Hey exchemist. I am over here. You keep having side conversations with everyone else.
Talk to me. Are you afraid?
A long while ago I asked Fute whether he thought the while oil industry had somehow missed the impending armageddon or whether he thought they were conspiring to hush it up. He has never given a clear answer to that, though he did insinuate a conspiracy, involving the oil industry and governments.
I hear the sound of white coats flapping……………..
You are such a liar, exchemist. Here is what really happened:
http://www.sciforums.com/threads/th...rically-confirmed.152487/page-11#post-3324258
exchemist said:
The notion that there is a looming catastrophe, due to thermodynamics, which has somehow been missed by everyone in both government planning and in the relevant industries, is stark staring mad.
Futilitist said:
It is quite apparent from your reaction, and the general reactions from almost everyone on this forum, that people aren't necessarily very open to hearing about this looming catastrophe. People don't like bad news. And this is really, really bad news. Hell, it's pretty much the worst news ever.
If you were the President of the United States or the CEO of a major corporation, how would you break the news of the upcoming apocalypse to the world?
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He did not answer my question, but later on:
exchemist said:
There is no such thing as a "commodities complex", except possibly as a rare psychiatric condition, suffered by certain people. Anyway, whatever else may be debatable, what is absolutely for sure is the slowdown in China has fuck-all to do with the thermodynamics of oil extraction. It is to do with the natural evolution of the Chinese economy and the (mis)management of it. As any halfway decent newspaper article can tell you.
Futilitist said:
And the natural evolution of the Chinese economy is thermodynamic. Duh.
How would any halfway decent newspaper article announce the end of the world? What would the headline say?
exchemist said:
I would be fascinated to see by what argument the current property bubble in China could be attributed to thermodynamics.
As for the newspaper headline, how about, "The End of the World is Nigh!"?
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Note---Some time had passed, and, having still gotten no answer to my original question, I asked it again:
Futilitist said:
"exchemist said:
The notion that there is a looming catastrophe, due to thermodynamics, which has somehow been missed by everyone in both government planning and in the relevant industries, is stark staring mad.
Futilitist said:
It is quite apparent from your reaction, and the general reactions from almost everyone on this forum, that people aren't necessarily very open to hearing about this looming catastrophe. People don't like bad news. And this is really, really bad news. Hell, it's pretty much the worst news ever."
If you were the President of the United States or the CEO of a major corporation, how would you break the news of the upcoming apocalypse to the world?
So, anyway, you completely dodged the question. How about answering it now?"
exchemist said:
You seem to insinuate that the president of the USA and the CEOs of major corporations know that there is an impending apocalypse but are not telling people. Do you really believe this ?
Futilitist said:
Answering my question with another question is dodging. Again.
I am not insinuating anything. You are the one who originally insinuated that I must be wrong because no one in a position of authority has said we are going to have an apocalypse. You implied that if the President knew we were going to have an apocalypse, he would tell us directly. I just asked you how he might break the news. So, once again:
If you were the President of the United States or the CEO of a major corporation, how would you break the news of the upcoming apocalypse to the world?
It is a simple question. Just answer it. I won't let you off the hook.
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Lalala indeed. This must be the 4th or 5th time Fute has posted the same diagram and equations.
He has yet to respond to Russ W's observation that nowhere in these equations does the chemical energy of the oil as fuel appear. So the dominant source of available energy in the system, which in fact drives all the transport and refining of oil, is ignored. The model - according to Fute at least - treats oil as if it were water
.
That is another lie, exchemist. I did respond to Russ_Watters:
http://www.sciforums.com/threads/th...rically-confirmed.152487/page-32#post-3329479
Russ_Watters said:
The equation derivation is the math escribing that. what he's doing here is essentially treating the reservoir as a literal "heat reservoir" and calculating the energy removed by removing the oil, with the oil being the working fluid at a given temperature and thermal capacity. This would only be relevant if the oil were being used, liquid, as a working fluid in a heat engine. It isn't. When you pump it out of the ground, if it gets above ground warmer than the surrounding air, that energy is dissipated to the air as it cools. This has nothing at all to do with the value of the chemical energy contained in the oil or in the energy required to pump the oil out of the ground (which, as billvon explained earlier, is an issue of gravity and pressure, not thermodynamic energy).
It's a bizarre misunderstanding of the relatively simple issue of what an oil well does.
Futilitist said:
Red herring. This is just a repeat of what exchemist claims. The Etp model uses the second law of thermodynamics to calculate the total energy cost to produce the world's oil. It is not necessary to factor in the energy content of a barrel of oil except to know how much energy is available to pay the production costs.
Here is a more complete answer to your chemical energy question from a post I made to Write4U:
http://www.sciforums.com/threads/th...rically-confirmed.152487/page-26#post-3328145
It is important not to mix up the chemical energy contained in a barrel of crude with the energetic cost of producing that barrel of crude. Both are thermodynamic in nature, but they are two very different things. The chemical energy contained in a barrel of 37.5 API crude oil has basically not changed over time. But the energetic cost of oil production and exploration has risen dramatically (exponentially). This means that the average net energy (EROEI) of a barrel of oil must, in fact, decline over time.
The Etp model does not consider the chemical energy contained in a barrel of oil, since that is basically constant. Instead, the Etp model calculates the rising energetic cost of oil production by using the second law of thermodynamics to find the rate of entropy change in the entire oil production process over time.
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All you do is lie and cheat. You refuse to engage in serious, rational debate. Unpacking your deceptive bullshit is becoming a full time job. I have better things to do. You are wasting my time, exchemist.
---Futilitist