<x-charset ISO-8859-1>http://www.currentconcerns.ch/archive/2004/01/20040118.php
No 1, 2004
08 Mar 2004, 08:29 PM
Iraq and the Problem of Peak Oil

by F. William Engdahl

Today, much of the world is convinced the Bush Administration did not 
wage war against Iraq and Saddam Hussein because of threat from 
weapons of mass destruction, nor from terror dangers. Still a puzzle, 
however, is why Washington would risk so much in terms of relations 
with its allies and the entire world, to occupy Iraq. There is 
compelling evidence that oil and geopolitics lie at the heart of the 
still-hidden reasons for the military action in Iraq.

It is increasingly clear that the US occupation of Iraq is about 
control of global oil resources. Control, however, in a situation 
where world oil supplies are far more limited than most of the world 
has been led to believe. If the following is accurate, the Iraq war 
is but the first in a major battle over global energy resources, a 
battle which will be more intense than any oil war to date. The 
stakes are highest. It is about fixing who will get how much oil for 
their economy at what price and who not. Never has such a choke-hold 
on the world economy been in the hands of one power. After occupation 
of Iraq it appears it is.

The era of cheap, abundant oil, which has supported world economic 
growth for more than three quarters of a century, is most probably at 
or past its absolute peak, according to leading independent oil 
geologists. If this analysis is accurate, the economic and social 
consequences will be staggering. This reality is being hidden from 
general discussion by the oil multinationals and major government 
agencies, above all by the United States government. Oil companies 
have a vested interest in hiding the truth in order to keep the price 
of getting new oil as low as possible. The US government has a 
strategic interest in keeping the rest of the world from realising 
how critical the problem has become.

According to the best estimates of a number of respected 
international geologists, including the French Petroleum Institute, 
Colorado School of Mines, Uppsala University and Petroconsultants in 
Geneva, the world will likely feel the impact of the peaking of most 
of the present large oil fields and the dramatic fall in supply by 
the end of this decade, 2010, or possibly even several years sooner. 
At that point, the world economy will face shocks which will make the 
oil price rises of the 1970's pale by contrast. In other words, we 
face a major global energy shortage for the prime fuel of our entire 
economy within about seven years.

Peak oil

The problem in oil production is not how much reserves are 
underground. There the numbers are more encouraging. The problem 
comes when large oilfields such as Prudhoe Bay Alaska or the fields 
of the North Sea pass their peak output. Much like a bell curve, oil 
fields rise to a maximum output or peak. The peak is the point when 
half the oil has been extracted. In terms of reserves remaining it 
may seem there is still ample oil. But it is not as rosy as it seems. 
The oil production may hold at the peak output for a number of years 
before beginning a slow decline. Once the peak is past however, the 
decline can become very rapid. Past the peak, there is still oil, but 
each barrel becomes more difficult to exploit, and more costly, as 
internal well pressures decline or other problems make recovery more 
expensive for each barrel. The oil is there but not at all easy to 
extract. The cost of each barrel past peak is increasingly higher as 
artificial means are employed to extract it. After a certain point it 
becomes uneconomical to continue to try to extract this peak oil.

Because most oil companies and agencies such as the US Department of 
Energy speak not of peak oil, but of total reserves, the world has a 
false sense of energy supply security. The truth is anything but 
secure.

Case studies

Some recent cases make the point. In 1991 the largest discovery in 
the Western Hemisphere since the 1970's, was found at Cruz Beana in 
Columbia. But its production went from 500,000 barrels a day to 
200,000 barrels in 2002. In the mid-1980's the Forty Field in North 
Sea produced 500,000 barrels a day. Today it yields 50,000 barrels. 
One of the largest discoveries of the past 40 years, Prudhoe Bay, 
produced some 1.5 million barrels a day for almost 12 years. In 1989 
it peaked, and today gives only 350,000 barrels daily. The giant 
Russian Samotlor field produced a peak of 3,500,000 barrels a day. It 
has now dropped to 325,000 a day. In each of these fields, production 
has been kept up by spending more and more to inject gas or water to 
maintain field pressures, or other means to pump the quantity of oil. 
The world's largest oil field, Ghawar in Saudi Arabia, produces near 
60% of all Saudi oil, some 4.5 million barrels per day. To achieve 
this, geologists report that the Saudis must inject 7 million barrels 
a day of salt water to keep up oil well pressure, an alarming signal 
of near collapse of output in the world's largest oil kingdom.

The growing problem of peak oil has been known among oil industry 
insiders since the mid-1990's. In 1995, the leading oil consulting 
firm, Petroconsultants in Geneva, published a global study, 'The 
World Oil Supply.' The report cost $35,000, written for the oil 
industry. Its author was petroleum geologist, Dr. Colin Campbell. In 
1999 Campbell testified to the British House of Commons, 'Discovery 
of (new oil reserves) peaked in the 1960's. We now find one barrel 
for every four we consume ...'

No new giant discoveries

After OPEC raised oil prices in the 1970's, non-OPEC oil projects 
began to be profitable in the North Sea, Alaska, Venezuela and other 
places. Oil production increased markedly. At the same time, in 
response to the higher oil price, many industrial countries like 
France, Germany USA, Japan dramatically increased the energy from 
nuclear power plants. The combination gave the illusion that the oil 
problem had vanished. It has not, far from it.

If in fact many of today's major sources of oil have peaked, and are 
about to fall off drastically, and at the same time, if world energy 
demand continues to grow, and not enough oil is found even to replace 
existing depletion, the global economy faces a crisis of staggering 
dimension. This would also begin to explain the shift of US foreign 
policy in the direction of a crude neo-imperial military presence 
globally, from Kosovo to Afghanistan, from West Africa to Baghdad and 
beyond.

Obviously, the easiest, most economical solution is to find new giant 
or super giant oilfields where large volumes of oil can be extracted 
and brought to world markets at low cost. That is just what is not 
the case today. According to a recent report from the Colorado School 
of Mines, 'The World's Giant Oilfields,' the world's '120 largest 
oilfields produce close to 33 million barrels a day, almost 50% of 
the world's crude oil supply. The fourteen largest account for over 
20%. The average age of these 14 largest fields is 43.5 years.' 1

The above study concludes that 'most of the world's true giants were 
found decades ago.' Over the past 20 years despite investment of 
hundreds of billions dollars by major oil companies, results have 
been alarmingly disappointing.

The world's major oil companies - Exxon-Mobil, Shell, ChevronTexaco, 
BP, ElfTotal and others - have invested hundreds of billions of 
dollars in finding enough oil to replace the existing oil supply 
sources. Between 1996 and 1999, some 145 companies spent $410 billion 
to find enough oil only to keep their daily production stable at 30 
million barrels a day. From 1999 to 2002, the five largest companies 
spent another $150 billion and their production grew only from 16 
million barrels a day to 16.6 million barrels, a tiny increase. With 
the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990's, western oil 
companies placed high hopes on the oil potentials of the Caspian Sea 
in Central Asia.

Disappointing Caspian results

In December 2002, just after US troops took Afghanistan, BP, a major 
oil company announced disappointing Caspian drilling results which 
suggested that the 'oil find of the century' was little more than a 
drop in the ocean. Instead of earlier predictions of oil reserves 
above 200 billion barrels, a new Saudi Arabia outside the Middle 
East, the US State Department announced, 'Caspian oil represents 4% 
of world reserves. It will never dominate the world's markets.' 
PetroStrategies published a study estimating that the Caspian Basin 
contained a mere 39 billion barrels of oil, and of a poor quality. 
Soon after this news, BP and other western oil companies began 
reducing investment plans in the region.

Interest in West Africa

One of the most active areas of new exploration is in the offshore 
region of West Africa from Nigeria to Angola. President Bush made a 
high profile trip to the region earlier in the year, and the US 
Pentagon has signed military basing agreements with two small 
strategic islands, Principe and San Tome, insuring a military 
presence should anything threaten the flow of oil across the 
Atlantic. Yet, while the volume of oil is important, it also is 
hardly a new Saudi Arabia. Geologist Campbell estimates that if all 
deepwater oil, perhaps 85 billion barrels, were produced from fields 
off Brazil, Angola and Nigeria, it would meet global demand for 3-4 
years.

Growing energy demand

Against the prospect that many of the largest oil fields today are in 
a marked decline in output, world demand for oil is rising 
ruthlessly, marked by the growing economies of China, India and Asia. 
Even at today's weak GDP growth rates, economists estimate that world 
demand for oil at today's prices will rise by some 2% per year.

Ten years ago, China was not a factor in world import of oil. It 
produced most of its limited needs domestically. Beginning 1993 
however, China began to import oil to meet its economic needs. By end 
2003 China has surpassed Japan to be the second largest oil importer 
next to the USA. China now consumes 20% of total OECD industrial 
country energy. China oil imports are rising now by 9% a year and 
this is predicted to rise significantly in the coming decade, as 
China emerges as the world's largest industrial nation. China 
currently is growing at 7-8% a year. India has recently emerged as a 
rapidly growing economy as well. Combined they account for some 2.5 
billion of the world population. Little wonder that China vehemently 
opposed the US unilateral war against Iraq in the UN Security 
Council. The China National Petroleum Company had long sought to 
secure major oil supply from Iraq.

What Cheney knew in 1999

In a speech to the International Petroleum Institute in London in 
late1999, Dick Cheney, then chairman of the world's largest oil 
services company, Halliburton, presented the picture of world oil 
supply and demand to industry insiders. 'By some estimates,' Cheney 
stated, 'there will be an average of two percent annual growth in 
global oil demand over the years ahead, along with, conservatively, a 
three percent natural decline in production from existing reserves.' 
Cheney ended on an alarming note: 'That means by 2010 we will need on 
the order of an additional fifty million barrels a day.' This is 
equivalent to more than six Saudi Arabia's of today's size.

Perhaps it was no coincidence that Cheney, as Vice President, was 
given as his first major assignment the head of a Presidential Task 
Force on Energy. He knew the dimension of the energy problem facing 
not only the United States, but the rest of the world.

Cheney is also well identified as the leading Iraq warhawk in the 
Bush Administration, together with Defense Secretary Rumsfeld. 
Repeatedly it was Cheney pushing for military action against Iraq, 
regardless of which allies support it.

When we examine what is known about global oil reserves, and where 
they are, in light of the above 'peak oil' analysis of much of 
today's existing oil production, it becomes clearer why Cheney would 
be willing to risk so much in terms of America's standing among 
allies and others, to occupy the oilfields of Iraq. Cheney knows 
exactly what the global oil reserve situation is as former CEO of 
Halliburton Corporation, the world's largest oil services company.

The Achilles heel of the US?

The burning question is where will we get such a huge increase of 
oil? In the decade from 1990 to 2000, a total of 42 billion barrels 
of new oil reserves were discovered worldwide. In the same period, 
the world consumed 250 billion barrels. In the past two decades only 
three giant fields with more than one billion barrels each have been 
discovered. One in Norway, in Columbia and Brazil. None of these 
produce more than 200,000 barrels a day. This is far from 50 million 
barrels a day which the world will need.

Is the era of cheap, abundant oil to fuel the world economy about to 
end? One most important issue in the entire debate over why 
Washington went to war in Iraq is the question of how much oil 
remains to be found in the world at today's prices. The debate has 
been remarkably little over an economic issue of enormous 
consequences.

According to the estimates of Colin Campbell and K. Aleklett of 
Uppsala University, five countries hold the overwhelming bulk of the 
world's remaining oil and could potentially make up the difference as 
other areas pass their peak. 'The five major producers of the Middle 
East, namely Abu Dhabi, Iraq, Iran, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia 
(including the Neutral Zone), with about half the world's remaining 
oil, are treated as swing producers making up the difference between 
world demand and what other countries can produce...'2.

These five countries - Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the UAE - 
through circumstances of geology, contain the oil and gas reserves 
vital to the future economic growth of the world. In an article in 
the January 7, 2002 issue of Oil and Gas Journal by A. S. Bakhtiari 
of the National Iranian Oil Company, noted, 'The Middle East (is) 
simultaneously the most geostrategic area on the globe and the 
ultimate energy prize: Two-thirds of global crude oil reserves are 
concentrated in five countries bordering the Persian Gulf.'3

In a paper published in November 2001, eminent Princeton geologist, 
Kenneth Deffeyes wrote, 'The biggest single question is the year when 
world oil production reaches a Hubbert peak and then declines 
forever. Both the graphical and the computer fits identify 2004 as 
the probable year. The largest single uncertainty is the enormous 
reserves of Saudi Arabia.'4

If the peak oil analysis is accurate, it suggests why Washington may 
be willing to risk so much to control Iraq and through its bases 
there, the five oil-rich countries. It suggests Washington is acting 
from a fundamental strategic weakness, not from absolute strength as 
is often thought. A full and open debate on the problem of peak 
energy is urgently needed.

Footnotes:

1 'The World`s Giant Oilfields', Matthew R. Simmons, M. King Hubbert 
Center for Petroleum Supply Studies, Colorado School of Mines, 
January 2002.

2 Aleklett, K. and Campbell, C.J., 'The Peak and Decline of World Oil 
and Gas Production,' published by the Association for the Study of 
Peak Oil and Gas, www.asponews.org .

3 Bakhtiari, A.M. Samsam, '2002 to see birth of New World Energy 
Order,' Oil and Gas Journal, January 7, 2002.

4 Deffeyes, Kenneth S, 'Peak of world oil production,' Paper no. 
83-0,Geological Society of America Annual Meeting, November 2001. 
gsa.confex.com.

 

Article published on 01-26-2004

…?2001-2004. All rights reserved.


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