Scott Tinker
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Looking pretty good if you're cooking with wood. LPG is saving so many lives in this world, replacing wood and charcoal and huts and homes. And I'm not talking a few lives. There are 3 billion people and 2.8 billion people in the world today that cook indoors with solid biomass. And 3 million of them die every year still, Jordan. 3 million people from breathing indoor smoke, particulates.
The major pollution problem. That's it. In cities outdoor, this is just indoor. There's another two, at least that many outdoors breathing indoor particulate pollution, real pollution. So you replace that with an LPG tank, liquid propane, you save lives, instantly save lives, or an induction cooktop, something that doesn't have that happening.
The major pollution problem. That's it. In cities outdoor, this is just indoor. There's another two, at least that many outdoors breathing indoor particulate pollution, real pollution. So you replace that with an LPG tank, liquid propane, you save lives, instantly save lives, or an induction cooktop, something that doesn't have that happening.
The major pollution problem. That's it. In cities outdoor, this is just indoor. There's another two, at least that many outdoors breathing indoor particulate pollution, real pollution. So you replace that with an LPG tank, liquid propane, you save lives, instantly save lives, or an induction cooktop, something that doesn't have that happening.
It's an incredible life-saving technology, if you will. So on the abundance thing, back to that, here we are, there's a lot of natural gas in the world, okay, a lot.
It's an incredible life-saving technology, if you will. So on the abundance thing, back to that, here we are, there's a lot of natural gas in the world, okay, a lot.
It's an incredible life-saving technology, if you will. So on the abundance thing, back to that, here we are, there's a lot of natural gas in the world, okay, a lot.
Correct.
Correct.
Correct.
No, we're not out of energy options, we're out of ideas sometimes.
No, we're not out of energy options, we're out of ideas sometimes.
No, we're not out of energy options, we're out of ideas sometimes.
So in 08, Mr. Obama brought me up to ask me to be Assistant Secretary of Energy under Stephen Chu. 08, first term, first month Obama, and I visited and we talked and they were looking at me doing fossil energy, coal, oil, gas, strategic petroleum reserve and other things.
So in 08, Mr. Obama brought me up to ask me to be Assistant Secretary of Energy under Stephen Chu. 08, first term, first month Obama, and I visited and we talked and they were looking at me doing fossil energy, coal, oil, gas, strategic petroleum reserve and other things.
So in 08, Mr. Obama brought me up to ask me to be Assistant Secretary of Energy under Stephen Chu. 08, first term, first month Obama, and I visited and we talked and they were looking at me doing fossil energy, coal, oil, gas, strategic petroleum reserve and other things.
And I spoke with the secretary and this was right as that fracking revolution, evolution really, because I know that it's kind of an evolution of technologies, came together. The Barnett shale really kicked it off in 2001 and two with George Mitchell. But by 08... We saw the Barnett, the Fayetteville had gotten started, the Haynesville was coming, the Marcellus is just getting started.
And I spoke with the secretary and this was right as that fracking revolution, evolution really, because I know that it's kind of an evolution of technologies, came together. The Barnett shale really kicked it off in 2001 and two with George Mitchell. But by 08... We saw the Barnett, the Fayetteville had gotten started, the Haynesville was coming, the Marcellus is just getting started.
And I spoke with the secretary and this was right as that fracking revolution, evolution really, because I know that it's kind of an evolution of technologies, came together. The Barnett shale really kicked it off in 2001 and two with George Mitchell. But by 08... We saw the Barnett, the Fayetteville had gotten started, the Haynesville was coming, the Marcellus is just getting started.
These are big shale gas basins in the country. And you mean big. Big. They're huge. They're big. Right. And oil followed, more technology. Natural gas is a little molecule. I think you'll be interested in this. Why do you have to frack? Why do you have to crack rock? Okay, and here's why.