Fossil Fuel Consumption I
Quick Summary of Previous Lectures on Material Flows:
- Flow of any material (Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen, etc)
is regulated by exchange processes between land, water and air.
The exchange rates are all in equilibrium.
- Exponential use of resources causes non-equilibrium growth
which seriously alters the cycle. This causes a (temporary) excess
of some material in either the land, water or air. Examples:
- Excess Carbon in the atmosphere (CO_2)
- Excess Nitrogen in the Ocean (fertilizer mining of atmosphere)
- The Hydrological
Cycle is an excellent example of equilbrium cycle with many
feedback channels:
- urbanization closes most of these feedback channels and
creates a large surface runoff excess
- Damming increases surface area and hence evaporation
Fossil Fuel Production and Consumption
Energy Consumption in the US
- This figure shows the different energy sources which
have been tapped by the US from the period 1850-1990. It is
full of information; study it closely
- An equally interesting tail is also provided by reading more
on The Historical
Price of Gas
Growth of energy use is dependent on the following factors:
Referring to the figure referenced above, the breakdown of current
energy usage by source is the following:
- Oil 42.1
- Gas 23.8
- Coal 23.3
- Nuclear 7.0 %
- Hydro 3.5
- Other 0.3
Some Pie Charts: US vs Mexico
Energy From Fossil Fuels: