Sat 30 Jun 2007
David Strahan, author of The Last Oil Shock, argued that peak oil was the motivation for the invasion of Iraq in Guardian last week:
In a world of looming fuel shortage, Britain and the US formalised their energy fears with a war…
Even as one of the principal architects of the Iraq war washes his hands of the whole bloody mess, there is still only a vague understanding of the real reason behind the invasion, but evidence of the intense interest of the international oil companies continues to build. Only last week, ExxonMobil chief executive Rex Tillerson said in London: “We look forward to the day when we can partner with Iraq to develop that resource potential.” Despite their interest and influence, however, the decision to attack was not taken in the boardroom. Iraq was indeed all about oil, but in a sense that transcends the interests of individual corporations, however large.
The elephant in the drawing room was the fact that global oil production is likely to peak within about a decade. Aggregate oil production in the developed world has been falling since 1997, and all major forecasters expect world output excluding Opec to peak by the middle of the next decade. From then on everything depends on the cartel, but unfortunately there is growing evidence that Opec’s members have been exaggerating the size of their reserves for decades.
Oil consultancy PFC Energy briefed Dick Cheney in 2005 that on a more realistic assessment of Opec’s reserves, its production could peak by 2015. A report by the US Department of Energy, also in 2005, concluded that without a crash programme of mitigation 20 years before the event, the economic and social impacts of the oil peak would be “unprecedented”. The evidence suggests these fears were already weighing heavily with Cheney, Bush and Blair.
In a world of looming shortage, Iraq represented a unique opportunity. With 115bn barrels, it had the world’s third biggest reserves, and after years of war and sanctions they were the most underexploited. In the late 1990s, production averaged about 2m barrels, but with the necessary investment its reserves could support three times that. In a report to the security council, UN inspectors warned in January 2000 that sanctions had caused irreversible damage to Iraq’s reservoirs. But sanctions could not be lifted with Saddam still in place.
Cheney knew, fretting about global oil depletion in a speech in London the following year, where he noted that “the Middle East with two thirds of the world’s oil and lowest cost is still where the prize ultimately lies”. Blair too had reason to be anxious: British North Sea output had peaked in 1999, while the petrol protests of 2000 had made the importance of maintaining the fuel supply excruciatingly obvious.
Britain’s and the US’s fears were secretly formalised during the planning for Iraq. It is widely accepted that Blair’s commitment to support the attack dates back to his summit with Bush in Texas in April 2002. What is less well known is that at the same summit, Blair proposed and Bush agreed to set up the US-UK Energy Dialogue, a permanent liaison dedicated to “energy security and diversity”. Its existence was only later exposed through a freedom of information inquiry.
Both governments refuse to release minutes of Dialogue meetings, but one paper dated February 2003 notes that to meet projected demand, oil production in the Middle East would have to double by 2030 to more than 50m barrels a day. So on the eve of the invasion, UK and US officials were discussing how to raise production from the region - and we are invited to believe this is coincidence. The bitterest irony is, of course, that the invasion has created conditions that guarantee oil production will remain hobbled for years to come, bringing the global oil peak that much closer. So if that was plan A, what on earth is plan B?
Tuesday June 26, 2007, The Guardian
· David Strahan is the author of The Last Oil Shock: A Survival Guide to the Imminent Extinction of Petroleum Man
Lastoilshock.com
3 Responses to “The real casus belli: peak oil”
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July 1st, 2007 at 2:59 pm
New blog -"Informed Comment Global Affairs": Gasoline Rationing Finally Comes to Iran …
… as announced by the ever informed Juan Cole.
The Oil Drum -
July 6th, 2007 at 2:04 pm
That interview with the chief economist of the IEA is pretty extraordinary. Mighy be time to take up organic farming.
July 16th, 2007 at 5:20 pm
source: http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2007/07/08/1183833344238.html
As senior lecturer in strategic studies at the Australian Defence Force Academy, Clinton Fernandes, pointed out in 2002 before the decision to invade was announced, the US didn’t need to go to war with Iraq to get access to Iraqi oil, it had to go to war if it wanted to retain control of Iraqi oil.
According to Dr Fernandes, “access to oil” means the US wishes to buy oil like any other country; that it wants oil at a reasonable price.
“Control of oil” means that the US can use oil to exert influence against Europe, China and Japan. The point is made by Zbigniew Brzezinski, the former national security adviser to President Jimmy Carter: “Not only does America benefit economically from the relatively low costs of Middle East oil, but America’s security role in the region gives it indirect but politically critical leverage on the European and Asian economies that are also dependent on energy exports from the region.” (”Hegemonic quicksand”, The National Interest - Winter 2003-04.)
Fernandes points out that “control of oil” also means control of profits as oil money is recycled back to the US to purchase advanced US weapons systems.
…The US has gone full circle since the dollar was backed by gold and a healthy trade surplus until the 1980s. Now the main backing for the dollar as the international reserve currency is America’s military might.
…The non-problem about “access to oil” should be even more obvious than in 2002.
The question is succinctly put by Gwynne Dyer in his book The Mess They Made: The Middle East After Iraq: “Today every major oil-producing country in the Middle East depends on the cash flow from oil exports to feed its growing population, so they are all compelled to sell pretty much every barrel they can pump - and to sell it into a global market that sets the price for buyer and seller alike. So it doesn’t matter to us who runs these countries”.