Friday, November 10, 2006

Israel Saving the World Again.

I brazenly stole the title of this post from Elder of Zyion along with the link to this UPI news story:
HAIFA, Israel, Nov. 7 (UPI) -- The Israeli process for producing energy from oil shale will cut its oil imports by one-third, and will serve as a guide for other countries with oil shale deposits, according to one company. A.F.S.K. Hom Tov presented its oil shale processing method on Tuesday, outside Haifa and just down the street from one of the country's two oil refinery facilities.

"Because the patents for this process belong to (the company), Israel is the most advanced in the world in the effort to create energy from oil shale," Moshe Shahal, a Hom Tov legal representative and a former Israeli energy minister, told United Press International. Shahal estimated that the company's Negev Desert facility would begin full-scale production in three to four years, while other countries with oil shale deposits will need five to six years to reach production.

Oil shale is limestone rock that contains hydrocarbons, or fossil fuels -- about 20 percent of the amount of energy found in coal. Using the rock as a raw material and coating it with bitumen, a residue of the crude oil refining process, the company can produce natural gas, fuel, electricity, or a combination of the three.

Older technologies squeezed the hydrocarbon material out of the rock, with extremely high pressure and at high temperatures. According to Professor Ze'ev Aizenshtat, an oil shale expert, the Hom Tov process is more environmentally friendly than other methods of converting oil shale into energy. It also allows for more flexibility in the kind of fuel produced, produces less waste and operates at lower temperatures than other methods.

Though the production process may be more environmentally friendly, the end product is still a fossil fuel, similar in quality to a high-grade diesel when in liquid form. Israel's shale is low-quality, however -- its "caloric value" is only about 15 percent, while shale in other countries yields 20 percent, according to a report in BusinessWeek earlier this year. As a result, more Israeli shale is needed to produce the same amount of fuel.
(…)
Because fewer refining processes are necessary with oil shale than with crude oil, the final product is a higher quality fuel at a lower price, Aizenshtat said. The company estimates it will consume 6 million tons of oil shale and 2 million tons of refinery waste each year, for an annual production of 3 million tons of product.
It would cost about $17 to produce a barrel of synthetic oil at the Hom Tov facility, meaning giant profit margins in a world of $45 to $60 per barrel crude.

Yearly earnings are forecasted to be between $159 million and $350 million, Shahal said. Israel has 15 billion tons of oil shale reserves. Jordan, on the other hand, has about 25 billion tons, and the oil shale in Jordan is of higher quality. Shahal met with Jordanian Energy Minister Azmi Khreisat earlier this year, to discuss setting up a plant there.

Finally, a way to break the death grip of OPEC countries on the world oil market which also has the potential to take a serious bite out of the amount of petrodollars available for international terrorism. By the way, did I mention that the Israelis are also working on a vaccine for AIDS and Alzheimer’s disease?

3 comments:

K. Shoshana said...

Here's a link to in Business Week to Hom Tov is the company that owns the patent on the process.

http://72.14.203.104/search?q=cache:zSaiK6UEBXEJ:www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/content/jul2006/gb20060705_516609.htm+hom+tov+energy+company&hl=en&gl=ca&ct=clnk&cd=4

The price is based on US$ as far as I can determine. More details are given in the article.

Michael said...

Kate:
On a related point, I remember seeing somewhere that the province of Alberta has oil shale resources containing nearly double the oil reserves of Saudi Arabia.

The Arabs don't have an oil monopoly. The West just has to realize it.

K. Shoshana said...

Michael, your right. Canada's reserves of shale are huge (as is Colorado's) and Europe has substantial reserves as well.

The problem, if I am understanding it correctly, has always been the high cost and complex process of extracting oil from Shale which in the past was often of a dubious quality. The process developed in Israel makes it cheap and easy to process a high quality product - even with a low grade quality of shale.

Of course, its also a slap in the face to all those who run around forecasting the end of fossil fuels.