by Michael Klare
08-12-04
When George W. Bush entered the White House in early 2001, the nation was
suffering from a severe "energy crisis" brought on by high gasoline
prices, regional shortages of natural gas, and rolling blackouts in California.
Most notable was the artificial scarcity of natural gas orchestrated by the
Enron Corporation in its rapacious drive for mammoth profits. Luckily for him, the energy situation improved slightly as a national
economic slowdown depressed demand, leading to a temporary decline in gasoline
prices. But now, as Bush approaches his second term in office, another energy
crisis looms on the horizon -- one not likely to dissipate of its own accord.
Another indication of crisis came only one month later, when the New York
Times revealed that prominent American energy analysts now believe Saudi Arabia,
the world's largest oil producer, had exaggerated its future oil production
capacity and could soon be facing the wholesale exhaustion of some of its most
prolific older fields.
How imminent that peak-oil moment may in fact be has generated considerable
debate and disagreement within the specialist community, and the topic has begun
to seep into public consciousness. A number of books on peak oil -- Out of Gas
by David Goodstein, The End of Oil by Paul Roberts, and The Party's Over by
Richard Heinberg, among others -- have appeared in recent months, and a related
documentary film, The End of Suburbia, has gained a broad underground audience.
Nor is the evidence of a slowdown in oil output the only sign of an unfolding
energy crisis. Of no less significance is the dramatic increase in energy demand
from newly-industrialized nations -- especially China. As recently as 1990, the
older industrialized countries (including the former Soviet Union) accounted for
approximately three-quarters of total worldwide oil consumption. But the
consumption of petroleum in developing nations is growing so rapidly -- at three
times the rate for developed countries -- that it is soon expected to draw even.
This increase represents a prodigious amount of oil, the equivalent to total
world consumption in 1970, and it is very difficult to imagine where it will all
come from (especially given indications of a global slowdown in daily output).
If, as appears likely, the world's energy firms prove incapable of satisfying
higher levels of international demand, the competition among major consumers for
access to the remaining supplies will grow increasingly more severe and
stressful.
After all, any significant increase in day-to-day energy output requires
substantial investment in new infrastructure -- investment that is not likely to
materialize in countries suffering from perpetual disorder. At best, production
in such countries will remain flat or rise sluggishly; at worst, as in Iraq
today, it may even threaten to fall. Indeed, the persistence of political
turmoil in countries like Angola, Colombia, Iraq, Nigeria, and Venezuela has
largely been responsible for the higher gasoline prices still evident, despite
recent modest decreases, at the neighbourhood pump.
Because the wealth generated by oil production is so vast, and because few
incumbent leaders are willing to abandon their positions of privilege, internal
struggles of this sort are prone to trigger violent clashes between competing
claimants to national power.
With oil demand regularly outpacing supply and disorder spreading in major
producing areas, global shortages and resulting high prices are likely to become
the norm, not the exception. Ideally, the United States could compensate for any
shortfalls in the global availability of petroleum by increasing its reliance on
other sources of energy. When producing electricity, for example, itis often
possible to switch from coal to natural gas and back again.
It is here that the performance of the Bush administration should come in for
close scrutiny. In response to the earlier energy crisis of 2001, the President
appointed a National Energy Policy Development Group (NEPDG), headed by Vice
President Dick Cheney, to analyse America's energy predicament and devise
appropriate solutions. The NEPDG issued its final report, the National Energy
Policy (also known as the Cheney Report), in May, 2001.
In a crude attempt to mislead the public about the nature of our oil
dependency, the Cheney Report called for increasing US energy
"independence" by exploiting the untapped oil reserves of Alaska's
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) and other protected wilderness areas. But
ANWR only possesses sufficient petroleum to provide this country with (at most)
1 mm bpd for an estimated 15-20 years, a tiny fraction of the 20 mm barrels of
additional oil that will be needed to supplement domestic output in 2025.
As a result, we are more dependent on foreign oil in 2004 than we were in
2001, and all the indicators suggest that this dependency will only become more
pronounced during Bush's second term. Yes, the administration has proposed
modest investment in the development of hydrogen-powered fuel cells and other
new energy systems; but, at current rates of development, these new technologies
will not prove capable of substituting for oil on a significant scale during the
next few decades.
When, and in just what form, the United States enters the coming energy
crisis cannot be foreseen. Perhaps it will be provoked by a coup d'état in
Nigeria, a civil war in Venezuela, or a feud among senior princes in the Saudi
royal family (possibly brought on by the impending death of King Fahd). Or it
could be thanks to a major act of terrorism or a catastrophic climate event.
Michael Klare is a professor of peace and world security studies at Hampshire
College in Amherst, Massachusetts, and the author, most recently, of Blood and
Oil: The Dangers and Consequences of America's Growing Petroleum Dependency (The
American Empire Project, Metropolitan Books).
Source: Michael KlareLooming energy crisis overshadows Bush's second term
In response, the President promised to make energy modernization one of his top
concerns. However, aside from proposing the initiation of oil drilling in
Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, he did little to ameliorate the
country's energy woes during his first four years in office.
The onset of this new energycrisis was first signalled in January 2004, when
Shell -- one of the world's leading energy firms -- revealed that it had
overstated its oil and natural gas reserves by about 20 %, the net equivalent of
3.9 bn barrels of oil or the total annual consumption of China and Japan
combined.
Although officials at the US Department of Energy (DoE) insisted that these
developments did not foreshadow a near-term contraction in the global supply of
energy, warnings increased from energy experts of the imminent arrival of
"peak" oil -- the point at which the world's known petroleum fields
will attain their highest sustainable yield and commence a long, irreversible
decline.
As if to acknowledge the seriousness of this debate, the Wall Street Journal
reported in September that evidence of a global slowdown in petroleum output can
no longer be ignored. While no one can say with certainty that recent
developments portend the imminent arrival of peak oil output, there can be no
question that global supply shortages will prove increasingly common in the
future.
To meet the needs of their older customers and satisfy the rising demand from
the developing world, the major oil producers will have to boost production at
breakneck speed. According to the DoE, total world petroleum output will have to
grow by approximately 44 mm bpd between now and 2025 -- an increase of 57 % --
to satisfy anticipated world demand.
To further complicate matters, many of the countries the Bush administration
considers potential suppliers of additional petroleum, including Angola,
Azerbaijan, Colombia, Equatorial Guinea, Iran, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Nigeria, Saudi
Arabia, and Venezuela, are torn by ethnic and religious conflict or are buffeted
by powerful anti-American currents. Even if these countries possess sufficient
untapped reserves to sustain an increase in output, as long as they remain
chronically unstable, the desired increases are unlikely to appear.
If anything, the potential for conflict in such countries is likely to grow as
demand for their petroleum rises. The reason is simple. Increased petroleum
output in otherwise impoverished nations tends to widen the gap between haves
and have-nots -- a divide that often falls along ethnic and religious lines --
and to sharpen internal political struggles over the distribution of oil
revenues.
In many cases, these clashes may take the form of attacks on the oil
infrastructure itself, further jeopardizing the global availability of energy.
As shown in Colombia and Iraq, where raids on oil pipelines and pumping stations
have become a near-daily occurrence, such infrastructure -- stretched out over
miles and miles of jungle or desert -- represents an unusually vulnerable and
inviting target for terrorism. Not only do such attacks deprive the prevailing
regime of vital revenues, but they also constitute an assault on the United
States and the large multinational corporations that are deemed responsible for
so many of the developing world's afflictions.
But most of our petroleum supplies are used in transportation -- mainly to power
cars, trucks, buses, and planes -- and, for this purpose, oil has no readily
available substitutes. Indeed, we have so organized our economy and society
around the availability of cheap and abundant petroleum that we are severely
ill-equipped to deal with the sort of shortages and supply disruptions that are
likely to become the norm in the years ahead.
How the group arrived at its final assessment is a matter of some speculation,
as the administration has refused to make its deliberations public, but its
conclusions are incontrovertible: rather than stress conservation and the rapid
development of renewable energy sources, the report called for increased US
reliance on petroleum. And because domestic oil production is in an irreversible
decline, any rise in American oil usage necessarily entails an increased
reliance on imported petroleum.
What this suggests is that the overwhelming bulk of this additional energy will
have to be acquired from foreign sources. To obtain all this imported energy,
the Cheney Report calls on the President and his chief associates to place a
high priority on acquiring additional petroleum from producers in the Persian
Gulf, the Caspian Sea basin, Africa, and Latin America -- that is, from regions
especially susceptible to instability and anti-Americanism.
This means that we will face our looming energy crisis with no viable fallback
measures in sight. We remain trapped in our dependence on importedoil. In the
long run, the only conceivable result of this will be sustained crisis and
deprivation.
Whatever the case, our existing energy system, already stretched to its limits,
will not be able to absorb a major blow like this without considerable
readjustment and pain -- or worse. While President Bush is likely to respond to
a new energy crisis, as he has in the past, with renewed calls for drilling in
ANWR and the further relaxation of US environmental standards, nothing he has
proposed to date even suggests a viable exit strategy from perpetual crisis.