Here’s
the Good Oil
You want the truth about oil? Here it is!
By Ken Ring - Long Range Forecaster and Former Maths Teacher
Take a seed which is no bigger than a
grain of rice. Plant it in the ground. Eventually, you will have a tree. The
tree will bear fruit. The many generations of fruit from the one tree, from the
one seed, which can be mechanically squeezed into vegetable oil or the oil from
fruits, by the bucketful, is well known.
In the case of an olive tree, an
enormous amount, perhaps a hundred years’ worth from the one tree, from the one
seed. What made the oil?
Oil is a natural substance that forms automatically by forces and pressures in the Earth’s mantle. It is virtually everywhere if you can drill deep enough to tap it. Almost all hydrocarbons are produced by the earth crust. Oil and gas are not fossil fuels. They are abiotic and come from bacteria or phytoplankton. Some dry oil wells are refilling.
The myth of fossil fuels has been exploited by climate alarmism. The fossil fuel idea was only to promote scarcity which kept the prices high.
Oil and renewable resource are not
words that often appear in the same sentence. Since the economies of entire
countries ride on the fundamental notion that oil reserves are exhaustible, any
contrary evidence would arguably turn the world view upside down.
If oil is not finite then the price
should come down, the panic to find alternatives would be over and in the realization that oil is harmless to the environment, the first casualty would
be the international banking system, backed up by the cost of the US dollar
which in turn is governed by the cost of oil.
Volcanoes are mostly under the sea
and if it were not for undersea volcanoes there would be no land. NZ was
formed, as was Iceland, by an alpine fault jumping out of the sea. Pacific
atolls sit astride tectonic faults, because that is their origin, which is why
bits of land poking out of the ocean like Tuvalu rise and sink again like
nature's elevators.
Fault lines are also where the
biggest oil reserves are being found. Oil is formed in the heat of volcanism,
which is why oil consortiums search the tectonic joins first.
There are oil-feeding bacteria of all
kinds: those that eat the oil rapidly and those that degrade the petroleum very
slowly, a wide variety. These bacteria work as a team. Some digest the big
hydrocarbon molecules of oil generating much shorter chains of carbon; other
bacteria consume these shorter chains. It is a pac-man-like food chain similar
to the world of fish, where the bigger species eat the smaller. At the
termination of this teamwork, the oil has completely disappeared – only remains
of water and carbon dioxide are left. Refineries take the crude oil and kill
the microbes.
There is no such thing as an
"environmental catastrophe" such as an oil leak from a tanker. The
microbes in the oil, if left alone, would soon completely clean up the beaches.
But each spill is alarmist nonsense, and the published pictures of birds
covered in oil is just green propaganda, designed to evoke emotional responses
in the population.
If this sounds strangely familiar,
CO2 was accused of the same villainy. CO2 from the atmosphere is consumed by
trees, which is how they get to grow. A molecule of carbon (from CO2) is added
to a molecule of water which makes a carbohydrate molecule; hence the name
carbo-hydr-ate, and which is the building block of nature. Burning firewood releases
the CO2 back to the air. The atmosphere is always CO2 deficient. In the distant
past before vegetation, the air was CO2-rich. Along came plants and grabbed it.
When so-called fossil fuels are burned, CO2 is returned to the point of origin,
the atmosphere.
Oil was known to be out at sea when
native populations told of it drifting onto beaches, which gave oil companies
clues on where on the coast to search. Such was the case at Taranaki, where oil
washed up on the beach in pre-colonial times.
The use of oil for fuel is very old.
The Romans and Canadian Indians used pitch to waterproof their canoes, as did
Noah, according to the Bible. Petroleum is a Latin word, and various bitumen
products were used to seal leaky Roman pipes, and oil was burned as in lamps,
before whale oil.
If we can positively establish that
the amount of oil being returned to or remaining in the earth equals or exceeds
the amount extracted from it by the number of humans using it then any oil
“problem” disappears.
To assess the oil reserves, we must
estimate the starting number of barrels of oil in the ground and how much we
have so far used. We will never know either answer. So why do so many alarmists
paint a doom-filled picture?
Suppose can try to estimate what we
have so far used. Global oil use = 31.5 billion barrels per year. One barrel
oil = 42 U.S. gallons. One cubic foot = 7.48 U.S. gallons. One cubic mile =
147.2 billion cubic feet. So, the volume of oil consumed by mankind annually =
(31.5 x 42) / (7.48 x 147.2) = 1.2 cubic miles of oil per year. The volume of
the earth is 260,000 million cubic miles.
If by volume a millionth of the
interior of the earth contains oil, there is enough to last 260,000 years. But
if 1/250,000 of the earth is oil, which is only about the volume of the
Mediterranean Sea and which does not seem at all unreasonable, at the present
rate of consumption we can drive our SUVs around for another million years.
You read it right, one million years.
(Extracted from
"The Great Global Warming Hoax", by Ken Ring, see website, or Amazon)
Before readers criticize Ken Ring for not having a science degree, they should
take a look at this list of Uneducated
Leaders or this list of Scientists
without Science Degrees then think again before putting him down. Or you
could cast your eye over the Wikipedia List of
Autodidacts. Oh, you don’t know what an autodidact is? Well, you can become
one by finding out for yourself.