Grand Danois
Entertainer
Some very informative articles (and papers). Of particular interest was Wood et al. who amongst many things, ask:
Does Iran really seek energy independence? On the basis of the economic evidence both within the nuclear program and in related energy industries, we conclude that Iran is not seriously pursuing energy independence, yet is attempting to justify a nuclear program motivated by a weapons objective under this rubric.
They conclude Iran is not serious about the energy independence because there is only Uranium deposits for 7 years worth of fuel!!!
They also conclude that
Another point to consider is that if a country such as Iran has been found ‘‘incapable of maximizing profit, minimizing cost, or containing explosive demand in subsidized products’’ in an enterprise in which it has more than 50
years of operating experience utilizing technologies with low levels of sophistication, it is questionable how such a country could manage a highly technical nuclear-powered enterprise that requires a rigorous regulatory body, highly trained technical staff, and apervasive culture of safety to operate successfully.
Which corroborate another thought I've had - is there a business case for Iran exporting processed nuclear fuel and technology? Apparently no, there is not enough raw materials domestically, and the infrastructure and expertise would be a drain on brains and resources.
It is just simply a no go as a business.
In the findings they write
Iran’s management of its natural gas sector is inconsistent with a serious program oriented toward energy independence. In 2003, it wasted 9.38 percent of its gross production* almost 430 billion cubic feet (ft3).12 The natural gas that is flared represents a total energy resource equivalent to more than four 1,000 MWe reactors. Even achieving the Middle Eastern average flaring efficiency would allow Iran to generate more than two 1,000-MWe reactors’ worth of electrical power*using a resource that is now wasted.
plus they calculate that nuclear power is more expensive than NG in the case of Iran. It also punches a big hole in the Iranian argument that the flared gas is not recoverable - if the other ME states does it. (!)
I knew it wasn't perfect, but quite frankly, it seems the energy sector in Iran is a [text-deleted] scandal of mismanagement.
So if there isn't an energy independence case to be made (limited doemstic fuel supplies); there is no economic case (only works on subsidies, including as export product), and it even would be significantly cheaper to use NG, then how is it any wonder that Western intelligence (and everyone else) thinks the purpose is weapons production?
My speculation is that it is a mix of
But in many ways, the sparring capitals look more like mirror images than polar opposites. On different scales, both Iranians and Americans tend to take an imperial view. Both governments demonise the other. They use past resentments to reap political rewards by looking tough.
Two to tango...
Btw, using NG instead of nuclear wouldn't have an impact on CO2 emissions, but it would be nice not to have this unethical waste.
Lackadaisical, meh.
Does Iran really seek energy independence? On the basis of the economic evidence both within the nuclear program and in related energy industries, we conclude that Iran is not seriously pursuing energy independence, yet is attempting to justify a nuclear program motivated by a weapons objective under this rubric.
They conclude Iran is not serious about the energy independence because there is only Uranium deposits for 7 years worth of fuel!!!
They also conclude that
Another point to consider is that if a country such as Iran has been found ‘‘incapable of maximizing profit, minimizing cost, or containing explosive demand in subsidized products’’ in an enterprise in which it has more than 50
years of operating experience utilizing technologies with low levels of sophistication, it is questionable how such a country could manage a highly technical nuclear-powered enterprise that requires a rigorous regulatory body, highly trained technical staff, and apervasive culture of safety to operate successfully.
Which corroborate another thought I've had - is there a business case for Iran exporting processed nuclear fuel and technology? Apparently no, there is not enough raw materials domestically, and the infrastructure and expertise would be a drain on brains and resources.
It is just simply a no go as a business.
In the findings they write
Iran’s management of its natural gas sector is inconsistent with a serious program oriented toward energy independence. In 2003, it wasted 9.38 percent of its gross production* almost 430 billion cubic feet (ft3).12 The natural gas that is flared represents a total energy resource equivalent to more than four 1,000 MWe reactors. Even achieving the Middle Eastern average flaring efficiency would allow Iran to generate more than two 1,000-MWe reactors’ worth of electrical power*using a resource that is now wasted.
plus they calculate that nuclear power is more expensive than NG in the case of Iran. It also punches a big hole in the Iranian argument that the flared gas is not recoverable - if the other ME states does it. (!)
I knew it wasn't perfect, but quite frankly, it seems the energy sector in Iran is a [text-deleted] scandal of mismanagement.
So if there isn't an energy independence case to be made (limited doemstic fuel supplies); there is no economic case (only works on subsidies, including as export product), and it even would be significantly cheaper to use NG, then how is it any wonder that Western intelligence (and everyone else) thinks the purpose is weapons production?
My speculation is that it is a mix of
- plain poor management
- prestige (domestic/regional)
- having a lever to turn confrontation with the big bad U.S. on/off (it takes two to tango), legitimacy (domestic)
- regional power & influence
But in many ways, the sparring capitals look more like mirror images than polar opposites. On different scales, both Iranians and Americans tend to take an imperial view. Both governments demonise the other. They use past resentments to reap political rewards by looking tough.
Two to tango...
Btw, using NG instead of nuclear wouldn't have an impact on CO2 emissions, but it would be nice not to have this unethical waste.
Lackadaisical, meh.
Consider - the gas is being burned as we type, but to no purpose, just making big flames above oil wells. Trapping it & burning where it would be useful would add nothing to the CO2 output. To the extent that it replaces other fossil fuel, it will reduce CO2 output.
Various sources. e.g.
http://www.economist.com/world/africa/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10181134
Has prompted a denial from the Iranian government, which insists much of the gas is not economically recoverable - but says nothing about why it is so lackadaisical about recovering that part which it admits is worth it.
This article points out some other energy- and cost-efficient investments Iran could make in fuel, with immensely better returns than its current nuclear programme -
http://cns.miis.edu/pubs/npr/vol14/141/141wood.pdf
Slide 21 of this official Iranian presentation shows that in 1994, 11% of Iranian CO2 emissions were due to flaring -
http://unfccc.int/resource/docs/natc/presentations/iranncpresent.pdf
Last edited: