Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

46
1 Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and development means a growth in – Our need for resources and products – The wastes generated – Impacts on other life forms We will look at the economic geography of resources – And discuss trade and transportation issues related to them

Transcript of Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

Page 1: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

1

Energy, Development, and Trade• Economic growth and development means a growth

in– Our need for resources and products

– The wastes generated

– Impacts on other life forms

• We will look at the economic geography of resources– And discuss trade and transportation issues related to

them

Page 2: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

2

Sources of Energy

• Our energy sources can be broadly classified into– Fossil fuels, and

– Non-fossil fuels

• What is a fossil fuel?– Formed from remains of prehistoric life

– Carbon-based compounds

Page 3: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

3

Energy Sources

• Interestingly enough, they also fall into two other classifications we can use– Non-renewable energy

– Renewable energy

• Because it takes thousands of years to convert dead life into fuel– Limit to the amount of fossil fuels

Page 4: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

4

Fossil Fuels

• Coal

• Petroleum– Why is it called “petroleum”?

• Natural gas

Page 5: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

5

Terminology

• Key terms are “reserves” and “resources”– Reserves are resources that are known and

available with current technologies and at current prices.

– Projected reserves are based on expected future prices and technologies

Page 6: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

6

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Classification of Natural Resources & Proved Reserves

General Classification of Resources by the U.S. Geological Survey.

Page 7: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

7

Minerals

• Naturally occurring inorganic substance in the earth’s crust– Key term here is “inorganic”

• Nonmetallic and metallic minerals– Any examples?

Page 8: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

8

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Abundance, by Weight, of Elements in the Earth’s Crust

Page 9: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

9

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Leading Producers of Selected Minerals

Data from World Resources Institute.

Page 10: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

10

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

U.S. Reliance on Foreign Supplies of MineralsFigure 11.25

Data from U.S. Geological Survey, U.S. Department of the Interior.

Page 11: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

11

World Trade & US Consumption

• Developing countries increasingly major mineral exporters– UNCTAD Data

• What are the implications of the chart on the right?

Page 12: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

12

Natural Gas

• Natural gas– As petroleum becomes more expensive, NG

becomes a viable alternative

– Russia has largest NG reserves

– Logistical problems with transporting NG

Page 13: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

13

Page 14: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

14

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Proved Natural Gas Reserves, January 1, 2000

Data from The BP Amoco Statistical Review of World Energy, 2000.

Page 15: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

15

Page 16: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

16

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Worldwide Trade Flows of Natural Gas, 1999

Data from The BP Amoco Statistical Review of World Energy, 2000. Used with permission.

Page 17: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

17

Page 18: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

18

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Major Natural Gas Pipelines in the United States

U.S. Department of Energy.

Page 19: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

19

Coal• Typically consumed in the country where it

is mined• Deposits found all over the Earth• Unattractive because:

– Sulfur and CO2 emissions– Mining complicated– Logistics of transportation– Not adaptable for mobile units

Page 20: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

20

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Major Coal Basins

Page 21: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

21

Coal

• Four types of coal– Peat

– Lignite

– Bituminous

– Anthracite

• Peat is mostly dirt, and anthracite has most energy packed into it

Page 22: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

22

Coal

• Coal-based power plants invariably located close to where coal is found– Transporting coal is a waste on a per Btu basis

• Btu stands for British Thermal Unit, which measures the energy needed to raise the temperature of one pound of water by one degree Fahrenheit

Page 23: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

23

Oil

• In 1993, the world's proved reserves were estimated to be just under a trillion barrels– about a 45-year supply of oil, based on current

rates of consumption.

– 95% possibility that the world's remaining oil resources could last 63 more years and a

– 5% chance that the world's resources will last another 95 years at recent rates of consumption.

Page 24: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

24

Oil Supply• Resource unevenly distributed• Few major suppliers

– Saudi Arabia has largest reserves

• World supply controlled by the OPEC– 40% of the world’s production– Group is able to ‘fix’ crude oil prices– Limiting supply automatically increases price

Page 25: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

25

Oil Demand

• Modern economies need oil– Consumption growth rate very high in the fast

growing less developed countries

• Developed countries consume most– The United States is the leading consumer of

petroleum• Almost a third of the world’s production

Page 26: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

26

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Leading Producers and Consumers of Oil

(a), (b) Data from The BP Amoco Statistical Review of World Energy, 2000.

Page 27: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

27

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Shares of Proved Oil Reserves, January 1, 2000

Data from The BP Amoco Statistical Review of World Energy, 2000.

Page 28: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

28

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

International Crude Oil Flow by Sea, 1999

The BP Amoco Statistical Review of World Energy, 2000. Used with permission.

Page 29: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

29

When Reserves are Exhausted ...

• What if the estimates are incorrect?– New exploration techniques are improving the

scope and success of offshore drilling operations, adding to the world's known resources.

– For example, in 1965, the petroleum industry's drilling capabilities limited offshore wells to waters less than 300 feet deep.

• Today, the industry drills for oil in waters as deep as 3,000 feet.

Page 30: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

30

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Areas with Naturally Fertile Soils

Page 31: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

31

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Commercial Marine Fisheries of the World

Page 32: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

32

Hydropower

• Water is a renewable source of energy– Unless we screw up things really bad :-(

• Not a major source of world’s energy– About one percent at a global level

• But may be significant in smaller regions– Pacific Northwest, for instance

Page 33: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

33

Go Nuke?

• Nuclear power was thought to be THE solution to the growing need for energy

• Growth of nuclear power in the 1960s and 1970s– Drive ended with the infamous Three Mile Island

incident

– A definite no-no after the Chernobyl disaster

Page 34: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

34

Go Nuke?

• Nuclear power is a major source of energy in many countries– In France, 80% of electricity from nuclear power

plants (57 of them)

– In 1973, 80% of the electricity was produced with fossil fuels

• http://www.insc.anl.gov/maps/world.html

Page 35: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

35

Page 36: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

36

In the US • Nuclear power generation accounts for about

a fifth of the total electricity generated– 103 commercial plants– 67% of Vermont’s electricity

• In CA?– San Onofre– Diablo Canyon near SLO

• http://www.energy.ca.gov/maps/power_plant.html

Page 37: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

37

Page 38: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

38

Electricity

• Is a secondary source of energy– We use coal, oil, gas, etc., to produce electricity

• Location criteria for energy production– Raw materials

– Market

– Loss in distribution

– Pollution concerns

Page 39: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

39

Electricity

• Raw material orientation– Coal is too bulky and expensive to transport over

long distances

– Hydropower plants located close to source of water

– How about gas and oil based?

Page 40: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

40

Electricity

• Pollution concerns– Many urban areas already highly polluted

– So, rarely are power generation plants located close to urban areas

• Longer distances over which electricity is transported– California even bought Canadian electricity!

Page 41: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

41

Electricity

• Distribution losses– Almost a tenth of the energy is lost in

transmission and distribution

– Advanced technology has made possible the use of HIGH voltage transmission lines that reduce losses

• Use it or lose it– Can’t save it for a rainy day :-(

Page 42: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

42

Transporting Raw Materials

• Coal– Railroads the major carrier

– Water transport• Mississippi river, Great Lakes basins

– Slurry pipeline• Coal plus water pumped along pipes

Page 43: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

43

Transporting Raw Materials• Oil

– Transported over miles• Remember, Saudi Arabia is the largest exporter

quite a few thousand miles away– Supertankers

– Once it gets to the US?• Road, railroad and pipelines

• Location of refineries?

Page 44: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

44

Transporting Raw Materials• Natural gas

– Not easy to transport as petroleum is

• Huge pipelines all over the world– Remember the James Bond movie, “The

World is not Enough”?

• Gas pipelines and the CA energy crisis– http://www.energy.ca.gov/naturalgas/western_state_pipelines.html

Page 45: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

45

Energy Use and Pollution

• Air pollution– Global and local

• Global dimension:– Damage to the ozone layer

• The ozone layer protects Earth from harmful UV rays

• Primary culprit here is CFC, whose use has ceased in the US

Page 46: Energy, Development, and Trade Economic growth and ...

46

Air Pollution

• The other global problem is global warming– Given that fossil fuels are carbon-based

– Burning these fuels increases CO2

– CO2 traps the heat from being emitted into space

– Results in increase of our planet’s temperature

• Loss of the rainforest cover compounds it– Plants absorb CO2 for photosynthesis