Middle East and Peak Oil - Sept 10
by Staff
Click on the headline (link) for the full text. Many more articles are available through the Energy Bulletin homepage
The enormity of an operation such as Gwahar can make us complacent about the scarcity of the world's supplies of oil but, as we all know, this is a finite resource and it will not last for ever. Dubai is already moving to a non-oil economy and many other countries [the UK not least] will have to do the same in the coming years. This has led to the concept of "peak oil" – the point at which there is less oil left in the ground than the amount we have taken out. There are plenty of theories about when peak oil will be reached: two years ago, next year, five years… take your pick. ...However, before we get complacent and rush out to swap the Toyota Prius for a thirsty Land Rover, none of this new development is going to be easy to exploit. The days of oil bubbling out of the ground, as it used to do in Saudi and Bahrain, are long gone and the new fields are often extremely hard to tap. Take the BP find in the Gulf of Mexico. Its drill hole is a staggering 10,685 metres deep – this is nearly two kilometres more than the height of Mount Everest. The well is also in deep water, which will make it much more expensive to construct a drilling platform and pipeline to shore. ...The debate about peak oil is, therefore, misleading. We are not about to run out of oil any time soon, but we are going to have to pay a great deal more to get it out of the ground. We should be focussing on cost of production rather than some mythical tipping point at which we start to run out of oil...
Unlike some previous forecasts, recent reports are more sober. The debate on output highlights the Saudi government’s increasing calls for a more “equitable” oil pricing level at US$75 a barrel. This would encourage continuous investment in this vital energy sector, while at the same time ensuring that peak oil thresholds are pushed back. Saudi pleas seem to have fallen on deaf ears, as recession-hit Western governments are loath to see higher energy prices for domestic political reasons. This comes almost a year after oil prices hit peaks of $147 a barrel and the same leaders were trooping to Saudi Arabia to literally beg for increased oil production to bring prices down. ...The collapse of oil prices to the $30-$45 levels was a short-term blessing that masks the urgency of the Saudi warning that more, and not less, investment is now needed. ..The implications are many: more energy market concentration in a few, predominantly Middle East hands, with future accusations of oil pricing “blackmail” and geopolitical tensions and rivalries in the region. ...It behoves the world to take the Saudi warning very seriously. Like it or not, the fates of oil consuming countries such as the US to that of Saudi Arabia are connected and will remain so for decades to come...
...The report, published in Emirates 24/7, stated that $96.4 bn would be spent on new facilities while the remainder would go on expansion capacity of existing refineries. The report also said that considering the massive amounts of oil Arab states actually produce, the joint refining capacity was very low. Arab countries operate less than 10% of the world's refineries -- 64 out of a total 655 -- which produce 9% of global capacity -- 7.55 mm bpd out of a total of 82.5 mm bpd...
...The centrepiece of all of the Emirate's green commitments is the carbon-neutral Masdar City. ...Abu Dhabi hopes to generate 7% of its electricity using renewable sources.
The AHDR 2009 argues that the trend in the region has been to focus more on the security of the state than on the security of the people. While this adherence to the traditional conception of security has in many cases ensured the continuity of the state, it has also led to missed opportunities to ensure the security of the human person, and has left the bond between state and citizen less strong than it might otherwise be. And it has hampered the region's embrace of diversity, curtailing opportunities to welcome population groups of differing origins and inclinations into the national project. The result is an all-too-common sense of limited opportunities and personal insecurity, witnessed in the world's highest levels of unemployment, deep and contentious patterns of exclusion, and, ultimately, strong calls from within for reform. Indeed, the pursuit of state security without attention to human security has brought on suboptimal outcomes for the state and citizen alike. And in the long run, the government that pursues state security without investing in human security is the government that achieves neither. - from the foreword by Amat Al Alim Alsoswa, Assistant Secretary-General and Assistant Administrator, Regional Director, Regional Bureau for Arab States, Contributor's comments - Rahul Goswami The second comment, published by the Abu Dhabi daily, 'The National', is of greater value. Dr Ramady makes a few points worth thinking carefully about: that the KSA (Kingdom of Saudi Arabia) plans to invest more than US$400 billion over 15 years to increase production to 16 million barrels per day (from its 2008 level of 10,846,000 bpd, according to the BP Statistical Review of World Energy 2009); that the KSA argument for US$75/barrel is an 'equitable' price that will encourage investment and thereby ensure that "peak oil thresholds are pushed back"; and that this is 'warning' from KSA that the fates of oil consumers are tied to those of oil producers. The first of two short reports in Arabian Oil and Gas helps explain the Saudi view. The huge planned increase in refining capacity is to bring the Middle East region's total refining capacity to 12,500,000 bpd up from the 7,592,000 bpd (BP Statistical Review). KSA is therefore seeing a producing-consuming world, within 15 years, in which its own production will increase 67% and the region's refining capacity will rise 60%. The second of the Arabian Oil and Gas reports celebrates another milestone in Abu Dhabi's renewable energy programme (with the curious and staggeringly expensive Masdar City as its showpiece, a 'renewable' oasis in an emirate that will not retrofit its existing urban dwellings and systems to meet its 'carbon-neutral' aims). Finally, this year's Arab Human Development Report 2009 helps place the energy, oil and renewables debate squarely within the community and social framework. This is not a report the GCC likes, not this one and none of its earlier editions. The foreword sets the tone for the critical current that runs through the 265 pages of analysis, indices and examples. Editorial NotesEB contributor Rahul Goswami is a "Researcher and writer based in Goa, India and Berlin, Germany. Areas of study: local economies, energy and food interweaves, community planning. |
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