http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/20070607-084546-5183r.htm




Emerging Super-Powers


 <http://www.nysun.com/authors/R.+Emmett+Tyrrell+Jr.> 

By  <http://www.nysun.com/authors/R.+Emmett+Tyrrell+Jr.> R. EMMETT TYRRELL
JR.
June 8, 2007

Who are the major producers of oil in the world?

The unsettling answer is
<http://www.nysun.com/related_results.php?term=Saudi+Arabia> Saudi Arabia
and  <http://www.nysun.com/related_results.php?term=Russia> Russia. They
produce about 9 million barrels of oil a day.

And who are the world's major producers of natural gas?

Again, the answer is unsettling -
<http://www.nysun.com/related_results.php?term=Iran> Iran and Russia.

There are students of geopolitics with a special knowledge of energy
resources who worry about this. One, the economist,
<http://www.nysun.com/related_results.php?term=Philip+Verleger> Philip
Verleger, believes that with regard to Russia and its energy reserves, we
are in the second round of the Cold War.

As spring evanesces into summer and Americans take to the road in their gas
guzzlers, leaving their homes with air conditioners on high, it is perhaps
an auspicious time to consider our energy needs.

The presidential candidates, hustling for their parties' presidential
nominations, tell us that they are going to make us "energy independent." At
the same time they also tell us that $3.00-a-gallon gasoline at the pump is
highway robbery. Some announce that they are going to investigate the oil
companies. This is political schizophrenia. We cannot approach energy
independence and maintain cheap oil prices simultaneously.

In fact, in the near future, neither goal is possible. With 5% of the
world's population,
<http://www.nysun.com/related_results.php?term=United+States> America uses
25% of the world's oil. And right now the world is consuming about as many
barrels of oil a day as it is producing, which is 85 million barrels. In
terms of oil production, the world is now at what is called "peak
production."

The price of oil on the world market today is in the neighborhood of $70 a
barrel, and Americans are complaining about paying over $3.00 a gallon for
gasoline. But by the end of the summer the world will be consuming over 85
million barrels of oil. The economies of the world's leading oil consumers,
China and America, are that strong.

Thus oil experts, such as
<http://www.nysun.com/related_results.php?term=T.+Boone+Pickens> Boone
Pickens, predict $80 for a barrel of oil by the end of the year. He doubts
that the world can produce more than 85 million barrels a day. That means
the price of gasoline will be even higher than $3.00 a gallon. Mr. Verleger
predicts $100 for a barrel of oil before the end of 2008. Imagine what you
will be paying for a gallon of gas then.

Russia might regain its old position as a superpower on the basis of its oil
and natural gas holdings alone. Mr. Verleger cites a 2006 article in the
<http://www.nysun.com/related_results.php?term=Financial+Times+Ltd.>
Financial Times that suggests that this is very much on President Putin's
mind. "As a city official in St. Petersburg," Neil Buckley wrote in the FT,
"he studied part-time at the city's State Mining Institute and wrote a
dissertation entitled 'Mineral Raw Materials in the Strategy for Development
of the Russian Economy.' In it he argued Russia's rich natural resource base
would secure not only its economic future but also its international
position."

So let the presidential contenders begin their debate on energy independence
or at least an energy policy. With oil at $70 a barrel and moving upwards,
energy alternatives are more feasible.

Boone Pickens mentions ethanol and biodiesel as alternatives. His favorite
is nuclear, as he noted this month in the Dallas Business Journal. "It's
clean. There have been no accidents with it, and you can get rid of the
waste." He calls it the "fuel of the future."

Peak production of oil, however, is here and now. The world consumes 30
billion barrels of oil annually. Producers have not been able to replace 30
billion barrels of oil into the world oil supply since 1985. There are no
vast reservoirs of oil left. Simple market forces are going to coax America
toward oil alternatives.

In the meantime, however, Russia, Saudi Arabia, and Iran are going to be
prospering from our oil purchases, and Russia may emerge as a superpower.

Mr. Tyrrell, Jr. is the founder and editor in chief of the
<http://www.nysun.com/related_results.php?term=The+American+Spectator+Magazi
ne> American Spectator, a contributing editor to
<http://www.nysun.com/related_results.php?term=The+New+York+Sun+One+SL+LLC>
The New York Sun, and an adjunct scholar at the Hudson Institute. His book,
"The Clinton Crack-Up: The Boy President's Life After the White House" has
just been published by Thomas Nelson.

.
 
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d=34761/stime=1181337211/nc1=3848621/nc2=3848640/nc3=3848525> 
 


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