English, asked by agrimgupta3368, 11 months ago

Write a speech on petroleum about 450-500words

Answers

Answered by officialbossDK
0

Explanation:

Petroleum also called crude oil, is a thick and black liquid. It is a natural material mainly made of hydrocarbons. Most petroleum is found by drilling down through rocks on land or off-shore on the continental shelf. Major producers are in the Middle East, the Americas, and Russia. It is the most important world fuel source. It supplies 38% of the world's energy and is also used to make petrochemicals.

Crude oil is a mixture of many different chemicals (mostly hydrocarbons), most of which burn well. It is separated into simpler, more useful mixtures by fractional distillation in oil refineries to give separate chemicals such as gasoline (or petrol) for cars, kerosene for airplanes and bitumen for roads. The bitumen gives crude oil its dark black color; most of the other chemicals in crude are slightly yellow or colorless.

Petroleum can be easily transported by pipeline and oil tanker. Refined petroleum is used as fuels; mainly gasoline (petrol) for cars, diesel fuel for diesel engines used in trucks, trains and ships, kerosene fuel for jets and as lubricants.

Answered by buntythechallenger05
0

Answer:

Petroleum, the mineral in the greatest demand in modern industry, supplies half the world’s energy re­quirements. It provides fuel for heat and lighting, lu­bricants for machinery and raw materials for a num­ber of manufacturing industries.

In comparison with other fuels, such as coal, it has several advantages: it occurs in great abundance; it is easily obtained; it can be cheaply distributed; and above all, it has the widest range of domestic as well as industrial uses. It is often, therefore, referred to as ‘black gold’.

Despite repeated predictions of its rapid exhaustion, world petroleum production increases every year. Scientists and geo- physicists, using modern prospecting equipment such as the gravimeter, magnetometer and seismograph are discovering more and more new oilfields and are greatly widening the world’s known reserves of oil. Many of the most recently discovered fields are deep beneath the sea-floor.

The word petroleum is derived from the Latin words petra, meaning rock, and oleum, meaning oil. It is so called because it is derived from the rocks, where it flows freely in either liquid or gaseous state. It was first used where seepages occurred at the sur­face. In ancient times the Chinese, who encountered oil in drilling for salt in brine wells, used it as fuel to evaporate the brine.

The Egyptians used it for em­balming the dead before burial. The Bible notes that dark pitch from petroleum residues was used on Noah’s ark to make the wooden vessel waterproof. It was also recorded that tar (bitumen) was employed in cementing bricks in the construction of the Tower of Babylon, and in paving the streets in Mesopotamia.

Petroleum was also mentioned by many Greek and Roman writers who noted its use as lamp fuel and for ointments. In many other parts of the world such as around the Caspian Sea, in Romania, in Burma and in India, oil was often used in lighting, cooking, lubricat­ing and for medical purposes.

But the first man to have really ‘struck oil’ was probably Samuel M. Kier who in 1848 found it by chance in wells on the banks of the Allegheny River of Pennsylvania. He named it after the local Indians as Seneca oil. The shortage of whale oil, then widely used for domestic lighting and for oiling machinery, created a great demand for mineral oil.

The Seneca Oil Company was soon formed for drilling oil. ‘Colo­nel’ Edwin L. Drake, a retired railway conductor, was sent to Titusville, Pennsylvania (about 80 km/50 miles north of Pittsburgh) to drill for oil. He en­countered many setbacks. After two months, on 27 August 1859, drilling to a depth of 21.2 metres (69 ½ft), Drake struck oil.

It poured at the rate of 10 barrels (1.3 tonnes) a day. This ushered in the great ‘oil rush’, and commercial exploitation of petroleum on a large scale began. Drake, however, died a poor man, though he had made it possible for many oilmen to become rich after him. To commemorate his achievement, a stone monument was erected at the exact spot of his first oil well in the Drake Memorial Park at Titusville.

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