Tuesday, February 7, 1S34 Daily Ncbrsskan Pc:3 7 Gas may fulfill energy needs hJ mm By Donna GIsson Future natural gas use will increase more than ever before, said a speak er Monday at the UNL colo;:y department. Richard Wyman, direc tor of research at Cana dian Hunter Exploration Ltd. in Alberta, Canada, said energy sources have evolved through history, coal replaced wood, oil replaced coal, and now natural gas which has yet to reach its peak will replace oil Wyman, whose lecture is sponsored by the Amer ican Association of Pet roleum Geologists, is the first AAPG speaker of the semester. AAPG is the larg est geological society in the world and usually spon sors two or three speak ers per semester at UNL, said Samuel Treves, chair man of the geology depart ment. y Wyman outlines two sides of the natural gas question: supply and de mand. The potential sup plies of natural gas are enormous, Wyman said. Currently, there are 10,000 trillion cubic feet (TCF) of proven conven tional natural gas re serves, he said. Of this, the world uses 17-20 TCF per year. Nebraska con sumes .128 TCF of natu ral gas annually, Wyman said. Other gas reserves are tied up in non-conventional forms, Wyman said. Two non-conventional forms with which geolo-. gists have worked are tight gas formations and coal seams, he said. By the end of the cen tury, Wyman said, tight gas formations could sup ply 10 TCF of gas. That means tight gas forms could provide half of the world's energy, he said. Removing gas from coal seams involves extract ing methane that the coal has absorbed, Wy man said. Typically, water is extracted from these basins which repre sent a great potential for the field of hydraulics, he said. . Other potential sources of natural gas are coal gassification, geopres- Library looks for voluntary assistance The Nebraska Library for the Blind and Physi cally Handicapped is re cruiting volunteers to work with the blind and handicapped so they may have access to re corded books and maga zines. "We are always looking for new volunteers," said James Terry, volunteer services coordinator for the Nebraska library Com mission. "We're just like any other library," Terry said. The only difference is that all our books are either on record or cas sette or published in large print or braille." Of the 4,000 people using the library, about 20 percent are UNL stu dents, Terry said. Inter ested students can call 471-2045 for more infor mation.. . - sured aquifers, hydrates, has huge potential," Wy- peat aquifers and bio- man said. "It is a good mass. Totaled, these altern- motor fuel because it is atives have the potential practical, safe, easy on of producing 30,000 TCF 1 the engine and lowers main- cf ga3, Wyman said. When tenance costs and pollu- added to the convention al reserves available, a possible 41,000 TCF of natural gas could ulti mately be recovered, he said. Biomass is relatively un developed, Wyman said, but it is almost unlimited in supply. An example of biomass: garbage. Twelve thousand Los Angeles homes heat their gas from a garbage dump, he said. "On the supply side, there is little to worry about," Wyman said. He said economics will deter mine how fast the gas will be tapped. How much energy gets tapped depends on de mand and the market side, Wyman said. Future uses probably will include transportat ion, cogeneration, utili ties and fuel cells, he said. "Transportation is one area where we barely use natural gas but where it tion," he said. Natural gas in trans portation began in Italy in the 1920's, Wyman said. Wyman owns two cars that run on natural gas. he said it costs $1,800 to convert each car, but they run for half the cost of regular gaso line. "The talk of deregulat ing the industry is a bunch of politics," Wy man said. "It's already es sentially deregulated be cause it competes with other energies. The pro ducer who used to get $9 for a million cubic feet is now lucky to get $3. "An understanding of how gas can replace other fuels along with an appreciation of the incre dible resource base leads to a much brighter out look for the world energy future than we imagined even a few years ago," Wyman said. t in J w v W vtlivv ! It J it I 0 0 0 C31 rj. lOUh c g:s ep PAn;ar:s lot Guniay thru Thurcdny Tr-jnr "TT -n ri'j nj."T TT rt rrn n n '. T.l h Mm m b UiiTi M . M. rf fc - 03 ..;ih?l m rr iiiiiiiiiiM 7;CDp.Ki. PRESENTED BY: THE STUDENT ADVISORY HOARD, . COLLEGE OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION nnnnnrif i r n r i r i A 1 m -J - - "w.' V i L CopiwnlingbylocMBelar Till STUSuNT ADVJSOHY BOAHD OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NESHASXA-LIWCOLN AND THE CGUEG OF eu;JNEC3 CGf.DIA'.LY JMVITC5 YOU TO ATTEfJD: 7 crcciAL G i BUDGET ATTIRE. 7T fPSAKEn S03 HOY. PnCSJCC-NT Cf Lena j:f ? Ill niW?.:rx r-: -.- i r.-n r, MiD WILL GIVL Ctt HC,'t TO .'.iiLO.i f fTTTJVK p'I-.-r- Tsie F?:ror-J timi, sfqohed stx crrc, v n, fx-tut cixmVa r oi i (: h-.ii V '. :W RAFFLE T;CKETS' cnA.-.Drr.:-. , .' v" y i (V l 11 tM 3 .3 r.f-.'iTnATrc.'i