Gulf Coast Programmatic Environmental Assessment Geothermal Well Testing: The Frio Formation of Texas and Louisiana (open access)

Gulf Coast Programmatic Environmental Assessment Geothermal Well Testing: The Frio Formation of Texas and Louisiana

In accordance with the requirements of 10 CFR Part 711, environmental assessments are being prepared for significant activities and individual projects of the Division of Geothermal Energy (DGE) of the Energy Research and Development Administration (ERDA). This environmental assessment of geopressure well testing addresses, on a regional basis, the expected activities, affected environments, and possible impacts in a broad sense. The specific part of the program addressed by this environmental assessment is geothermal well testing by the take-over of one or more unsuccessful oil wells before the drilling rig is removed and completion of drilling into the geopressured zone. Along the Texas and Louisiana Gulf Coast (Plate 1 and Overlay) water at high temperatures and high pressures is trapped within Gulf basin sediments. The water is confined within or below essentially impermeable shale sequences and carries most or all of the overburden pressure. Such zones are referred to as geopressured strata. These fluids and sediments are heated to abnormally high temperatures (up to 260 C) and may provide potential reservoirs for economical production of geothermal energy. The obvious need in resource development is to assess the resource. Ongoing studies to define large-sand-volume reservoirs will ultimately define optimum sites for drilling …
Date: October 1, 1977
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proceedings: the second national solar radiation data workshop (open access)

Proceedings: the second national solar radiation data workshop

The 15 papers presented are indexed separately for the data base. Also included are three panel reports. (WHK)
Date: November 1, 1977
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Education confronts the energy dilemma (open access)

Education confronts the energy dilemma

The conference was convened to present a role that America's schools could play in solving or coping with the energy crisis. Eleven sessions were conducted to fulfill this concern: Our Energy Crisis and Education: A Critical Assessment; The Energy Agenda at the Office of Education; Energy Resources: Scenarios for the Future; The Moral Dilemma of Energy Education; Constraints Influencing Education's Role; Energy Education: What's Been Done to Date; Practitioners Discuss Their Future Roles, Responsibilities; Politics of Energy Education; Confronting the Energy Dilemma; The Meaning of Scarcity; and The Impact of the Carter Energy Program on American Schools. Summary reports and reactions to the conference conclude the proceedings. (MCW)
Date: January 1, 1977
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Publications of LASL research, 1972--1976 (open access)

Publications of LASL research, 1972--1976

This bibliography is a compilation of unclassified work done at the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory and published during the years 1972 to 1976. Publications too late for inclusion in earlier compilations are also listed. Declassification of previously classified reports is considered to constitute publication. The bibliography includes LASL reports, journal articles, books, conference papers, papers published in congressional hearings, theses, patents, etc. The following subject areas are included: aerospace studies; analytical technology; astrophysics; atomic and molecular physics, equation of state, opacity; biology and medicine; chemical dynamics and kinetics; chemistry; cryogenics; crystallography; CTR and plasma physics; earth science and engineering; energy (nonnuclear); engineering and equipment; EPR, ESR, NMR studies; explosives and detonations; fission physics; health and safety; hydrodynamics and radiation transport; instruments; lasers; mathematics and computers; medium-energy physics; metallurgy and ceramics technology; neutronics and criticality studies; nuclear physics; nuclear safeguards; physics; reactor technology; solid state science; and miscellaneous (including Project Rover). (RWR)
Date: April 1, 1977
Creator: Petersen, Lois
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind energy mission analysis. Final report, appendices A--J. [USA] (open access)

Wind energy mission analysis. Final report, appendices A--J. [USA]

Information is presented concerning meteorological data and supporting analyses, gross energy consumption patterns and end-use analysis, analysis for industrial applications of wind energy conversion systems (WECS), analysis for residential applications of WECS, analysis for application of WECS to communities remote from utility grids, analysis for agricultural applications of WECS, regional evaluation of the economics of wind turbine generation to the U. S. electric utility district, impact of storage on WECS, financial analysis techniques, and system spacing.
Date: February 18, 1977
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of the California energy industry (open access)

Analysis of the California energy industry

The energy-supply system for California is an integral part of the state's economy, both in terms of energy as a commodity and in the economic effects of expanding requirements for new capital and man-power in the energy sector. It is this notion of an expanding energy system that forms one of the motivations for many of the energy policy discussions and formulations currently taking place. Some of the questions to be addressed are (1) if the energy system is to expand, by how much, and in what particular areas of supply; (2) what are the policy ramifications of certain changes as opposed to others; and (3) what are the major economic effects of changes in energy supply system plans. The purpose of this study is to: (a) describe quantitatively the California energy industry and its relationship to the California and U.S. economies; (b) provide the analytic capability for determining the direct and indirect employment and income impacts resulting from a given energy future for California, and (c) demonstrate and test the methodology with scenarios that embody varying combinations of conventional energy technologies, new energy technologies and energy conservation measures. The methodology developed is generally applicable to any set of specified …
Date: January 1, 1977
Creator: Sathaye, J.; Ruderman, H.; Sextro, R.; Benenson, P.; Kunin, L.; Chan, P. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy situation in the Mid-Atlantic region (open access)

Energy situation in the Mid-Atlantic region

This report presents a review of the energy situation in the Mid-Atlantic Region. It describes the patterns of energy production, supply and demand by state and compares these to national and regional averages. It presents a picture of existing energy and environmental interactions and a view of potential energy and environmental conflicts. A review of the major issues by energy sector is included as is a description of the existing energy actors and major energy programs for Ohio, West Virginia, Virginia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Delaware, Maryland, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands, and Washington, DC.
Date: August 1, 1977
Creator: Munson, J S & Brainard, J P
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy utilization and environmental control technologies in the coal-electric cycle (open access)

Energy utilization and environmental control technologies in the coal-electric cycle

This report presents an overview and assessment of the currently commercial and possible future technologies in the United States that are a part of the coal-electric cycle. From coal production to residual emissions control at the power plant stack, this report includes a brief history, current status and future assessment of each technology. It also includes a discussion, helpful for policy making decisions, of the process operation, environmental emission characteristics, market constraints and detailed cost estimates for each of these technologies, with primary emphasis on coal preparation, coal-electric generation and emissions control systems.
Date: October 1, 1977
Creator: Ferrell, G. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
National Coal Utilization Assessment. a preliminary assessment of the health and environmental effects of coal utilization in the Midwest. Volume I. Energy scenarios, technology characterizations, air and water resource impacts, and health effects (open access)

National Coal Utilization Assessment. a preliminary assessment of the health and environmental effects of coal utilization in the Midwest. Volume I. Energy scenarios, technology characterizations, air and water resource impacts, and health effects

This report presents an initial evaluation of the major health and environmental issues associated with increased coal use in the six midwestern states of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin. Using an integrated assessment approach, the evaluation proceeds from a base-line scenario of energy demand and facility siting for 1975-2020. Emphasis is placed on impacts from coal extraction, land reclamation, coal combustion for electrical generation, and coal gasification. The range of potential impacts and constraints is illustrated by a second scenario that represents an expected upper limit for coal utilization in Illinois. The following are among the more significant issues identified and evaluated in this study: If environmental and related issues can be resolved, coal will continue to be a major source of energy for the Midwest; existing sulfur emission constraints will increase use of western coal; the resource requirements and environmental impacts of coal utilization will require major significant environmental and economic tradeoffs in site selection; short-term (24-hr) ambient standards for sulfur dioxide will limit the sizes of coal facilities or require advanced control technologies; an impact on public health may result from long-range transport of airborne sulfur emissions from coal facilities in the Midwest; inadequately controlled effluents …
Date: January 1, 1977
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Materials and Molecular Research Division annual report, 1977 (open access)

Materials and Molecular Research Division annual report, 1977

Progress in research in structure of materials, mechanical, and physical properties, solid state physics, and materials chemistry, including chemical structure, high temperature and surface chemistry, is reported. (FS)
Date: January 1, 1977
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Oxygen isotopic ratios in quartz as an indicator of provenance of dust (open access)

Oxygen isotopic ratios in quartz as an indicator of provenance of dust

Quartz was isolated in the long range aerosol size range (fine silt, 1-10 ..mu..m in diameter) from atmospheric aerosols, wind-erosive soils, soil silts, shales, and Pacific pelagic sediments of the Northern and Southern Hemispheres, to trace their provenance or origin, as part of a study of dust mineral sequestering of /sup 137/Cs and other products of nuclear fission. The oxygen isotopic ratio (/sup 18/O//sup 16/O) was determined by mass spectrometry. The provenance has been established for this fine silt fraction which reflects the relative proportion of two classes of quartz source: (a) weathering of igneous and metamorphic rocks (high temperature origin and low /sup 18/O//sup 16/O ratio) and (b) of quartz crystallized in cherts and overgrowths (low temperature origin and high /sup 18/O//sup 16/O ratio). This quartz mixing ratio is a basic model or paradigm. Analyses of present day atmospheric aerosols and eolian-derived soils, Pacific pelagic sediments, and now-raised Phanerozoic marine sediments show that the Northern and Southern Hemispheres have separate large-scale reservoirs of the fine grain sizes that contribute to aerosol dusts. These can be identified by distinctive values of /sup 18/O//sup 16/O ratios of the quartz therein. The difference in quartz delta/sup 18/O value in parts per thousand …
Date: January 1, 1977
Creator: Jackson, M L
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Solar grain drying conference proceedings (open access)

Solar grain drying conference proceedings

Thirty papers are included. A separate abstract was prepared for each paper. (MHR)
Date: October 1, 1977
Creator: Shove, G. C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Manpower analysis in transportation safety. Final report (open access)

Manpower analysis in transportation safety. Final report

The project described provides a manpower review of national, state and local needs for safety skills, and projects future manning levels for transportation safety personnel in both the public and private sectors. Survey information revealed that there are currently approximately 121,000 persons employed directly in transportation safety occupations within the air carrier, highway and traffic safety, motor carrier, pipeline, rail carrier, and marine carrier transportation industry groups. The projected need for 1980 is over 145,000 of which over 80 percent will be in highway safety. An analysis of transportation tasks is included, and shows ten general categories about which the majority of safety activities are focused. A skills analysis shows a generally high level of educational background and several years of experience are required for most transportation safety jobs. An overall review of safety programs in the transportation industry is included, together with chapters on the individual transportation modes.
Date: May 1, 1977
Creator: Bauer, C. S.; Bowden, H. M.; Colford, C. A.; DeFilipps, P. J.; Dennis, J. D.; Ehlert, A. K. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transportation energy conservation data book: edition I. 5 (open access)

Transportation energy conservation data book: edition I. 5

This document contains statistical information on the major transportation modes, their respective energy consumption patterns, and other pertinent factors influencing performance in the transportation sector. Data relating to past, present, and projected energy use and conservation in the transportation sector are presented under seven chapter headings. These focus on (1) modal transportation characteristics, (2) energy characteristics of the transportation sector, (3) energy conservation alternatives involving the transportation sector, (4) government impacts on the transportation sector, (5) the supply of energy to the transportation sector, (6) characteristics of transportation demand, and (7) miscellaneous reference materials such as energy conversion factors and geographical maps. References are included for each set of data presented, and a more general bibliography is included at the end of the book. In addition, a glossary of key terms and a subject index is provided for the user. A second edition of this document is scheduled for publication in September 1977.
Date: January 1, 1977
Creator: Shonka, D B; Loebl, A S; Ogle, M C; Johnson, M L & Howard, E B
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ground disposal of oil shale wastes: a review with an indexed annotated bibliography through 1976 (open access)

Ground disposal of oil shale wastes: a review with an indexed annotated bibliography through 1976

This review covers the available literature concerning ground-disposed wastes and effluents of a potential oil shale industry. Ground disposal has been proposed for essentially all of the solid and liquid wastes produced (Pfeffer, 1974). Since an oil shale industry is not actually in operation, the review is anticipatory in nature. The section, Oil Shale Technology, provides essential background for interpreting the literature on potential shale oil wastes and the topics are treated more completely in the section entitled Environmental Aspects of the Potential Disposal of Oil Shale Wastes to Ground. The first section of the annotated bibliography cites literature concerning potential oil shale wastes and the second section cites literature concerning oil shale technology. Each section contains references arranged historically by year. An index is provided.
Date: December 1, 1977
Creator: Routson, R.C. & Bean, R.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Examination of the pathways from soil to man for plutonium (open access)

Examination of the pathways from soil to man for plutonium

The data available on resuspension and ingestion as pathways of plutonium from soil to man were reviewed and a recommended limit based upon a conservative interpretation of the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements (NCRP) recommendations for limiting values was derived. Wind resuspension appeared to be the least limiting value with mechanical resuspension and pica in children among the more important. Ingestion of foodstuffs could also be an important pathway if it is assumed that all food is produced in the contaminated area.
Date: April 1, 1977
Creator: Healy, J. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy consumption in the pipeline industry (open access)

Energy consumption in the pipeline industry

Estimates are developed of the energy consumption and energy intensity (EI) of five categories of U.S. pipeline industries: natural gas, crude oil, petroleum products, coal slurry, and water. For comparability with other transportation modes, it is desirable to calculate EI in Btu/Ton-Mile, and this is done, although the necessary unit conversions introduce additional uncertainties. Since water and sewer lines operate by lift and gravity, a comparable EI is not definable.
Date: December 31, 1977
Creator: Banks, W. F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spatial data on energy, environmental, and socioeconomic themes at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (open access)

Spatial data on energy, environmental, and socioeconomic themes at Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Spatial data files covering energy, environmental, and socioeconomic themes at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) are described. The textual descriptions are maintained by the Regional and Urban Studies Information Center (RUSTIC) within the Data Management and Analysis Group, Energy Division, as part of the Oak Ridge Computerized Hierarchical Information System (ORCHIS) and are available for online retrieval using the ORLOOK program. Descriptions provide abstracts, geographic coverage, original data source, availability limitations, and contact person. Most of the files described in this document are available on a cost-recovery basis.
Date: February 1, 1977
Creator: Olson, R. J.; Watts, J. A.; Shonka, D. B.; Leobe, A. S.; Johnson, M. L.; Ogle, M. C. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental Sciences Division annual progress report for period ending September 30, 1976. ESD Publication No. 1102 (open access)

Environmental Sciences Division annual progress report for period ending September 30, 1976. ESD Publication No. 1102

Separate abstracts were prepared for the eleven sections of the report. (HLW)
Date: November 1, 1977
Creator: Auerbach, S. I.; Reichle, D. E. & Struxness, E. G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy consumption in the pipeline industry. Technical report, Task 1 (partial) (open access)

Energy consumption in the pipeline industry. Technical report, Task 1 (partial)

Estimates are developed of the energy consumption and energy intensity (EI) of five categories of US pipeline industries: natural gas, crude oil, petroleum products, coal slurry, and water. For comparability with other transportation modes, it is desirable to calculate EI in Btu/Ton-Mile, and this is done, although the necessary unit conversions introduce additional uncertainties. Since water and sewer lines operate by lift and gravity, a comparable EI is not definable.
Date: December 31, 1977
Creator: Banks, W. F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A SAFETY AND ECONOMIC STUDY OF SPECIAL TRAINS FOR SHIPMENT OF SPENT FUEL (open access)

A SAFETY AND ECONOMIC STUDY OF SPECIAL TRAINS FOR SHIPMENT OF SPENT FUEL

This report presents the results of a study to compare and evaluate the safety and economics of spent fuel shipments by special trains relative to shipments by conventional freight trains. The safety of special trains was investigated by analyzing data from the Federal Railroad Administration for freight train accidents occurring during the period 1972-1974. The economic analysis compared the cost of spent fuel shipments by special trains and by conventional freight trains.
Date: December 1, 1977
Creator: Loscutoff, W. V.; Murphy, E. S.; Clark, L. L.; McKee, R. W. & Hall, R. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Slurry pipelines: economic and political issues. A review (open access)

Slurry pipelines: economic and political issues. A review

In the controversy surrounding the proposal to grant Federal eminent domain to coal-slurry pipelines, the fundamental issue is whether, on balance, such a grant is in the national interest. The principal subissues (peripheral issues) of economics, water supply and disposal, energy consumption and conservation, employment, safety, and environmental impact are analyzed. It is found that, as compared with unit trains, which are the only immediate alternative for movement of large quantities of Western coal, the pipelines are not against the national interest, except in the case of employment. It is concluded that, on balance, the pipelines are in the national interest and should be granted the power of Federal eminent domain.
Date: November 30, 1977
Creator: Banks, W. F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Biomass: a cash crop for the future (open access)

Biomass: a cash crop for the future

Twenty-one papers were abstracted and indexed individually for ERA/EDB. (JGB)
Date: January 1, 1977
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental control implications of generating electric power from coal. Appendix C. Gasification/combined-cycle power generation: comparison of alternative systems. 1977 technology status report. [246 references w. abstracts] (open access)

Environmental control implications of generating electric power from coal. Appendix C. Gasification/combined-cycle power generation: comparison of alternative systems. 1977 technology status report. [246 references w. abstracts]

The technical, economic, and environmental aspects of low-Btu gasification/combined-cycle power-generation (LBG/CCPG) plants are assessed, using available published data. Six base-case plants, based on three different gasifiers and two different coals, are investigated. A representative combined power cycle is selected for analysis, and material and energy balances for the six systems are developed. Emissions of various air pollutants, including sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides, and discharge rates of aqueous effluents are also calculated. The costs of electricity produced are derived for the six systems, using estimated plant-investment and operating costs. These costs and the emissions of various pollutants are compared with those for a conventional 500-MWe coal-based power plant using flue-gas cleaning and in compliance with the federal New Source Performance Standards. Finally, the commercialization potential of coal-based combined-cycle plants, based on the technical feasibility of building a first plant in the 1985 period and on economic viability, is evaluated. This evaluation is based on the current status of research and development programs for various components of the combined-cycle plant, such as gas turbines and fuel-gas-cleaning systems, and on the status of the demonstration plant.
Date: December 1, 1977
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library