Sobre el proyecto Petroplex

Previous Topic Next Topic
 
classic Clásica list Lista threaded En Árbol
3 mensajes Opciones
Responder | En Árbol
Abrir este mensaje con la vista en árbol
|

Sobre el proyecto Petroplex

RogerGS
Hola,

¿Qué os parece esto? ¿Un fake de dimensiones gigantescas para que compremos acciones o una realidad?

http://www.angelnexus.com/o/web/54761

-------
At around 6 o'clock on the morning of May 28, 1923, an oil well named after the patron saint of the impossible blew...
The well sprayed oil over the top of the derrick and covered a 250-yard area around the site.
On that morning, the oil boom in West Texas was born.
And the name of the well was Santa Rita No. 1.
For the next 50 years, oil from West Texas flooded the world...
Wildcatters, ranchers, and residents of sleepy cowtowns became instant millionaires as they struck one gusher after another.
There was so much oil coming out of this region, locals dubbed it the "Petroplex."
This region in West Texas has pumped out over 35 billion barrels since Santa Rita No. 1 started spewing black gold.

The Petroplex peaked in production between 1973 and 1974, as predicted by Shell geologist M. King Hubbert.

At its height, it was pumping out over 1.7 million barrels per day.

When it peaked, it marked the end of American oil domination and ushered in OPEC... and for the next 40 years, OPEC would have a stranglehold on the world's energy economy.

They pushed everybody around whenever they wanted to. When they got mad, they cut production, driving up the price of oil and gasoline.

And they would bankrupt any competition to their monopoly by increasing production and flooding the market with cheap oil.

But that was four decades ago. A lot of things have changed — and quite dramatically...

Thanks to the American revolution in hydraulic fracturing (or fracking, as it is popularly called), the Petroplex is about to regain its stature in the global oil market.

To the point, drillers using state-of-the-art technology can now access and extract oil from the actual massive source rock that was feeding the Santa Rita well 90 years ago.

Now before I go any further, let me quickly explain what a source rock is...

Why it is important...

Why it's the reason the United States is currently in an oil and gas renaissance...

And why it's the reason the IEA recently said the U.S. will become the world's largest oil producer...

"... overtaking Russia by the second quarter of 2014" and "overtaking Saudi Arabia by 2017."

The source rock is like a giant pressure cooker or giant factory heating all of that organic matter into billions upon billions of barrels of oil.

Source rocks are typically so highly pressurized and so full of oil, they literally push the hydrocarbons closer to the surface into surrounding reservoirs.

Every drop of oil pumped out of the ground since the first well was drilled in Titusville, Pennsylvania, in 1859 was first created by a source rock.

Every drop!ogt-petroplex-image4

But even though oil companies have known about source rocks for decades, they couldn't drill into them, because it was either too expensive or the technology didn't exist.

That has all changed now with the advances in hydraulic fracturing and with oil selling for more than $90 a barrel.

And that's exactly what's happening in the Petroplex...

For the first time ever, companies are now extracting oil directly from the source rock in the Petroplex.

And the early results from these new wells are already a game-changer.

According to an October 16, 2013 Forbes report:

"... the region [Petroplex] is producing more oil than the pipelines can handle..." and "New infrastructure is being laid to send oil from the Petroplex straight to the refinery center in Houston... "

And on October 21, CNBC reported:

"Oil flows like water in the Petroplex."

And it's all because of the technological revolution in hydraulic fracturing developed in the United States.

As you read this oil workers are rushing into the Petroplex like army ants.

And it's easy to see why...

Large parts of the Petroplex shale are between 3,500 and 4,000 feet thick. That's about ¾ of a mile in length.

That's huge. Nothing like it has ever been discovered before.

To give you an idea of how big that is, the Bakken in North Dakota is between 10 and 25 feet thick; and the Eagle Ford in South Texas is around 35 feet thick.

Both the Bakken and Eagle Ford are currently producing a combined two million barrels of oil equivalent per day. That's more than the oil produced by OPEC members Ecuador, Angola, and Qatar.

And in a few short years, the Bakken and Eagle Ford will be producing more oil than OPEC members Libya, Algeria, Kuwait, Nigeria, and Venezuela.

But the Petroplex in West Texas is much, much bigger...

... ver el resto en el link de arriba
Responder | En Árbol
Abrir este mensaje con la vista en árbol
|

Re: Sobre el proyecto Petroplex

sorella
A mi me parece claramente una propaganda disfrazada de noticia, capaz de impresionar a las personas que no estén suficientemente informadas.

Tomaría un largo tiempo, del que no dispongo, desmontar cada una de las principales afirmaciones que se hacen, además de que ya se ha hablado antes de todo esto en el blog.  También creo que es más  instructivo que, una vez tomado el cabo de la madeja, la molestia de tirar del hilo para ir descubriendo a dónde nos lleva se la tome cada cual.
Aquí te dejo unos cuantos cabos, ahora la labor de ir tirando depende de ti.

http://crashoil.blogspot.com.es/2013/02/fracking-rentabilidad-energetica.html

http://crashoil.blogspot.com.es/2013/11/el-fracking-se-fractura.html

http://crashoil.blogspot.com.es/2010/06/digamos-alto-y-claro-esta-crisis.html
Responder | En Árbol
Abrir este mensaje con la vista en árbol
|

Re: Sobre el proyecto Petroplex

Dario Ruarte
En respuesta a este mensaje publicado por RogerGS
Spam!

Lo voy a reportar al administrador para que lo borre.

Esto de que usen los foros para hacer publicidad (y encima equivocada) es de las cosas más molestas que existen.