Hard, cold and inarguable facts about the energy in  one cubic mile of oil….
One cubic mile of oil (CMO) equals the oil that the world consumes every year.
Three CMOs equal ALL the energy that the world consumes every year.
Cited in cubic miles of oil, energy consumption can be expressed without reference to barrels and gallons of oil, tons (or tonnes) of coal or cubic feet of natural gas – or, for that matter, to British thermal units, joules, calories, watt-hours and all the associated mind-numbing multipliers that accompany them, such as trillions and quadrillions, gigawatts and terawatts.

A Cubic Mile of Oil: Realities and Options for Averting the Looming Global Energy Crisis.
Written by three California-based scientists (bioengineer Hewitt Crane, energy technologist Edwin Kinderman and organic chemist Ripudaman Malhotra) and published by Oxford University Press, Cubic Mile uses a simple volumetric metaphor to eliminate a bewildering technocratic Babel: a pool of oil one mile wide, one mile long and one mile deep.

But Cubic Mile is more than an introduction to a new unit of measurement. It is an encyclopedic embrace of energy issues, with dispassionate but compelling analysis of the energy conundrum.


People shouldn’t count, for example, on bio-waste.
Convert all of the world’s garbage into electrical energy, Cubic Mile asserts, and you might meet 1 or 2 per cent of the world’s energy needs. Biomass now provides a mere 0.15 CMO – and this mostly from the old-fashioned burning of wood. Similarly, the energy contributions of wind, photovoltaic and solar thermal “barely register on the CMO scale.”

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The authors calculate that global demand for energy will rise from three CMOs to six CMOs by 2050 – or, perhaps, to nine CMOs.
They describe this task as daunting. They note that it took 200 years (1700 to 1900) for coal to replace wood as the world’s primary energy source. It took almost 100 years (1870 to 1960) for oil to replace coal. And it took 100 years (1900 to 2000) for natural gas to equal coal in energy usage.


Fossil fuels will necessarily supply much of the necessary energy (“We are not ‘running out of oil,’ ” the authors say). Coal especially could become a more important source. At current rates of consumption (0.8 CMO a year), coal reserves will last for centuries. But all energy production comes with serious disadvantages.

  • To increase coal-sourced energy by one CMO a year, for example, will require 1,300 new surface coal mines; 2,600 new underground mines; 300,000 more trucks (running from mine to railhead) – and 2,600 more trains (each consisting of 130 cars drawn by three 3,500-horsepower locomotives). And each mine will leave behind 750,000 tons of excavated material spread – 50 feet deep – across 20 square miles.
  • Producing one CMO of energy a year from hydro power will require the construction of 153 of China’s Three Gorges Dams – or one every four months for the next 50 years.
  • Producing one CMO of electricity from wind will require three million two-megawatt wind turbines. These turbines would occupy 580,000 acres of combined space.
  • And nuclear? The world will go increasingly nuclear – but every CMO of nuclear energy will require 500 new surface uranium mines; 1,000 new underground uranium mines; and 2,280 nuclear reactor operations.


Read more at The Globe & Mail

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