- ID
- 602986
- Banca
- CESGRANRIO
- Órgão
- Petrobras
- Ano
- 2011
- Provas
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- CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Petrobras - Advogado
- CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Petrobras - Analista de Sistemas Júnior - Engenharia de Software
- CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Petrobras - Analista de Sistemas Júnior - Infra-Estrutura - 2011
- CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Petrobras - Analista de Sistemas Júnior - Processos de Negócios - 2011
- CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Petrobras - Arquiteto
- CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Petrobras - Assistente Social Júnior - 2011
- CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Petrobrás - Contador Júnior - 2011
- CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Petrobras - Engenheiro de Equipamento Júnior - Elétrica 2011
- CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Petrobras - Engenheiro de Equipamento Júnior - Eletrônica - 2011
- CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Petrobras - Engenheiro de Produção Júnior - 2011
- CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Petrobras - Geofísico Júnior - Geologia - 2011
- CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Petrobras - Geólogo Júnior - 2011
- Disciplina
- Inglês
- Assuntos
Off the Deep End in Brazil
Gerald Herbert
With crude still hemorrhaging into the Gulf of
Mexico, deep-water drilling might seem taboo just
now. In fact, extreme oil will likely be the new normal.
Despite the gulf tragedy, the quest for oil and gas in
the most difficult places on the planet is just getting
underway. Prospecting proceeds apace in the ultradeepwater
reserves off the coasts of Ghana and
Nigeria, the sulfur-laden depths of the Black Sea, and
the tar sands of Venezuela’s Orinoco Basin. Brazil’s
Petrobras, which already controls a quarter of global
deepwater operations, is just starting to plumb its 9 to
15 billion barrels of proven reserves buried some four
miles below the Atlantic.
The reason is simple: after a century and a
half of breakneck oil prospecting, the easy stuff is
history. Blistering growth in emerging nations has
turned the power grid upside down. India and China
will consume 28 percent of global energy by 2030,
triple the juice they required in 1990. China is set to
overtake the U.S. in energy consumption by 2014.
And now that the Great Recession is easing, the
earth’s hoard of conventional oil is waning even
faster. The International Energy Agency reckons the
world will need to find 65 million additional barrels a
day by 2030. If the U.S. offshore-drilling moratorium
drags on, look for idled rigs heading to other shores.
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Retrieved on: June 19, 2011.