Japan Extracts Natural Gas From Frozen Methane Hydrate
ixarux writes "For the first time ever, a Japanese company has successfully extracted natural gas from frozen methane hydrate off its central coast. The Nankai Trough gas field, located a little more than 30 miles offshore, could provide an alternative energy source for the island nation, reducing its dependence on foreign imports. 'A Japanese study estimated that at least 1.1tn cubic meters of methane hydrate exist in offshore deposits. This is the equivalent of more than a decade of Japan's gas consumption. Japan has few natural resources and the cost of importing fuel has increased after a backlash against nuclear power following the Fukushima nuclear disaster two years ago.'"
But I don't understand why Japan doesn't perfect Deep water cooling technology, using heat exchanges and thermocouples to generate energy. Or is the Inland Sea not deep enough?
SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
For the first time ever, a Japanese company has successfully extracted natural gas from frozen methane hydrate off its central coast.
Despite the crappy writing this isn't just the first time a Japanese company has done this, it's the first time anyone has.
Are now designed or were designed?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pebble_bed_reactor
There are a LOT of better designs out there now that in a really severe earthquake or storm, would self-compartmentalize.
SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
The problem is transporting it. Transporting liquids (oil) is easy, you pump it through pipes to tanks. Transporting gas is slightly harder as you pump it in air-tight pipes to air-tight tanks.
Transporting room temperature solids is a moderately hard, you shovel it and truck it.
But frozen methane is the worst. It is solid when left alone, but turns to gas at room temperature. Worse, it is almost always at the bottom of the ocean.
If they solved this problem, great. But we don;t know they did that, because they were not very clear at all.
In my experience there is a simple explanation for that lack of information - very bad translation from a foreign language. Someone probably solved a rather minor technical issue about removing the frozen water, leaving the gas, but it probably did NOT solve the major 'do it underwater, at huge depths, at freezing cold temperatures, by robot' problem.
Instead of explaining that it was a minor technical victory, they left out all the details and claimed translation issues.
excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
They are sure to awaken Godzilla.
This is madness! Madness, I tell you.
Because they will perish. ANY source of energy other than fossil combustibles deserves to be promoted.
The fossil fuel mafia is second only to big finance, so the amount of propaganda and misinformation against nuclear or geothermal energy is astounding, and these are the two cleanest and most realistic sources we currently have.
The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
How do fossil fuels cause rainbows to perish? All you need is humidity and a light source.
I can make a rainbow in a cave 3,000 feet underground.
I can make a rainbow on Mars.
I can make a rainbow while eating green eggs and ham said Sam I Am
sudo make me a sandwich
Frozen methane is already melting due to global warming and is theorized to greatly accelerate the global warming process. Making using of the stuff and burning it is probably more environmentally friendly than just leaving it there.
ANY source of energy other than fossil combustibles deserves to be promoted
How is combusting methane better than combusting other hydrocarbons?
They are using a new substance called Oxygen Destroyer to extract it.
Everyone ignores the obvious downside of hydrates. The are stored in the sands at the bottom of the ocean so it means effectively strip mining huge tracks of the ocean to recover them. The ecosystem of the ocean is dependent on the ocean floor and reefs both of which would be devastated by this kind of exploitation. There's also the issue of the dirt thrown into the water column choking fish. The oceans are badly stressed as it is so dredging most of the remaining ocean could be what collapses what's left of the fisheries.
It specifically says they used the "Engineers used a depressurisation method that turns methane hydrate into methane gas."... google it... and find: http://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methane_hydrate
Hmmm...
That's what I meant.
I see I used a wrong word, though - it turns out in English "fossil fuel" is narrower than what I thought, referring to long-dead organisms only rather than any historic deposits. That's a consequence of learning stuff in a different translation, my bad :/
The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
How do fossil fuels cause rainbows to perish? All you need is humidity and a light source.
"If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?"
(what good would it be the rainbow if we're not going to see it?)
Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
We seem to be having an unprecedented set of advances in extracting hydrocarbon based fuel sources other than conventional oil (and all that implies for the environment).
I support clean energy and would really like to see research expanded into fusion energy. However not a week goes by I don’t see someone preaching doom and gloom about Peak Oil. Even if these methane hydrate deposits don’t pan out (which actually they probably will) Oil Shale deposits have proven reserves of over 1 Trillion Barrels equivalent using current technology (and an insane potential with future advances) and the U.S. has the largest reserves worldwide. This is equivalent to approximately to all the known reserves for conventional oil and we have hardly begun to exploit it. Check out this link on Wikipedia for the numbers : Oil Shale Reserves.
Energy may become (slightly) more expensive in the future, there may temporary shocks from transition periods as we go to new hydrocarbon sources, but in the long run usable energy is there for the extraction in an economically viable fashion. If anything all this PEEK-OIL talk over inflates the value of energy. One has to wonder about agendas here. The only thing PEEK-OIL is doing is selling a lot of books for scare-mongers.
Perhaps we should go slow on utilizing these sources because of the environment, but even so I don’t see why prices are so high when every indicator seems to suggest there are massive new sources at hand. On the other hand if prices where low would we continue our slow march toward efficient use of what we have (LED replacement bulbs for instance and better insulated houses).
Letter To Iran
Obviously even multimillion dollar vaults get penetrated from time to time.
I don't think your comparison is valid. What is inside (say money or gold) is desirable enough somebody will risk life and limb break in. Breaking into a Nuclear reactor containment structure, while possible, is not going to contain much in the way of desirable things to take and the risks to life will be pretty high. How many folks would want to break into one, hit their lifetime radiation exposure limits in seconds, and attempt to steal what's inside? And what will they get? Miles of radio active copper wire? Radiation sources which are extremely easy to track along with the people carrying them? My point is that nobody really wants to break into a containment structure, while a bank vault has stuff they want.
So the real question is how often will the containment structure be compromised though accidental means? So far, out of thousands of years worth of reactor operating experience, we've only seen two contaminant structure failures. One killed a handful of people (between 100 and 200) and released quite a bit of radiation in Russia and eastern Europe and was caused by a seriously stupid operational error compounded by a reactor design that was nearly as stupid. The two stupids added up to one big stupid mess. The second containment breach event was caused by an extraordinary natural disaster which was outside of the design limits coupled with some seriously poor contingency plans, but hasn't killed anybody. All in all this doesn't seem too bad of a record to me.
It's safer per operating hour than riding in an automobile, or going on a commercial fight.
"File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
. . .so it means effectively strip mining huge tracks of the ocean. . .
I don't think that they could recover their investment, if this is even technically possible. The extraction is done underground at the end of a drill string. The Nankai Trough is as much as 4000M deep, and the deposits that they're tapping are as much as 7000M below the sea floor. According the Wikipedia article on the Nankai Trough, there's a huge influx of sediment, which would make "strip mining" still more difficult.
Arguing philosophy and perceptions of reality is a very poor fallback argument in this case. Did the universe exist before you were born?
sudo make me a sandwich
I think the other poster was looking for designs that actually work in practice, not theories that haven't panned out yet or tests that were shut down due to failure to perform.
Perhaps someday one of them will be economically feasible. At the moment, it would have to be cheaper than coal, since we idiot humans seem to be unable to stop burning the stuff.
How is combusting methane better than combusting other hydrocarbons?
Apparently not what the gp meant, but combusting methane (CH4) is, in fact, better than ethane (C2H6), which is better than propane (C3H8), etc. As the chain gets longer, the ratio of C/H gets higher, resulting in more CO2 being released for the same amount of energy produced.
It explains that the Japanese found a way to send a pipeline down to the hydrates and depressurize them. This caused some of the released methane to travel up the pipeline they had dropped to the surface, where it could be captured as a gas.
Note it does not say how much of the gas is wasted/escapes into the ocean (which might have some very serious effects). On the other hand, they left most of the ocean pressurized (obviously) so it should hopefully re-sublimate back down to a methane hydrate.
It is actually a real breakthrough, rather than a mere translation problem. That said, a lot matters about efficiency. Merely getting a gallon of methane to the surface is not a huge deal if they have to burn 3/4 of a gallon to get it up (let alone transport it to someplace useful via a pressurized gas transport ship/pipeline).
excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
Safe, sustainable and cost effective nuclear power is not only possible but should be our priority!
I'm not suggesting we not use Nuclear power more, we should, but I think there are limits to what Nuclear can do for us at this point. Electricity is not easily stored, in fact, it must be generated the instant it is used. Our electrical consumption varies a lot by the time of day, the season, and location. But Nuclear reactors are not easily throttled up and down on such short cycles. Usually it takes days to plan for and bring a nuclear plant from a low power output up to full power and days to efficiently throttle back down. During some phases of the fuel cycle (towards the end mostly) this is the most trouble and more than one reactor has been unexpectedly out of service for refueling due to throttling down to fast (as in a SCRAM event).
I bring this up to simply point out that you will still need fossil fueled plants to handle the peak loads, because nuclear plants have their limits.
"File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
That is all.
Methane is less stable than CO2. Its lifetime in normal atmoshperic sunlight is about two decades. CO2 stays for thousands of years.
(ummm, perception you say.... A funny thing this perception...)
My point wasn't at all philosophical: I was just pointing out that a potential catastrophic release of methane from the sea bed could mean every human may have totally other priorities than to admire rainbows (if they'd be able to have priorities at all, I imagine that a dead person couldn't care less about either rainbows or survival).
Here's an analogy: suppose you have a glass of water slowly warming in the sun. Everything is nice and dandy, the system is close to a thermal equilibrium at any moment; would you live inside the glass, you'd have time to adapt to the warming
Now, imagine that you drop a red-hot piece of metal inside the glass. Suddenly, for a good period of time what happens inside the glass is catastrophically far from an equilibrium even if, eventually, a new equilibrium would be reached.
Do you think you would be able to survive the transient chaotic period? Even if you do, would you be inclined to have aesthetic feelings caused by eventual rainbows? (highly likely a rainbow may be a sign of a super-storm that just passed, or is about to begin or you're just in the storm's eye).
You have a better perception on my point now?
(BTW: Mother of Storms made an enjoyable reading for me).
Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
Drillers intentionally avoid it because it blows up wells and catches fire. Thats what happened three years ago for the Mocando Deep Horizon Well. (regular overpressured methane, not hydrate)
Scientists have a pretty good idea now how to detect it on a conventional seismic section, whether they want to avoid it or drill for it. Its seems to be in continental shelves over much of the world.
According to USGS and most oil companies. Especially with the production of tight hydrocarbons (fracked). Hydrates could delay the peak another decade, two or three. BUT THERE WILL STILL BE A PEAK. Buys time for alternative energy and efficiency.
A Japanese study estimated that at least 1.1tn cubic metres of methane hydrate exist in offshore deposits. This is the equivalent of more than a decade of Japan's gas consumption.
What then? Strap buttered toast to dancing unicorns?
Either we get serious about nuclear energy or we're going to turn the skies grey burning coal.
A better nuke design would allow for much faster adjustments to the power, but since nuke plants are typically run as base load (as they are cheap to run if you consider fuels costs only) it really does not matter until you get to very high percentages of your electricity from nukes. If you went hog wild with nukes, you would still need demand power via natural gas turbines, hydro, or pumped-water storage, etc.
Coal plants are not good choices for demand load, and oil-fuel plants use very expensive fuel compared to natural gas.
Look at the recent power plant choices, Mostly natural gas, a small amount of wind, just a little nuke and that is about all. I.e., Just about all of the recent fossil fuel electric grid additions are natural gas.
I am not sure there is a sentence of this post that is even remotely correct. Hydrates are not strip mined. With a drill ship, they drill the formation, then apply a vacuum to the drill string. The hydrate dissociates, leaving behind methane gas (which is sucked up the drill string), and a little fresh water. For every cm^3 of hydrate, you get ~164 cm^3 of gas at STP. A drill string, and bottom hole assemble of the research ship Chukyu is not very large, and will likely have no impact on the ocean floor, reefs, etc. There is very little "dirt" being thrown anywhere. Also, there is no dredging.
Opinions were like kittens, I was giving them away.
Huge difference between looking at estimated recoverable vs. estimated total quantity. Just because we know an energy source exists doesn't mean it will ever be worthwhile to spend the energy required to recover it. eg, Helium-3.
Shall beds are geographically huge, but note how they have so far only been drilled in the thickest portions and only the shallowest formations have been actively pursued (marcellus vs. utica). It takes a lot of energy to get a gas well to produce, sometimes more than it will ever be capable of producing.
If we converted all of our nuclear sites to run on Thorium it would become a non-issue. Nuclear energy could be clean and safe but it would be harder to make atomic weapons.
http://energyfromthorium.com/
Send out the SCV. We can't finish the global command center without more Vespene gas.
Make a rainbow under an impenetrable cloud canopy that causes massive light ray diffraction before interacting with your mist layer?
Eg, what will happen to earth once enough CO2 is in the atmosphere, since a good deal of water vapor will join it as global temps rise, until cloud cover reaches such a density that the albedo of the clouds causes temps to drop.
Eg, during the ensuing iceage, your rainbows will be a very very rare thing.
The ecosystem of the ocean is dependent on the ocean floor and reefs both of which would be devastated by this kind of exploitation.
I appreciate your mention of "reefs", as they are completely irrelevant to the depths in question, and make it easy to completely dismiss your cavil as what it is: the persistent whine of the naysayer, who is opposed to everything.
It's really useful for people with the courage to take risks with the future, and therefore make things better, to be able to spot the naysayers, and concern for "reefs" at thousands of feet below the ocean surface is a good way to do so in this case, like concern for "birds killed by windmills" allows us to spot anti-wind trolls and concern for "polar bears on melting ice" allows us to spot climate change trolls.
There are valid concerns on all these topics, but people like you, who contribute only noise to the conversation, need to be screened out if we are to have the conversations that matter. Thanks for making that easy!
Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
I can not understand putting a nuke on a beach just as we have done here.
For cooling water, duh!
If there is a nasty leak, as at Fukushima, the isotopes in the water will quickly be dispersed to safe levels.
If the power station had been on a lake or river and suffered a similar loss of cooling incident, the contamination would have been much m ore of a problem.
Further, much of the atmospheric release was blown out to sea.
The coast is not a bad place for a reactor, you just need to make sure the cooling system is as protected from earthquake and innundation as the reactor dome itself.
Reactors are not normally built near large population centres - its not because that would kill lots of people, so much as the cost of the evacuation and relocation in a worst-case event.
The nuclear lobby ate it's children - thus TMI painted green is about the only available new option in the USA instead of thorium which threatened the status quo. Startups based on military technology and stuff from offshore are the only hope.
Some historic events from the past due to the mass release of this stuff...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permian-Triassic_extinction_event
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleocene-Eocene_Thermal_Maximum
could provide an alternative energy source for the island nation... This is the equivalent of more than a decade of Japan's gas consumption.
So, let's get this straight, the deposit is equivilant to a little over 10 years of Japan's CURRENT gas consumption, and this is being touted as an alternative energy source, especially to combat the loss of energy from loosing two nuclear power plants? Um, okay, not sure how much gas it takes to generate electricity, and not sure how much electricity a gas plant produces compared to a nuclear power plant, but it seems to me that they go through all the trouble to build these plants for only a couple of years worth of energy. This doesn't seem economically viable to me.
Maybe someone can explain it better, or can provide information as to how much gas it takes to power a gas plant, and how much power a gas plant produces compared to a nuclear plant.
Just about all of the recent fossil fuel electric grid additions are natural gas.
These plants are being built mainly because NG prices continue to fall as fracking technology allows the production of more domestic supply. NG is cheap and easy to burn clean. It is also flexible and fairly easy to throttle for peak load if you design your plant for that.
I'm not sure you can build nuclear plants that throttle on 12 - 24 hour cycles very well. Early in the fuel cycle, you can do that kind of thing some and not get yourself in trouble, but as you approach the end of your cycle, power changes are increasingly difficult to manage. I'm not sure how you can design out such issues because they are caused by the byproducts of fission building up in the fuel as it is used. Perhaps the new designs where the fuel is in liquid form can better deal with this?
"File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
Just call up "Ewing Energies"...