Washington Post
 
 
Oil’s new world order
By Daniel Yergin., Published:  October 28
For more than five decades, the world’s oil map has centered on  the Middle 
East. No matter what new energy resources were discovered and  developed 
elsewhere, virtually all forecasts indicated that U.S. reliance on  Mideast 
oil supplies was destined to grow. This seemingly irreversible reality  has 
shaped not only U.S. energy policy and economic policy, but also geopolitics  
and the entire global economy. 
But today, what appeared irreversible is being reversed. The outline of a 
new  world oil map is emerging, and it is centered not on the Middle East but 
on the  Western Hemisphere. The new energy axis runs from Alberta, Canada, 
down through  North Dakota and South Texas, past a major new discovery off 
the coast of French  Guyana to huge offshore oil deposits _found  near 
Brazil_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/12/06/AR2009120602442.html)
 . 
This shift carries great significance for the supply and the politics of  
world oil. And, for all the debates and speeches about energy independence  
throughout the years, the transformation is happening not as part of some 
grand  design or major policy effort, but almost accidentally. This shift was 
not  planned — it is a product of a series of unrelated initiatives and 
technological  breakthroughs that, together, are taking on a decidedly 
hemispheric cast. 
The search for a “hemispheric energy policy” for the United States has 
been a  subject of discussion ever since the oil crises and supply disruptions 
of the  1970s. Yet it was never easy to pin down exactly what such a policy 
would mean.  Some years ago, an economic adviser to a presidential candidate 
dropped in to  see me, explaining the directive that his boss had given 
him: “You know that  Western hemispheric energy policy that I have been giving 
speeches about? Could  you talk to some people around the country and find 
out what I actually mean by  a Western hemispheric energy policy?” 
The notion of “hemispheric energy” in the 1970s and 1980s rested on two  
pillars. One was Venezuela, which had been a reliable petroleum exporter 
since  World War II. The other was Mexico, caught up in a great oil boom that 
had  transformed the United States’ southern neighbor from an oil importer 
into a  major exporter. 
But since Hugo Chavez took power in Venezuela, its petroleum output has  
fallen — about 25 percent since 2000. Moreover, Venezuela does not seem quite  
the pillar to rely on when its leader denounces _“the  U.S. empire”_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/19/AR2007111900400.h
tml)  as “the biggest menace on our planet” and aligns his country  with 
Iran. And Mexico, which depends on oil for 35 percent of its government  
revenue, is struggling with declining output. Without reform to its oil sector  
and international investment, it could become an importer of oil later this  
decade. 
The new hemispheric outlook is based on resources that were not seriously 
in  play until recent years — all of them made possible by technological  
breakthroughs and advances. They are _“oil  sands”_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/graphic/2011/01/23/GR2011012304424.html)
  in Canada, “
pre-salt” deposits in Brazil and “tight oil” in the  United States. 
In little more than a decade, Canada’s oil sands have gone from being a  
fringe resource to a major one. Oil sands (sometimes known as “tar sands”) 
are  composed of very heavy oil mixed with clay and sand. The oil is so heavy 
and  molasses-like that, for the most part, it does not flow until it is 
separated  from the sand and clay and treated. To do that on a large scale and 
on a  commercial basis has required substantial advances in engineering over 
the past  15 years. 
Oil sands production in Canada today is 1.5 million barrels per day — more  
oil than Libya exported before _its  civil war_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/gaddafis-home-town-overrun-conflicting-reports-on-his-f
ate/2011/10/20/gIQAMwTB0L_story.html?hpid=z1) . Canadian oil sands output 
could double to 3 million barrels per  day by the beginning of the next 
decade. This increase, along with its other oil  output, would make Canada a 
larger oil producer than Iran — becoming the world’s  fifth largest, behind 
Russia, Saudi Arabia, the United States and China. 
The oil sands have become particularly controversial because of 
environmental  groups’ _vigorous  opposition_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/keystone-xl-pipeline-protest/2011/10/07/gIQAD4G7TL_gallery.html
#photo=1)  to the proposed _1,700-mile  Keystone XL pipeline_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/democratic-lawmakers-pressure-obama
-administration-on-both-sides-of-keystone-pipeline-issue/2011/10/19/gIQAJ8kV
yL_story.html) , which would carry oil from Alberta to the Texas coast.  
The pipeline is waiting for the Obama administration to say “yea” or “nay.”  
Though large, it would increase the length of the oil pipeline network in 
the  United States by just 1 percent. 
The main reason given for the opposition is the carbon dioxide associated  
with oil sands production, but the impact of this should be considered in 
the  context of the overall release of CO2. When measured all the way from “
well to  wheels” — that is, from production to what comes out of an auto 
tailpipe — oil  sands average 5 to 15 percent more carbon dioxide than the 
average barrel of oil  used in the United States. And this country uses other 
streams of oil that  generate CO2 in the same range. 
Even while the environmental argument rages, oil sands are proving to be a  
major contributor to energy security. Although it is easy to assume that 
most  U.S. oil imports come from the Middle East, the largest individual share 
by far  — nearly a quarter of the total — comes from Canada, part of a 
dense network of  economic ties that makes Canada the United States’ largest 
trading partner. More  than half of Canada’s oil exports to the United States 
come from oil sands, and  that share will rise steeply in the years ahead. 
At the other end of that hemispheric oil axis is Brazil. When Brazil began 
to  develop ethanol from sugar in the 1970s, it did so based on the 
conviction that  the country had no oil. As it turns out, Brazil has lots of 
oil. 
Just the  increase in Brazilian oil production since 2000 is more than  one 
and a half times greater than the country’s entire  ethanol output.  
In the middle of the last decade, new breakthroughs in technology made  
possible the identification and development of huge oil resources off the  
southern coast of Brazil that until then had been hidden below a belt of salt a 
 
mile thick. The salt had rendered unreadable the seismic signals necessary 
to  determine whether oil was there. “The breakthrough was pure mathematics,”
 said  Jose Sergio Gabrielli de Azevedo, the president of Petrobras, Brazil’
s national  oil company. “We developed the algorithms that enabled us to 
take out the  disturbances and look right through the salt layer.” Once 
discovered, further  technical advances were required to cope with the 
peculiarities of the salt  layer, which, sludge-like, keeps shifting. 
Developing these “pre-salt” resources, as they’ve become known, is a big  
technical, political and logistical challenge for Brazil, and will require 
huge  investments. But, if development proceeds at a reasonable pace, Brazil 
could be  producing 5 million barrels of oil per day by around 2020, about 
twice  Venezuela’s current output — and more than half the current output of 
Saudi  Arabia. That would make Brazil, not Venezuela, the powerhouse of 
Latin American  oil, and could make it a major exporter to the United States. 
The third major supply development has emerged right here in the United  
States: the application of shale-gas technology — horizontal drilling and  
hydraulic fracturing, a process popularly known as “fracking” — to the  
extraction of oil from dense rock. The rock is so hard that, without those  
technologies, the oil would not flow. That is why it is called “tight oil.” 
Case study No. 1 is in North Dakota, where, just eight years ago, a rock  
formation known as the Bakken, a couple of miles underground, was producing a 
 measly 10,000 barrels of oil per day. Today, it yields almost half a 
million  barrels per day, turning North Dakota into the fourth-largest 
oil-producing  state in the country, as well as the state with the lowest 
unemployment 
 rate. 
Similar development is taking place in other parts of the country, 
including  South Texas and West Texas. Altogether, tight oil production is 
growing 
very  fast. The total output in the United States was just 200,000 barrels 
per day in  2000. Around 2020, it could reach 3 million barrels per day — a 
third of the  total U.S. oil production. (And that is a conservative estimate; 
others are much  higher.) 
Together, these three developments will radically alter the global flow of  
oil. The Western Hemisphere will still require supplies from the rest of 
the  world, but not to the same degree — and certainly nowhere near the 
growing  amounts forecast just a few years ago. The need could fall by as much 
as 
half by  2020, which will mean declining imports from the Middle East and 
West  Africa. 
Oil that would have gone west from those regions will instead flow in  
increasing volumes to the east — to the booming emerging markets of Asia. And  
those markets will be in urgent need of additional supplies. China, which 
today  consumes half as much oil as the United States, could by the beginning 
of the  next decade overtake America as the world’s largest oil consumer. All 
of this  points to a major geopolitical shift, with Asian economies having 
an increasing  stake in the stability of Mideast oil supplies. It also 
raises a very  significant question over the next several years: How will 
responsibility be  shared among the great powers for the stability of the 
Persian 
Gulf?  
For the United States, these new sources of supply add to energy security 
in  ways that were not anticipated. There is only one world oil market, so 
the  United States — like other countries — will still be vulnerable to 
disruptions,  and the sheer size of the oil resources in the Persian Gulf will 
continue to  make the region strategically important for the world economy. 
But the new  sources closer to home will make our supply system more 
resilient. For the  Western Hemisphere, the shift means that more oil will flow 
north 
to south and  south to north, rather than east to west. All this 
demonstrates how innovation  is redrawing the map of world oil — and remaking 
our 
energy  future

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