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Cover image for Green petroleum : how oil and gas can be environmentally sustainable
Title:
Green petroleum : how oil and gas can be environmentally sustainable
Publication Information:
Beverly, MA : Scrivener ; Hoboken, N.J. : Wiley, c2012.
Physical Description:
xiv, 605 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.
ISBN:
9781118072165
Abstract:
"This book unravels the mysteries of the current energy crisis and argues that solutions to global warming will come only from the development of new technologies. Discussed here are the reasons why petroleum operations, as they are now, are not sustainable, how each practice treads an inherently implosive path, and how each spells irreversible damage to the planet's ecosystem. Fossil fuel consumption is not the culprit, but, rather, the practices involved from exploration to refining and processing are responsible for the current damage to the environment.Focusing on long-term solutions that should "green" all of the petroleum industry's practices, the book follows the theory of inherent sustainability, showing why current practices are fundamentally flawed and why new proposals to salvage efficiencies offer little hope for remedying the situation. The authors discuss global warming and its apparent relationship with petroleum operations, providing a detailed analysis of greenhouse gas emission ranging from pre-industrial and industrial ages to the golden petroleum era.A newly developed theory is included which shows that carbon dioxides from some sources do not contribute to global warming. Here - for the first time - carbon dioxide is characterized based on various criteria such as the origin, the path it travels, isotope numbers and age of the fuel source from which it is emitted. This book offers unique solutions to overcome major obstacles by developing genuinely green technologies that satisfy the new sustainability criteria, are highly efficient, and produce zero waste. Various energy technologies are ranked based on their global efficiency in this book, and it also compares petroleum operations with other energy development technologies, including solar and biofuel energy systems"-- Provided by publisher.

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30000010307142 TN870 G74 2012 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Can "green petroleum" reverse global warming and bring down high gasoline prices? Written in non-technical language for the layperson, this book investigates and details how the oil and gas industry can "go green" with new processes and technologies, thus bringing the world's most important industry closer to environmental and economic sustainability.

This book unravels the mysteries of the current energy crisis and argues that solutions to global warming will come only from the development of new technologies. Discussed here are the reasons why petroleum operations, as they are now, are not sustainable; how each practice treads an inherently implosive path; and how each spells irreversible damage to the planet's ecosystem. Fossil fuel consumption is not the culprit; rather, the practices involved, from exploration to refining and processing, are responsible for the current damage to the environment.


Author Notes

M. R. Islam is Professor of Petroleum Engineering in the Civil and Resource Engineering Department at Dalhousie University, Canada. He has over 700 publications to his credit, including six books, and is on the editorial boards of several scholarly journals. In addition to his teaching duties, he is also Director of Emertec Research and Development Ltd. and has been on the boards of a number of companies in North America and overseas.

M. M. Khan was recently a lecturer in chemical engineering at the Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology, before moving to Canada. He has written a dozen papers and coauthored a book on zero-waste engineering and sustainable technology.

A. B. Chhetri is a Carbon and Energy Analyst with Golder Associates Ltd. in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, where he delivers consulting services in carbon and energy management. He has over twelve years of experience in energy development and management.


Table of Contents

Preface
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 From the Pharaonic Age to the Information Age: Have We Progressed in Technology Development Skills?
Chapter 3 How long has this ætechnological disasterÆ been in the making? Delinearized History of Civilization and Technology Development
Is Modern Science Capable of Discerning Between True and False?
Fundamentals of Mass and Energy Balance
A True Sustainability Criterion and Its Implications
What is Truly Green Energy?
Good Light and Bad Light
Do You Believe in Global Warming?
Is the 3RÆs mantra sufficient?
Truly Green Refining and Gas Processing
Greening of Flow Operations
The Greening of Enhanced Oil Recovery
Deconstruction of Engineering Myths Prevalent in the Energy Sector
Conclusions
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