I would say that in Australia it would be in the inverse so 1 sheep for 10 hectares if you are lucky. and one cow per 100 hectares may be more like the truth, but when you have 300 million hectares to play with that is still a lot of cows or sheep grazing away happily.kenneal - lagger wrote:BDU, the amount of water available per hectare has a huge effect on the productivity of the land. In the UK we can graze 1.5 cattle or 10 sheep per hectare year round with a lot more on summer only grazing but I doubt that is possible on most Australian grazing.
The irrigation situation Australia is well known and has given rise to many plans, none reaching fruition of how to move the water to the areas with usable soils. As far as I know there is one inter-basin water transfer in Australia - The Snowy Scheme and this is slowly being reversed. The Bradfield scheme is still talked about before elections and then quietly forgotten about after them.
Solar desalination anyone?
As for Saudi and their EROEI I think that you are on the money there. They are supposedly just building their first nuclear power plant to free up more of the black stuff for export - apparently an Argentinian company is building it. Good luck there.It strikes me that one of the most significant points may not be the lost production, but that it is *cheap* high-EROEI production that has been lost.
On a national Saudi scale their own oil consumption for power plants, water desalination, domestic industry etc is becoming a concern that it is beginning to eat into their exports - one of the reasons why they export relatively little natural gas already is the Saudi use most of their own. While domestic consumption is not strictly speaking EROEI is still a drag on possible oil/gas exports.
Whether Ghawar EROEI is going down is a mystery to me but in the natural lifecycle of an oil field as I understand it, it comes out under its own pressure at first then you need to put in energy in the form of a nodding donkey or down hole pump to pump the stuff out. After that you need to either pump water, CO2 or some kind of surfactant to 'persuade' the stuff to come out. Then you can frack the hell out of it. At all stages the EROEI goes down. I would think Saudi EROEI stats are a state secret.