So I'm curious. These things are very easy to say and repeat. Wells dry up the drill more. They track the basin layers. I've worked oil fields and been around them for along time.
Do you have anything? that actually shows that the oil replenishes. Renews regenerates, comes back, or whatever else to describe it.
I've never seen one thing that gives compelling argument for this other than folks restating this as if it's facts.
The number of new drills is smaller than you may think. The companies that supply the drillers have contacts to return to 'dry' fields after anywhere from 5-15 years. The caps are temporary for a reason.
The actual biochemical mechanisms that have been shown to work on laboratories are algae-based. Not one pathway from any kind of animal matter has been reproduced in any manner that suggests it could happen naturally sustainably.
This discussion would be a long one with many details needed. The number of drills would not be smaller than what I think, lol. That's assuming what I know or don't know. The owner operator contracts to return typically are required maintenance and asset assessments to meet environmental requirements and corporate captial evaluations. Capping a well/ wellhead is dependant on if its plugged or a suspended well and dormancy of operation, and to reinstate (uncap) the well requires a large capital investment to start up, which in many cases costs as much as drilling new bore hole with casing and pressure, flow regulators.
I'm aware and familiar with all that. I'm also not inferring crude is a fossil fuel as it has been propagated since the inception of that theory. I am genuinely questioning and asking for compelling evidence, write ups, , studies etc. That demonstrate crude is renewing or renewable. That particular detail I haven't seen anything that provides a pathway to draw that conclusion, as of yet.
Formal studies, i would agree with near certainty, would not be made public or circulated for exposure. Independent study though might be out there. I'd like to see conclusions with details, so I can backtrack the theory. That particular aspect of formation or renewing crude, I can't even come up with a good starting point for a theory and genuinely interested if any exist.
So I'm curious. These things are very easy to say and repeat. Wells dry up the drill more. They track the basin layers. I've worked oil fields and been around them for along time.
Do you have anything? that actually shows that the oil replenishes. Renews regenerates, comes back, or whatever else to describe it.
I've never seen one thing that gives compelling argument for this other than folks restating this as if it's facts.
Scroll down until you reach Conclusions and read on from where it says
"The terrane marginal fault belt is coincident with surface water iodine anomalies, suggesting that petroleum basin brines have leaked from depth"
https://app.filen.io/#/d/fa3db494-40df-4027-9679-6b08dbbe6fd7#OyYbzV6MhpbpApADImYrnbIes0bSkkHl
Unfortunately the link wants to install a file or reader app for this so I was unable to read it.
No it doesn't, its a pdf which has the option of downloading, you don't have to download it, you can just read it.
OK well yeah it did and it doesn't download or open
The number of new drills is smaller than you may think. The companies that supply the drillers have contacts to return to 'dry' fields after anywhere from 5-15 years. The caps are temporary for a reason.
The actual biochemical mechanisms that have been shown to work on laboratories are algae-based. Not one pathway from any kind of animal matter has been reproduced in any manner that suggests it could happen naturally sustainably.
This discussion would be a long one with many details needed. The number of drills would not be smaller than what I think, lol. That's assuming what I know or don't know. The owner operator contracts to return typically are required maintenance and asset assessments to meet environmental requirements and corporate captial evaluations. Capping a well/ wellhead is dependant on if its plugged or a suspended well and dormancy of operation, and to reinstate (uncap) the well requires a large capital investment to start up, which in many cases costs as much as drilling new bore hole with casing and pressure, flow regulators.
Hydrocarbons are found on Titan, one of the moons of Neptune. Dinosaur country s/
I'm aware and familiar with all that. I'm also not inferring crude is a fossil fuel as it has been propagated since the inception of that theory. I am genuinely questioning and asking for compelling evidence, write ups, , studies etc. That demonstrate crude is renewing or renewable. That particular detail I haven't seen anything that provides a pathway to draw that conclusion, as of yet.
If there were such studies though, would they ever be allowed to be seen by the public?
Formal studies, i would agree with near certainty, would not be made public or circulated for exposure. Independent study though might be out there. I'd like to see conclusions with details, so I can backtrack the theory. That particular aspect of formation or renewing crude, I can't even come up with a good starting point for a theory and genuinely interested if any exist.