 The
undeclared oil war
Paul Roberts
June 28, 2004 - While some debate whether the war in Iraq was or was
not "about oil," another war, this one involving little but oil, has broken out
between two of the world's most powerful nations.
For months China and Japan have been locked in a diplomatic battle over
access to the big oil fields in Siberia. Japan, which depends entirely on imported oil, is
desperately lobbying Moscow for a 2,300-mile pipeline from Siberia to coastal Japan. But
fast-growing China, now the world's second-largest oil user, after the United States, sees
Russian oil as vital for its own "energy security" and is pushing for a
1,400-mile pipeline south to Daqing.
The petro-rivalry has become so intense that Japan has offered to
finance the $5 billion pipeline, invest $7 billion in development of Siberian oil fields
and throw in an additional $2 billion for Russian "social projects" -- this
despite the certainty that if Japan does win Russia's oil, relations between Tokyo and
Beijing may sink to their lowest, potentially most dangerous, levels since World War II.
Asia's undeclared oil war is but the latest reminder that in a global
economy dependent largely on a single fuel -- oil -- "energy security" means far
more than hardening refineries and pipelines against terrorist attack. At its most basic
level, energy security is the ability to keep the global machine humming -- that is, to
produce enough fuels and electricity at affordable prices that every nation can keep its
economy running, its people fed and its borders defended. A failure of energy security
means that the momentum of industrialization and modernity grinds to a halt. And by that
measure, we are failing.
In the United States and Europe, new demand for electricity is
outpacing the new supply of power and natural gas and raising the specter of more rolling
blackouts. In the "emerging" economies, such as Brazil, India and especially
China, energy demand is rising so fast it may double by 2020. And this only hints at the
energy crisis facing the developing world, where nearly 2 billion people -- a third of the
world's population -- have almost no access to electricity or liquid fuels and are thus
condemned to a medieval existence that breeds despair, resentment and, ultimately,
conflict.
In other words, we are on the cusp of a new kind of war -- between
those who have enough energy and those who do not but are increasingly willing to go out
and get it. While nations have always competed for oil, it seems more and more likely that
the race for a piece of the last big reserves of oil and natural gas will be the dominant
geopolitical theme of the 21st century.
Already we can see the outlines. China and Japan are scrapping over
Siberia. In the Caspian Sea region, European, Russian, Chinese and American governments
and oil companies are battling for a stake in the big oil fields of Kazakhstan and
Azerbaijan. In Africa, the United States is building a network of military bases and
diplomatic missions whose main goal is to protect American access to oilfields in volatile
places such as Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad and tiny Sao Tome -- and, as important, to deny
that access to China and other thirsty superpowers.
The diplomatic tussles only hint at what we'll see in the Middle East,
where most of the world's remaining oil lies. For all the talk of big new oil discoveries
in Russia and Africa -- and of how this gush of crude will "free" America and
other big importers from the machinations of OPEC -- the geological facts speak otherwise.
Even with the new Russian and African oil, worldwide oil production outside the Middle
East is barely keeping pace with demand.
In the run-up to the Iraq war, Russia and France clashed noisily with
the United States over whose companies would have access to the oil in post-Saddam Hussein
Iraq. Less well known is the way China has sought to build up its own oil alliances in the
Middle East -- often over Washington's objections. In 2000 Chinese oil officials visited
Iran, a country U.S. companies are forbidden to deal with; China also has a major interest
in Iraqi oil.
But China's most controversial oil overture has been made to a country
America once regarded as its most trusted oil ally: Saudi Arabia. In recent years, Beijing
has been lobbying Riyadh for access to Saudi reserves, the largest in the world. In
return, the Chinese have offered the Saudis a foothold in what will be the world's biggest
energy market -- and, as a bonus, have thrown in offers of sophisticated Chinese weaponry,
including ballistic missiles and other hardware, that the United States and Europe have
refused to sell to the Saudis.
Granted, the United States, with its vast economic and military power,
would probably win any direct "hot" war for oil. The far more worrisome scenario
is that an escalating rivalry among other big consumers will spark new conflicts --
conflicts that might require U.S. intervention and could easily destabilize the world
economy upon which American power ultimately rests.
As demand for oil becomes sharper, as global oil production continues
to lag (and as producers such as Saudi Arabia and Nigeria grow more unstable) the struggle
to maintain access to adequate energy supplies, always a critical mission for any nation,
will become even more challenging and uncertain and take up even more resources and
political attention.
This escalation will not only drive up the risk of conflict but will
make it harder for governments to focus on long-term energy challenges, such as avoiding
climate change, developing alternative fuels and alleviating Third World energy poverty --
challenges that are themselves critical to long-term energy security but which,
ironically, will be seen as distracting from the current campaign to keep the oil flowing.
This, ultimately, is the real energy-security dilemma. The more obvious
it becomes that an oil-dominated energy economy is inherently insecure, the harder it
becomes to move on to something beyond oil.
Paul Roberts is the author of "The End of Oil: On the Edge of a
Perilous New World."
http://www.washingtonpost.com
“The Washington Post”, June 28, 2004
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