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Patrick says
Oil is, apparently, a renewable resource.
Maybe not "renewable, but more plentiful that previously thought, especially with improved extraction techniques.
I always wonder what will happen to our continents when those holes deep down get too big?
FortWayneHatesRealtors says
I always wonder what will happen to our continents when those holes deep down get too big?
Scale. The deepest oil well isn't even 10 miles. The Earth is about 8,000 miles thick. Thos like worrying that a mosquito will plug his straw in deep enough to suck from your liver.
The deepest man-made hole on Earth is the Kola Superdeep Borehole (SG-3), located on the Kola Peninsula in northwestern Russia near the Norwegian border.
It reached a maximum true vertical depth of 12,262 meters (approximately 40,230 feet, or about 7.6 miles). This record was achieved in 1989 during a Soviet scientific drilling project that began in 1970.
Drilling stopped in the early 1990s (with final abandonment around 1995) due to extremely high temperatures (around 180°C or 356°F, much hotter than anticipated), which caused equipment issues and made the rock behave more like plastic. Funding shortages after the Soviet Union's collapse also played a role.

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Venezuela has greater oil stores than any other country. But after years of corruption, mismanagement and more recently U.S. sanctions, its oil output has dropped to a tenth of what it was two decades ago.
From Lake Maracaibo in the west to the Orinoco oil belt in the east, abandoned wells rust in the sun as looters scavenge the metal. The last drilling rig still working in Venezuela shut down in August. The country is on course, by the end of this year, to be pumping little more oil than the state of Wyoming.
“Twenty percent of the world’s oil is in Venezuela, but what good is it if we can’t monetize it?” said Carlos Mendoza, an ambassador under the late socialist president Hugo Chávez, who enjoyed an oil bonanza when prices were high but starved the industry of investment and maintenance funds.
“We’re entering a post-oil era,” Mr. Mendoza said.
While petroleum is under stress world-wide from climate-change concerns and the rise of wind and solar power, what is happening to oil in Venezuela goes far beyond the global industry’s troubles. It is an existential crisis for a country long dependent on oil for nearly all of its hard-currency earnings.
This year, Venezuela’s oil income will probably fall below the limited funds coming in from other sources such as gold mining and overseas workers’ remittances, said Luis Vicente León, an economist and pollster. Venezuela’s economy is likely to shrink more than 30% this year from the oil collapse plus the pandemic, says Ecoanalitica, a Caracas business consulting firm.