Published on Wednesday, May 4, 2005 by the Cape Times / South Africa  

'US Invasion of Iraq Was a Resource War'  

by Melanie Gosling 
  
CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA -- With the rapid decline of global oil supplies,
the United States is heading for an economic crash unlike anything since the
1930s. And the collapse of the dollar will affect every nation on earth. 

This is the chilling warning from academic Richard Heinberg of the New
College of California. Heinberg is in Cape Town, South Africa, this week to
share his views on what governments and societies need to do to mitigate the
imminent global crisis after world oil production peaks. 

"It's too late to maintain a 'business as usual' attitude. What is required
is to manage the change that peak oil will bring in a way that causes the
fewest casualties. This must be done at an economic and geopolitical level,
to fend off resource wars. The US invasion of Iraq is clearly a resource
war," Heinberg said on Monday. 

Global oil discovery peaked in the 1960s and oil production is likely to
peak as soon as 2007. With a world economy based on fossil fuel, the
economic and social consequences will be dire. 

'They say if they have 10 years to prepare, the economic and social chaos
could be minimised' In his most recent book, Power Down: Options and Actions
for a Post-Carbon World, Heinberg describes the options available to avoid
catastrophe. 

Wearing a T-shirt that read: "Wake up! You are here," with an arrow pointing
to a graph of a peak in oil production, Heinberg said world governments were
aware of the pending crisis. The United States department of energy had
commissioned a report on the probable impacts of "peak oil", the point at
which global oil production will no longer meet demand, which was released
in February. 

"The report was compiled mainly by ex-CIA people. The CIA has always kept a
close watch on resources. They found that peak oil would provide the US and
the world with an 'unprecedented risk and management problem'. 

"They say if they have 10 years to prepare, the economic and social chaos
could be minimised. But if it's less, the US will face a serious problem and
the government will have to manage it without public input. For that, read
martial law. The report found oil price volatility will increase to
unprecedented levels," Heinberg said. 

The US response is not to cut oil consumption by making major lifestyle
changes, and scale back on economic activity, but to use the military to
maintain control over oil in the Middle East. 

"The long-range plan is for the West to control the Middle East by the
military so it can control the price of oil." 

This was formalised as far back as 1979 by former US president Jimmy Carter,
in what became known as the Carter Doctrine, which stated that America would
use the military to maintain access to the oil reserves in the Middle East. 

Clearly we need to find substitutes for oil, says Heinberg, but the
available energy alternatives are not reassuring. 

Natural gas extraction will peak a few years after oil, extraction rates for
coal will peak in decades, nuclear energy is dogged by unresolved problems
of waste disposal and solar and wind energy will have to undergo rapid
expansion if they are to replace even a fraction of the energy shortfall
from oil. And the enthusiasm about a hydrogen economy comes from politics
rather than science, he said. 

"Our real problem is that we are trapped in a perpetual growth machine. As
long as modern societies need economic growth to stave off collapse (given
existing debt-and-interest-based national currencies), we will continue to
require ever more resources yearly. But the Earth has limited resources. 

"The energy conundrum is thus intimately tied to the fact that we anticipate
perpetual growth within a finite system," Heinberg said. 

He sketches four main options available in response: 


Following the US leadership in competing for remaining resources through
wars;

Wishful thinking that the market or science will come to the rescue;

Assuming that we are already in the early stages of disintegration, devoting
our energies to preserving the most worthwhile cultural achievements of the
past few centuries.

"Powering down" - reducing energy resource use drastically through economic
sacrifice, reducing the population size and developing alternative energy
sources. 
"The sooner we choose wisely, the better off we and our descendants will
be," Heinberg said. 

C 2005 Cape Times
http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?sf=2813&click_id=2813&art_id=vn20050503072119
511C128182&set_id=6
 









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