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For those oil enthusiasts who believe that petroleum will remain abundant for
decades to come - among them President George W Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney,
and their many friends in the oil industry - any talk of an imminent "peak"
in global oil production and an ensuing decline can be easily countered with a
simple mantra: "Saudi Arabia, Saudi Arabia, Saudi Arabia."
Not only will the Saudis pump extra oil now to alleviate global shortages,
it is claimed, but they will keep pumping more in the years ahead to quench
our insatiable thirst for energy. And when the kingdom's existing fields run
dry, lo, they will begin pumping from other fields that are just waiting to
be exploited. We ordinary folk need have no worries about oil scarcity, because
Saudi Arabia can satisfy our current and future needs. This is, in fact, the
basis for the Bush administration's contention that we can continue to increase
our yearly consumption of oil, rather than conserve what's left and begin the
transition to a post-petroleum economy. Hallelujah for Saudi Arabia!
But now, from an unexpected source, comes a devastating challenge to this powerful
dogma: in a newly released book, investment banker Matthew R Simmons convincingly
demonstrates that, far from being capable of increasing its output,
Saudi Arabia is about to face the exhaustion of its giant fields and, in the
relatively near future, will probably experience a sharp decline in output.
"There is only a small probability that Saudi Arabia will ever deliver
the quantities of petroleum that are assigned to it in all the major forecasts
of world oil production and consumption," Simmons writes in Twilight in
the Desert: The Coming Saudi Oil Shock and the World Economy. "Saudi Arabian
production," he adds, italicizing his claims to drive home his point, "is
at or very near its peak sustainable volume ... and it is likely to go into
decline in the very foreseeable future."
In addition, there is little chance that Saudi Arabia will ever discover new
fields that can take up the slack from those now in decline. "Saudi Arabia's
exploration efforts over the last three decades were more intense than most
observers have assumed," Simmons asserts. "The results of these efforts
were modest at best."
If only ... |
By Tom Engelhardt |
The price of a barrel of crude oil has broken the $60 mark; a Chinese
state-controlled oil company has made an $18.5 billion bid for American
oil firm Unocal - the company that fought to put a projected $1.9 billion
natural gas pipeline through Taliban Afghanistan and hired as its consultant
Zalmay Khalilzad, the outgoing Afghan ambassador and soon to be envoy
to Iraq; world energy consumption, according to last week's British Financial
Times, surged 4.3% last year (the biggest rise since 1984), oil use by
3.4% (the biggest rise since 1978).
In the meantime, Exxon - which just had the impudence to hire Philip
Cooney after he was accused of doctoring government reports on climate
change and resigned as chief of staff of the White House Council on Environmental
Quality ("The cynical way to look at this," commented Kert Davies,
US research director for Greenpeace, "is that ExxonMobil has removed
its sleeper cell from the White House and extracted him back to the mother
ship.") - has quietly issued a report, The Outlook for Energy: A
2030 View, predicting that the moment of "peak oil" is only
a five-year hop-skip-and-a-pump away; "Oil Shockwave," a "war
game" recently conducted by top ex-government officials in Washington,
including two former directors of the Central Intelligence Agency, found
the US "all but powerless to protect the American economy in the
face of a catastrophic disruption of oil markets", which was all
too easy for them to imagine ("The participants concluded almost
unanimously they must press the president to invest quickly in promising
technologies to reduce dependence on overseas oil ..."); and oil
tycoon Boone Pickens, chairman of the billion-dollar hedge fund BP Capital
Management, is having the time of his life.
Over the past five years, he claims, his bet that oil prices would rise
has "made him more money ... than he earned in the preceding half
century hunting for riches in petroleum deposits and companies",
and he is predicting that prices will only go higher with much more "pain
at the pump". Ah, the good life. And if you don't quite recognize
the new look of this fast-shifting energy landscape, then how are you
going to feel if the Age of Petroleum turns out to be drawing - more rapidly
than most people imagine - to a close?
Imagine where we might be today, energy-wise, if Americans - and American
legislators - had taken then-president Jimmy Carter's famed 1979 "moral
equivalent of war" speech on energy conservation seriously, but rejected
his Carter Doctrine and the Rapid Deployment Joint Task Force that went
with it - both of which set us on our present path to war(s) in the Middle
East. Here's part of what Carter said to the American people on television
that long-ago night:
"Beginning this moment, this nation will never use more foreign
oil than we did in 1977 - never. From now on, every new addition to our
demand for energy will be met from our own production and our own conservation.
"The generation-long growth in our dependence on foreign oil will
be stopped dead in its tracks right now and then reversed as we move through
the 1980s, for I am tonight setting the further goal of cutting our dependence
on foreign oil by one-half by the end of the next decade - a saving of
over 4-1/2 million barrels of imported oil per day ... To give us energy
security, I am asking for the most massive peacetime commitment of funds
and resources in our nation's history to develop America's own alternative
sources of fuel - from coal, from oil shale, from plant products for gasohol,
from unconventional gas, from the sun ... I'm proposing a bold conservation
program to involve every state, county, and city and every average American
in our energy battle.
"This effort will permit you to build conservation into your homes
and your lives at a cost you can afford ..."
Well, it never happened.
Tom Engelhardt is editor of Tomdispatch and the author of The End
of Victory Culture.
|
If Simmons is right about Saudi Arabian oil production - and the official dogma
is wrong - we can kiss the era of abundant petroleum goodbye forever. This is
so for a simple reason: Saudi Arabia is the world's leading oil producer, and
there is no other major supplier (or combination of suppliers) capable of making
up for the loss in Saudi production if its output falters. This means that if
the Saudi Arabia mantra proves deceptive, we will find ourselves in an entirely
new world - the "twilight age" of petroleum, as Simmons puts it. It
will not be a happy place.
Before taking up the implications of a possible decline in Saudi Arabian oil
output, it is important to look more closely at the two sides in this critical
debate: the official view, as propagated by the US Department of Energy (DoE),
and the contrary view, as represented by Simmons' book.
The prevailing view goes like this: according to the DoE, Saudi Arabia possesses
approximately one-fourth of the world's proven oil reserves, an estimated 264
billion barrels. In addition, the Saudis are believed to harbor additional,
possible reserves containing another few hundred billion barrels. On this basis,
the DoE asserts, "Saudi Arabia is likely to remain the world's largest
oil producer for the foreseeable future."
To fully grasp Saudi Arabia's vital importance to the global energy equation,
it is necessary to consider the DoE's projections of future world oil demand
and supply. Because of the rapidly growing international thirst for petroleum
- much of it coming from the United States and Europe, but an increasing share
from China, India and other developing nations - the world's expected requirement
for petroleum is projected to jump from 77 million barrels per day in 2001 to
121 million barrels by 2025, a net increase of 44 million barrels. Fortunately,
says the DoE, global oil output will also rise by this amount in the years ahead,
and so there will be no significant oil shortage to worry about. But over one-fourth
of this additional oil - some 12.3 million barrels per day - will have to come
from Saudi Arabia, the only country capable of increasing its output by this
amount. Take away Saudi Arabia's added 12.3 million barrels, and there is no
possibility of satisfying anticipated world demand in 2025.
One could, of course, suggest that some other oil producers will step in to
provide the additional supplies needed, notably Iraq, Nigeria and Russia. But
these countries together would have to increase their own output by more than
100% simply to play their already assigned part in the DoE's anticipated global
supply gain over the next two decades. This in itself may exceed their production
capacities. To suggest that they could also make up for the shortfall in Saudi
production stretches credulity to the breaking point.
It is not surprising, then, that the DoE and the Saudi government have been
very nervous about the recent expressions of doubt about the Saudi capacity
to boost its future oil output. These doubts were first aired in a front-page
story by Jeff Gerth in the New York Times on February 25, 2004. Relying, to
some degree, on information provided by Simmons, Gerth reported that Saudi Arabia's
oilfields "are in decline, prompting industry and government officials
to raise serious questions about whether the kingdom will be able to satisfy
the world's thirst for oil in coming years".
Gerth's report provoked a barrage of counter-claims by the Saudi government.
Their country, Saudi officials insisted, could increase its production and satisfy
future world demand. "[Saudi Arabia] has immense proven reserves of oil
with substantial upside potential," Abdallah S Jum'ah, the president of
Saudi Aramco, declared in April 2004. "We are capable of expanding capacity
to high levels rapidly, and of maintaining those levels for long periods of
time."
This exchange prompted the DoE to insert a sidebar on this topic in its International
Energy Outlook for 2004. "In an emphatic rebuttal to the New York Times
article [of February 24]," the DoE noted, "Saudi Arabia maintained
that its oil producers are confident in their ability to sustain significantly
higher levels of production capacity well into the middle of this century."
This being the case, we ordinary folks need not worry about future shortages.
Given Saudi abundance, the DoE wrote, we "would expect conventional oil
to peak closer to the middle than to the beginning of the 21st century."
In these, and other such assertions, US oil experts always come back to the
same point: Saudi oil managers "are confident in their ability" to
achieve significantly higher levels of output well into the future. In no instance,
however, have they provided independent verification of this capacity; they
simply rely on the word of those oil officials who have every incentive to assure
us of their future reliability as suppliers. In the end, therefore, it comes
down to this: America's entire energy strategy, with its commitment to an increased
reliance on petroleum as the major source of our energy, rests on the unproven
claims of Saudi oil producers that they can, in fact, continuously increase
Saudi output in accordance with the DoE's predictions.
And this is where Simmons enters the picture, with his meticulously documented
book showing that Saudi producers cannot be trusted to tell the truth about
future Saudi oil output.
First, a few words about the author of Twilight in the Desert. Matthew ("Matt")
Simmons is not a militant environmentalist or anti-oil partisan; he is chairman
and chief executive officer of one of the nation's leading oil-industry investment
banks, Simmons & Company International. For decades, Simmons has been pouring
billions of dollars into the energy business, financing the exploration and
development of new oil reservoirs. In the process, he has become a friend and
associate of many of the top figures in the oil industry, including Bush and
Cheney. He has also accumulated a vast storehouse of information about the world's
major oilfields, the prospects for new discoveries, and the techniques for extracting
and marketing petroleum. There is virtually no figure better equipped than Simmons
to assess the state of the world's oil supply. And this is why his assessment
of Saudi Arabia's oil production capacity is so devastating.
Essentially, Simmons' argument boils down to four major points:
Most of Saudi Arabia's oil output is generated by a few giant fields, of which
Ghawar - the world's largest - is the most prolific.
These giant fields were first developed 40 to 50 years ago, and have since
given up much of their easily extracted petroleum.
To maintain high levels of production in these fields, the Saudis have come
to rely increasingly on the use of water injection and other secondary recovery
methods to compensate for the drop in natural field pressure.
As time goes on, the ratio of water to oil in these underground fields rises
to the point where further oil extraction becomes difficult, if not impossible.
To top it all off, there is very little reason to assume that future Saudi exploration
will result in the discovery of new fields to replace those now in decline.
Twilight in the Desert is not an easy book to read. Most of it consists of
a detailed account of Saudi Arabia's vast oil infrastructure, relying on technical
papers written by Saudi geologists and oil engineers on various aspects of production
in particular fields. Much of this has to do with the aging of Saudi fields
and the use of water injection to maintain high levels of pressure in their
giant underground reservoirs.
As Simmons explains, when an underground reservoir is first developed, oil
gushes out of the ground under its own pressure; as the field is drained of
easily extracted petroleum, however, Saudi oil engineers often force water into
the ground on the circumference of the reservoir in order to drive the remaining
oil into the operating well. By drawing on these technical studies - cited here
for the first time in a systematic, public manner - Simmons is able to show
that Ghawar and other large fields are rapidly approaching the end of their
productive lives.
Simmons' conclusion from all this is unmistakably pessimistic: "The 'twilight'
of Saudi Arabian oil envisioned in this book is not a remote fantasy. Ninety
percent of all the oil that Saudi Arabia has ever produced has come from seven
giant fields. All have now matured and grown old, but they still continue to
provide around 90 percent of current Saudi oil output ... High-volume production
at these key fields ... has been maintained for decades by injecting massive
amounts of water that serves to keep pressures high in the huge underground
reservoirs ... When these water projection programs end in each field, steep
production declines are almost inevitable."
This being the case, it would be the height of folly to assume that the Saudis
are capable of doubling their petroleum output in the years ahead, as projected
by the DoE. Indeed, it will be a minor miracle if they raise their output by
a million or two barrels per day and sustain that level for more than a year
or so. Eventually, in the not-too-distant future, Saudi production will begin
a sharp decline from which there is no escape. And when that happens, the world
will face an energy crisis of unprecedented scale.
The moment that Saudi production goes into permanent decline, the Petroleum
Age as we know it will draw to a close. Oil will still be available on international
markets, but not in the abundance to which we have become accustomed and not
at a price that many of us will be able to afford. Transportation, and everything
it effects - which is to say, virtually the entire world economy - will be much,
much more costly. The cost of food will also rise, as modern agriculture relies
to an extraordinary extent on petroleum products for tilling, harvesting, pest
protection, processing and delivery. Many other products made with petroleum
- paints, plastics, lubricants, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics and so forth will
also prove far more costly. Under these circumstances, a global economic contraction
- with all the individual pain and hardship that would surely produce - appears
nearly inevitable.
If Simmons is right, it is only a matter of time before this scenario comes
to pass. If we act now to limit our consumption of oil and develop non-petroleum
energy alternatives, we can face the "twilight" of the Petroleum Age
with some degree of hope; if we fail to do so, we are in for a very grim time
indeed. And the longer we cling to the belief that Saudi Arabia will save us,
the more painful will be our inevitable fall.
Given the high stakes involved, there is no doubt that intense efforts will
be made to refute Simmons' findings. With the publication of his book, however,
it will no longer be possible for oil aficionados simply to chant "Saudi
Arabia, Saudi Arabia, Saudi Arabia" and convince us that everything is
all right in the oil world. Through his scrupulous research, Simmons has convincingly
demonstrated that - because all is not well with Saudi Arabia's giant oilfields
- the global energy situation can only go downhill from here. From now on, those
who believe that oil will remain abundant indefinitely are the ones who must
produce irrefutable evidence that Saudi Arabia's fields are, in fact, capable
of achieving higher levels of output.
Michael T Klare is a professor of peace and world security studies at Hampshire
College and the author of Blood and Oil: The Dangers and Consequences of America's
Growing Petroleum Dependency (Metropolitan Books).
(Copyright 2005 Michael T Klare)