http://www.freezerbox.com/archive/article.asp?id=55
:
Caspian Oil and New Energy Politics
BY DANIEL SHERMAN
ENVIRONMENT | 5.25.2000

The Caspian Sea region has long been considered by many to be the 
next oil and gas frontier. This week confirmed that speculation when 
it was reported that a consortium of Western oil companies had found 
a vast petroleum reserve in the northern Caspian Sea off the coast of 
Kazakhstan. It may very well be the largest oil discovery of the past 
20 years. This find follows the Clinton administration's two-year 
promotion for the building of a $2.4 billion, 1,080-mile Baku-Ceyhan 
pipeline to transport the growing volumes of Caspian oil to European 
markets.

The Caspian Sea region's sizable and untapped resources, combined 
with its unique political status following the breakup of the former 
Soviet Union, catapulted the area into the media limelight and to the 
center of policy debates a few years back. Oil politics in the region 
is a post-Cold War geopolitical game between an emboldened Washington 
and a weakened Moscow over the control of strategic and lucrative oil 
pipelines.

The stakes are high. Today a modest producer, the Caucasus region 
could become a significant suppler of oil to world markets, which 
would help meet rising energy demands. The drive by U.S. oil 
companies to exploit these resources has produced a political 
realignment of historic proportions, including an unprecedented 
American presence in a region dominated by Russia since the 19th 
Century. The breakup of the Soviet Union created a power vacuum that 
unleashed a number of new rivalries and alignments that have been 
seized upon and successfully manipulated by the U.S. alone. The 
regiont remains a flash point for conflict and chaos and poses risks 
and policy dilemmas that will only intensify with the completion of 
the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline.

The U.S. has thus kept an eye on the stability of the region's 
governments, encouraging the 'nation-building process.' The region 
remains a potentially volatile area riven with instability, poverty, 
ethnic conflict, armed separatist movements, and an intense rivalry 
between Russia and Iran. The Caspian countries welcomed American oil 
giants and eventually the U.S. as a way to secure its financial and 
political independence. Ethnic tensions, such as those between 
Armenia and Azerbaijan, continue to simmer beneath a surface of 
slowly developing national identities that threaten not only control 
of the western oil export route, but also the stability of the entire 
region.

Western oil companies have been coveting these reserves for the last 
decade, often lobbying the US government to take on a larger role. 
The Chicago-based Amoco Corp. has played a significant role in 
pushing the U.S. closer to Azerbaijan, and reflects the growing 
political complexity involving oil companies and governments vying 
for a piece of the pie. Many American oil firms view a pipeline 
running south to Iran as the cheapest and fastest exit route for 
Caspian oil, but Clinton has maintained the U.S. policy of isolating 
the Islamic state.

The U.S., despite its nation-building rhetoric, is clearly involved 
for energy security reasons. If it takes democracy to ensure this 
region remains stable, so be it. While roughly half of our needs are 
met with imports (much from the Persian Gulf), there has been a 
fundamental shift in our reliance on Middle East oil. The fact 
remains that the stability of the world economy will continue to rely 
on the steady flow of reasonably priced oil from the Persian Gulf, 
but the availability of vast oil reserves has diverted attention 
elsewhere for the time being. The tie that binds the U.S. closer to 
the Caspian region is likely to tighten because there are at present 
few alternatives.

While finding new reserves is important and newsworthy, it 
underscores a larger problem facing the country whose prosperity was 
built upon and remains largely dependent on the availability of cheap 
oil. With reserves running low worldwide, this find is significant. 
Unfortunately, it will likely push back efforts to find much needed 
alternative energy sources for the future. More emphasis is placed on 
finding new pockets and protecting these regions (our national 
security they tell us) than creating viable solutions to a 
multi-trillion dollar problem.

Gas prices surge and we get unnerved, but this is merely a warning of 
things to come. This winter the global price of crude tripled while 
production levels were steady. Imagine what will happen when 
production begins to fall. While it could be decades before we run 
out of oil, we will run out of cheap oil sooner rather than later. 
When that happens and prices rise permanently, it will hit even 
harder than the temporary oil crunch of the 1970s (which contributed 
to decade-long stagflation).

This is why we must put our technological knowledge to work 
developing advanced energy alternatives. Research into new forms of 
energy will be the dot com phenomenon of the 21st century. We either 
start investing in new energy forms now or else face the consequences 
later. Can you say oil-induced recession?



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