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from.– Oil Crisis...is
the world about to be shocked
It's official - cheap oil era
is over
By Michael T Klare
Every summer, the Energy Information Administration of the US Department
of Energy issues its International Energy Outlook (IEO), a jam-packed
compendium of data and analysis on the evolving world energy equation.
For those with the background to interpret its key statistical findings,
the release of the IEO can provide a unique opportunity to gauge
important shifts in global energy trends, much as reports of routine
communist party functions in the party journal Pravda once provided
America's Kremlin watchers with insights into changes in the Soviet
Union's top leadership circle.
As it happens, the recent release of the 2009 IEO has provided energy
watchers with a feast of significant revelations. By far the most
significant disclosure: the IEO predicts a sharp drop in projected
future world oil output (compared with previous expectations) and a
corresponding increase in reliance on what are called "unconventional
fuels" - oil sands, ultra-deep oil, shale oil and biofuels.
So here's the headline for you: for the first time, the well-respected
EIA appears to be joining with those experts who have long argued that
the era of cheap and plentiful oil is drawing to a close. Almost as
notable, when it comes to news, the 2009 report highlights Asia's
growing demand for energy and suggests that China is moving ever closer
to the point at which it will overtake the United States as the world's
number one energy consumer. Clearly, a new era of cutthroat energy
competition is on us.
Peak Oil becomes the new norm
As recently as 2007, the IEO projected that the global production of
conventional oil (the stuff that comes gushing out of the ground in
liquid form) would reach 107.2 million barrels per day in 2030, a
substantial increase from the 81.5 million barrels produced in 2006.
Now, in 2009, the latest edition of the report has grimly dropped that
projected 2030 figure to just 93.1 million barrels per day - in
future-output terms, an eye-popping decline of 14.1 million expected
barrels per day.
Even when you add in the 2009 report's projection of a larger increase
than once expected in the output of unconventional fuels, you still end
up with a net projected decline of 11.1 million barrels per day in the
global supply of liquid fuels (when compared with the IEO's soaring 2007
projected figures). What does this decline signify - other than growing
pessimism by energy experts when it comes to the international supply of
petroleum liquids?
Very simply, it indicates that the usually optimistic analysts at the
Department of Energy now believe global fuel supplies will simply not be
able to keep pace with rising world energy demands. For years now,
assorted petroleum geologists and other energy types have been warning
that world oil output is approaching a maximum sustainable daily level -
a peak - and will subsequently go into decline, possibly producing
global economic chaos. Whatever the timing of the arrival of peak oil's
actual peak, there is growing agreement that we have, at last, made it
into peak-oil territory, if not yet to the moment of irreversible
decline.
Until recently, Energy Information Administration officials scoffed at
the notion that a peak in global oil output was imminent or that we
should anticipate a contraction in the future availability of petroleum
any time soon. "[We] expect conventional oil to peak closer to the
middle than to the beginning of the 21st century," the 2004 IEO report
stated emphatically.
Consistent with this view, the Energy Information Administration
reported one year later that global production would reach a staggering
122.2 million barrels per day in 2025, more than 50% above the 2002
level of 80.0 million barrels per day. This was about as close to an
explicit rejection of peak oil that you could get from the Energy
Information Administration's experts.
Where did all the oil go?
Now, let's turn back to the 2009 edition. In 2025, according to this new
report, world liquids output, conventional and unconventional, will
reach only a relatively dismal 101.1 million barrels per day. Worse yet,
conventional oil output will be just 89.6 million barrels per day. In
Energy Information Administration terms, this is pure gloom and doom,
about as deeply pessimistic when it comes to the world's future oil
output capacity as you're likely to get.
The agency's experts claim, however, that this will not prove quite the
challenge it might seem because they have also revised downward their
projections of future energy demand. Back in 2005, they were projecting
world oil consumption in 2025 at 119.2 million barrels per day, just
below anticipated output at that time. This year - and we should all
theoretically breathe a deep sigh of relief - the report projects that
2025 figure at only 101.1 million barrels per day, conveniently just
what the world is expected to produce at that time. If this actually
proves the case, then oil prices will presumably remain within a
manageable range.
In fact, the consumption part of this equation seems like the less
reliable calculation, especially if economic growth continues at
anything like its recent pace in China and India. Indeed, all evidence
suggests that growth in these countries will resume its pre-crisis pace
by the end of 2009 or early 2010. Under those circumstances, global oil
demand will eventually outpace supply, driving up prices again and
threatening recurring and potentially disastrous economic disorders -
possibly on the scale of the present global economic meltdown.
To have the slightest chance of averting such disasters means seeing a
sharp rise in unconventional fuel output. Such fuels include Canadian
oil sands, Venezuelan extra-heavy oil, deep-offshore oil, Arctic oil,
shale oil, liquids derived from coal (coal-to-liquids or CTL), and
biofuels. At present, these cumulatively constitute only about 4% of the
world's liquid fuel supply but are expected to reach nearly 13% by 2030.
All told, according to estimates in the new IEO report, unconventional
liquid production will reach an estimated 13.4 million barrels per day
in 2030, up from a projected 9.7 million barrels in the 2008 edition.
But for an expansion on this scale to occur, whole new industries will
have to be created to manufacture such fuels at a cost of several
trillion dollars. This undertaking, in turn, is provoking a wide-ranging
debate over the environmental consequences of producing such fuels.
For example, any significant increase in biofuels use - assuming such
fuels were produced by chemical means rather than, as now, by cooking -
could substantially reduce emissions of carbon dioxide and other
greenhouse gases, actually slowing the tempo of future climate change.
On the other hand, any increase in the production of Canadian oil sands,
Venezuelan extra-heavy oil, and Rocky Mountain shale oil will entail
energy-intensive activities at staggering levels, sure to emit vast
amounts of CO2, which might more than cancel out any gains from the
biofuels.
In addition, increased biofuels production risks the diversion of vast
tracts of arable land from the crucial cultivation of basic food staples
to the manufacture of transportation fuel. If, as is likely, oil prices
continue to rise, expect it to be ever more attractive for farmers to
grow more corn and other crops for eventual conversion to transportation
fuels, which means rises in food costs that could price basics out of
the range of the very poor, while stretching working families to the
limit. As in May and June of 2008, when food riots spread across the
planet in response to high food prices - caused, in part, by the
diversion of vast amounts of corn acreage to biofuel production - this
could well lead to mass unrest and mass starvation.
A heavy energy footprint
The geopolitical implications of this transformation could well be
striking. Among other developments, the global clout of Canada,
Venezuela, and Brazil - all key producers of unconventional fuels - is
bound to be strengthened.
Canada is becoming increasingly important as the world's leading
producer of oil sands, or bitumen - a thick, gooey, viscous material
that must be dug out of the ground and treated in various
energy-intensive ways before it can be converted into synthetic
petroleum fuel (synfuel). According to the IEO report, oil sands
production, now at 1.3 million barrels a day and barely profitable,
could hit the 4.4 million barrel mark (or even, according to the most
optimistic scenarios, 6.5 million barrels) by 2030.
Given the IEA's new projections, this would represent an extraordinary
addition to global energy supplies just when key sources of conventional
oil in places like Mexico and the North Sea are expected to suffer
severe declines. The extraction of oil sands, however, could prove a
pollution disaster of the first order. For one thing, remarkable
infusions of old-style energy are needed to extract this new energy,
huge forest tracts would have to be cleared, and vast quantities of
water used for the steam necessary to dislodge the buried goo (just as
the equivalent of "peak water" may be arriving).
What this means is that the accelerated production of oil sands is sure
to be linked to environmental despoliation, pollution, and global
warming. There is considerable doubt that Canadian officials and the
general public will, in the end, be willing to pay the economic and
environmental price involved. In other words, whatever the IEA may
project now, no one can know whether synfuels will really be available
in the necessary quantities 15 or 20 years down the road.
Venezuela has long been an important source of crude oil for the United
States, generating much of the revenue used by President Hugo Chavez to
sustain his social experiments at home and an ambitious anti-American
political agenda abroad. In the coming years, however, its production of
conventional petroleum is expected to fall, leaving the country
increasingly reliant on the exploitation of large deposits of bitumen in
the eastern Orinoco River basin.
Just to develop these "extra-heavy oil" deposits will require
significant financial and energy investments and, as with Canadian oil
sands, the environmental impact could be devastating. Nevertheless,
successful development of these deposits could prove an economic bonanza
for Venezuela.
The big winner in these grim energy sweepstakes, however, is likely to
be Brazil. Already a major producer of ethanol, it is expected to see a
huge increase in unconventional oil output once its new ultra-deep
fields in the "subsalt" Campos and Santos basins come on-line. These are
massive offshore oil deposits buried beneath thick layers of salt some
160 kilometers off the coast of Rio de Janeiro and several kilometers
beneath the ocean's surface.
When the substantial technical challenges to exploiting these undersea
fields are overcome, Brazil's output could soar by as much as three
million barrels per day. By 2030, Brazil should be a major player in the
world energy equation, having succeeded Venezuela as South America's
leading petroleum producer.
New powers, new problems
The IEO report hints at other geopolitical changes occurring in the
global energy landscape, especially an expected stunning increase in the
share of the global energy supply consumed in Asia and a corresponding
decline by the United States, Japan, and other "First World" powers. In
1990, the developing nations of Asia and the Middle East accounted for
only 17% of world energy consumption; by 2030, that number, the report
suggests, should reach 41%, matching that of the major First World
powers.
All recent editions of the report have predicted that China would
eventually overtake the United States as number one energy consumer.
What's notable is how quickly the 2009 edition expects that to happen.
The 2006 report had China assuming the leadership position in a
2026-2030 timeframe; in 2007, it was 2021-2024; in 2008, it was
2016-2020. This year, the Energy Information Administration is
projecting that China will overtake the United States between 2010 and
2014.
It's easy enough to overlook these shifting estimates, since the reports
don't emphasize how they have changed from year to year. What they
suggest, however, is that the US will face ever fiercer competition from
China in the global struggle to secure adequate supplies of energy to
meet national needs.
Given what we have learned about the dwindling prospects for adequate
future oil supplies, we are sure to face increased geopolitical
competition and strife between the two countries in those few areas that
are capable of producing additional quantities of oil (and undoubtedly
genuine desperation among many other countries with far less resources
and power).
And much else follows: as the world's leading energy consumer, Beijing
will undoubtedly play a far more critical role in setting international
energy policies and prices, undercutting the pivotal role long played by
Washington. It is not hard to imagine, then, that major oil producers in
the Middle East and Africa will see it as in their interest to deepen
political and economic ties with China at the expense of the United
States. China can also be expected to maintain close ties with oil
providers like Iran and Sudan, no matter how this clashes with American
foreign policy objectives.
At first glance, the IEO for 2009 hardly looks different from previous
editions: a tedious compendium of tables and text on global energy
trends. Looked at another way, however, it trumpets the headlines of the
future - and their news is not comforting.
The global energy equation is changing rapidly, and with it is likely to
come great power competition, economic peril, rising starvation, growing
unrest, environmental disaster, and shrinking energy supplies, no matter
what steps are taken. No doubt the 2010 edition of the report and those
that follow will reveal far more, but the new trends in energy on the
planet are already increasingly evident - and unsettling.
Michael T Klare is a professor of peace and world security studies at
Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts, and the author, most
recently, of Rising Powers, Shrinking Planet: The New Geopolitics of
Energy (Henry Holt).
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