Shale oil : potential economies of large-scale production, workshop phase
Author(s)
Ball., Benjamin Calhoun; Barbera, Robert J.; Weiss, Malcolm A.
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A workshop on shale oil, sponsored by M.I.T., was held on June 4-5,
1979. The purpose of the workshop was to identify technological
opportunities for significant reduction in the cost of producing shale
oil on a large scale (at least 2 million barrels per day). Large-scale
production of shale oil is of current interest as one of the alternatives
for reducing imports of petroleum. The workshop participants included 11
industry and 9 M.I.T. people expert in technologies or approaches
potentially applicable to shale oil.
The participants reached general consensus on three major
conclusions:
- Large-scale production of shale oil would make possible a
reduction of cost through new technological applications and
innovations. There are opportunities for new technology in
individual mining, retorting, and upgrading steps. Perhaps more
important, there are also opportunities for combinations of
technology which would make best use of various processing
methods, the natural resources in place, economies of scale, the
mix of products, etc.
- A shale oil industry must exist and must be producing shale oil on
a meaningful scale in order to develop these improved technologies
most effectively. This is particularly true for those
technologies whose impact is on the whole system (such as
combinations of technology) rather than on individual process
steps. If industry growth is not accelerated, it will be a long
time before shale oil can contribute significantly to easing U.S.
energy problems, and current technical, economic, and
environmental uncertainties will remain uncertainties.
- Creating a large-scale shale oil industry soon would require
capital, human skills, and materials well beyond the capacity of
one company or a small group of companies. Those needs, plus some
unique characteristics of the shale land (its federal ownership,
and its concentration with consequent potential for heavy local
impact on population and envrionment), suggest the desirability of
a new structure to manage U.S. shale resources in the common
interest. That structure would include some type of joint
participation by the private sector, the public, and government
(federal, state, and local) to ensure getting contributions and
cooperation of all affected groups, and to best meet all their
needs.
Date issued
1979-07Publisher
MIT Energy Laboratory
Other identifiers
05753435
Series/Report no.
MIT-EL79-031WP
Keywords
Shale oils |x Congresses., Oil-shale industry |x Congresses.
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