High but obtainable standards for building green

Where the money is……

• Base building: 5% of allowable costs, up to $7.50/ sf

• Tenant space: 5% allowable Costs, up to $3.75/ sf

More Incentives

• Fuel cells– 30% inst costs– Max $1,000/ kw of dc rated capacityPhotovoltaic's

100% of incremental costs of BIPV25% costs of non-BIPVcap of $3/W of DC rated capacity

Refrigerants10% equipment costsnon-ozone depleting or r-123 for twp years.

HelpfulHelpful ResourcesResources

• US Dept of Energy: www.eere.energy.gov• US Green Building Council: www.usgbc.org• US Energy star program: www.energystar.gov• Sustainable Buildings Industry Council:

www.sbicouncil.org• Sustainable building sources: www.greenbuilder.com• US EPA Environmental building specifications:

www.epa.gov/

Why build green? Did you know?

• In United States, buildings account for:

• 36% of total energy use• 65% of electricity

consumption • 30% of greenhouse gas

emissions • 30% of raw materials

use • 30% of waste

output/136 million tons annually

• 12% of potable water consumption

• Environmental benefits: • Enhance and protect ecosystems and

biodiversity • Improve air and water quality • Reduce solid waste • Conserve natural resources • Economic benefits: • Reduce operating costs • Enhance asset value and profits • Improve employee productivity and

satisfaction • Optimize life-cycle economic performance • Health and community benefits: • Improve air, thermal and acoustic

environments • Enhance occupant comfort and health • Minimize strain on local infrastructure • Contribute to overall quality of life

Water Efficiency

• Water efficient landscape• Innovative wastewater

technologies• Water use reduction• The US discharges 220

billion gallons of used water and/or treated water per day into rivers streams and water bodies.

LEEDLEED

Vegetated Roofs

• Control Storm Water

• Protect roof membrane

• Eliminate Heat Island effect

• Insulates building

• Actively Cools building in Summer

• Creates O2 and Absorbs CO2

Styles of green homesStyles of green homes

• Styles are sorted into these Styles are sorted into these broad categories:broad categories:

– Conventional– Rounded– Earth-sheltered

Contemporary and Traditional   • Contemporary styling

– modern appearance, Unusual architectural lines, Use of newer materials.

• Traditional styling

– Typical styles: Early American, Craftsman, Ranch, and French.

Conventional Styles

• Four Types– Curved

• Curved Floor Plan

– Domed • Curved floor plan with dome roof.

– Vault • Straight walls, curved or domed roof only.

– Faceted, • Octagonal floor plan giving round feel

Rounded Styles

Faceted

Earth-Sheltered Styles

• Three Types

– Berm

– Living Roofs

– Earthships

Materials

• Earth

• Wood

• Straw

• Stone

• Manufactured

• Lightweight Concrete

Wood as a Building Material

• Log

• Timber frame

• Stick Frame

• CordWood

Straw

Stone

Manufactured Building Materials

• Several Types– Autoclaved Aerated Concrete

(AAC)– Insulated Concrete Forms

(ICF’S)– Structural Insulated panels

(SIP’S)– Shotcrete….Steel

Lightweight ConcreteLightweight Concrete

• Two Types– Pumicecrete– Papercrete

• Insulate• Windows

– Low-E, low-conductivity frames, double/triple glaze

• Renewable/ Solar Energy– Natural cooling, passive

solar heating, solar water heating

• Use low or No VOC Paint & finishes

• Use recycled or rapidly renewing resources– bamboo, cork, ceramic tile

from recycled glass

• Energy Star appliances• Install CFL’s• Insulate hot/cold water pipes

– flow reducers in showers/faucets

• Incorporate fly ash in foundation

• Permeable paving, design around existing landscape, natural water catchments

• Orient homes on East-west axis for solar access

Other Things We Can Do

Carpool

Install CFL’s

Replace Furnace Filters

Reduce Electrical Usage

Reduce heating -cooling usage

Check Tire Pressure

Drive Green