Not In front Of The Children
Why The Oil Crisis Is Different This Time
www.btinternet.com/~nlpwessex/Documents/oilcrisisdifferent.htm
'This Is Not For The Press'
IEA Chief Economist
June 2004
"....the number of major new oil
fields discovered around the world fell to zero
for the first time in 2003, despite an obvious increase in technological expertise."
Is the world's oil running out fast?
BBC Online, 7 June 2004

Oil Discovery (3 year average - past and projected) 1930-2050
Source:
Association for the Study of Peak Oil
ASPO home page - click here
"We now consume six barrels of oil for
every new barrel we discover. Major oil finds (of over 500m barrels) peaked in 1964. In
2000, there were 13 such discoveries, in 2001 six, in 2002 two and in 2003 none."
Break out the bicycles
Guardian,
8 June 2004
| US Vice President Dick
Cheney And Pentagon Defence Policy Board Member James
Woolsey Were Two Of The Key Promoters Of The Invasion Of Iraq In 2003 So What Do They Have To Say About 'Peak Oil' ? |
2010 - Dick Cheney's Final Countdown To Peak Oil
"For
the world as a whole, oil companies are expected to keep finding and developing enough oil
to offset our seventy one million plus barrel a day of oil depletion, but also to meet new
demand. By some estimates there will be an average of two per cent annual growth in global
oil demand over the years ahead along with conservatively a three per cent natural decline
in production from existing reserves. That means by 2010 we will need on the order of an
additional fifty million barrels a day. So where
is the oil going to come from? Governments and the national oil companies are obviously in
control of about ninety per cent of the assets. Oil remains fundamentally a government business. While many regions of the world offer great oil opportunities, the Middle East with two thirds of the world's oil and
the lowest cost, is still where the prize ultimately lies, even though companies are anxious for greater access there, progress continues to be slow."
Dick Cheney, Chief Executive of Halliburton,
now Vice President of the United States
Speech at London
Institute of Petroleum, Autumn Lunch 1999
"Oil is unique in that it is so strategic
in nature. We are not talking about soapflakes or leisurewear here. Energy is truly
fundamental to the world's economy. The [1991] Gulf War was a reflection of that
reality."
Dick Cheney, Chief Executive of Halliburton,
now Vice President of the United States
Speech at London
Institute of Petroleum, Autumn Lunch 1999
2010 - James Woolsey's Final Countdown To Peak Oil
"Optimists about world oil reserves,
such as the Department of Energy, are getting increasingly lonely. The International
Energy Agency now says that world production outside the Middle Eastern Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries (opec) will peak in 1999 and world production overall will
peak between 2010 and 2020. This projection is supported by influential recent articles in
Science and Scientific American. Some knowledgeable academic and industry voices put the
date that world production will peak even soonerwithin the next five or six years.
The optimists who project large reserve quantities of over one trillion barrels tend to
base their numbers on one of three things: inclusion of heavy oil and tar sands, the
exploitation of which will entail huge economic and environmental costs; puffery by opec
nations lobbying for higher production quotas within the cartel; or assumptions about new
drilling technologies that may accelerate production but are unlikely to expand reserves.
Once production peaks, even though exhaustion of world reserves will still be many years
away, prices will begin to rise sharply. This trend will be exacerbated by increased
demand in the developing world....."
Richard G. Lugar and R. James Woolsey (Former Director of the
CIA)
The New Petroleum - Foreign Affairs January/February 1999
"Energy is vital to a country's
security and material well-being. A state unable to provide its people with adequate
energy supplies or desiring added leverage over other people often resorts to force.
Consider Saddam Hussein's 1990 invasion of Kuwait, driven by his desire to control more of
the world's oil reserves, and the international response to this threat. The underlying
goal of the U.N. force [in the 1991 Gulf war], which included 500,000 American troops, was
to ensure continued and unfettered access to petroleum...."
Richard G. Lugar and R. James Woolsey (Former Director
of the CIA)
The New Petroleum - Foreign Affairs January/February 1999
Not In front Of The Children
"But the age of cheap oil is
over. If you doubt this, take a look at the BBC's online report yesterday
of a conference run by the Association for the Study of Peak Oil. The reporter spoke to
the chief economist of the International Energy Agency, Fatih Birol. 'In public, Mr Birol denied that supply would not be able
to meet rising demand ... But after his speech he seemed to change his tune: 'For the time
being there is no spare capacity. But we expect demand to increase by the fourth quarter
by 3m barrels a day. If Saudi does not increase supply by 3m barrels a day by the end of
the year we will face, how can I say this, it will be very difficult. We will have
difficult times.' The reporter asked him whether such a growth in supply was possible, or
simply wishful thinking. 'You are from the press?' Birol replied. 'This is not for the press.' So the BBC
asked the other delegates what they thought of the prospects of a 30% increase in Saudi
production. 'The answers were unambiguous: 'absolutely out of the question'; 'completely
impossible'; and '3m barrels - never, not even 300,000'. One delegate laughed so hard he
had to support himself on a table.' And this was before they heard that two BBC
journalists had been gunned down in Riyadh. The world's problem is as follows. We now
consume six barrels of oil for every new barrel we discover. Major oil finds (of over 500m
barrels) peaked in 1964. In 2000, there were 13 such discoveries, in 2001 six, in 2002 two
and in 2003 none. Three major new projects will come onstream in 2007 and three in 2008.
For the following years, none have yet been scheduled."
Break out the bicycles
Guardian,
8 June 2004
Is the world's oil running out fast? - BBC report on 'Peak Oil' Conference - Berlin, June 2004
"Saddam Hussein sits and smiles
as the price of his oil - as well as that of his neighbors' (which, he doubtless believes,
he may again be able to seize) -- skyrockets, giving him more to spend on his military
forces, including longer range ballistic missiles and weapons of mass destruction. He can
be confident that within the next decade or two - the period during which most independent
assessments of reserves suggest that world petroleum production will begin to decline -
the world's sharply increasing demand for petroleum will increasingly have to be satisfied
by him and his neighbors, to their great profit.... Although all these serious
[economic, environmental and social] problems may at first seem unconnected, Mr. Chairman,
they in fact all have essentially the same cause - over-dependence by the rest of the
world on petroleum-derived products that will increasingly have to come from the very
troubled and unstable Middle East."
James Woolsey, former Director of the
CIA
Statement
to Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry, Unites States Senate, 11 April 2000
"... the mideast will
increasingly become the source of the world's oil, and this is a strategic problem for us
and for many other countries."
James Woolsey, Former Director of the CIA
Online Interview with the Council on Foreign Relations and
the Washington Post: June 7, 2000
James Woolsey - Ex-CIA Chief Predicted 'Peak' Oil Crisis In 1999 CFR Paper - 23 May 2004
"For the first time, spare
capacity is starting to become an issue. It means that Opec's real power is moving back to
the Middle East."
Julian Lee, of the Centre for
Global Energy Studies
London
Times, 25 May 2004
"Iraq can be seen as the
first battle of the fourth world war. After two hot world wars and one cold one that all
began and were centered in Europe, the fourth world war is going to be for the Middle
East."
Former Director of the CIA, James
Woolsey
NATO
conference, Prague, November 2002
"Opec, the 11-nation cartel of
oil exporting states, meets in Beirut this week and is expected to agree to boost
production levels by enough to make a 'psychological impact' in an attempt to bring prices
down. Chancellor Gordon Brown speaking for the G7 nations in New York last week
effectively begged for just such action."
Oil; It Powers the World's Economies ... But Unrest in Saudi Is
Fuelling Fears It Could Also Destroy

Where Is The Spare Capacity?
Opec Member Production
Click
Here to View Full Graphic (London Times)
"The oil price surged to new
heights yesterday as market speculators tested Saudi Arabia's ability to bring the
rampaging crude oil price under control.... Guy Caruso, head of the US Energy Information
Administration, predicted that US oil prices would remain high and expressed doubts that
the extra oil promised by Ali al-Naimi, the Saudi Oil Minister, would be enough to meet
burgeoning demand.... Julian Lee, of the Centre for Global Energy Studies, reckons that
extra oil from Saudi Arabia will have little impact on the acute petrol shortage in the
United States. 'It will take the best part of two months to get it to the US, to refine it
and get it to petrol pumps.'.... Mr Lee sees a shift in the balance of power. 'For the
first time, spare capacity is starting to become an issue. It means that Opec's real power
is moving back to the Middle East.'"
Crude
prices surge near to 21-year high
London
Times, 25 May 2004
"According to an April 29, 2002 report
in Britain's Guardian, ARAMCO
[Arab American Oil Company] constitutes 12% of the world's total oil production; a figure
which has certainly increased as other countries have progressed deeper into irreversible
decline. ARAMCO is the largest oil group in the world, a state-owned Saudi company in
partnership with four major US oil companies. Another one of Aramcos partners is
Chevron-Texaco which gave up one of its board members, Condoleezza Rice, when she became
the National Security Advisor to George Bush. All of ARAMCOs key decisions are made
by the Saudi royal family while US oil expertise, personnel and technology keeps the cash
coming in and the oil going out. ARAMCO operates, manages, and maintains virtually all
Saudi oil fields 25% of all the oil on the planet.... According to a New York Times
report on March 8th of this year, ARAMCO is planning to make a 25% investment in a new and
badly needed refinery to produce gasoline. The remaining 75% ownership of the refinery
will go to the only nation that is quickly becoming America's major world competitor for
ever-diminishing supplies of oil: China.... One of the most important intelligence prizes
today - especially after recent stories in major outlets like the New York Times reporting
that Saudi oil production has peaked and gone into irreversible decline - would be to know
of a certainty whether those reports are correct. The Saudis are denying it vehemently but
they are being strongly refuted by an increasing amount of hard data. The truth remains
unproven. But the mere possibility has set the world's financial markets on edge. Saudi
Oil Minister Ali Naimi came to Washington on April 27th to put out the fires. It was
imperative that he calm everybody's nerves as the markets were screaming, 'Say it ain't
so!' Naimi said emphatically that there was nothing to worry about concerning either Saudi
reserves or ARAMCO's ability to increase production. There was plenty of oil and no need
for concern. FTW covered and reported on that event. Writer and energy expert Julian
Darley noted that there were some very important ears in the room, listening very closely.
He also noted that Naimi's 'scientific' data and promises of large future discoveries did
not sit well many who are well versed in oil production and delivery. If anybody has the
real data on Saudi fields it is either ARAMCO or the highest levels of the Saudi royal
family. The answer to the Saudi peak question will determine whether Saudi Arabia really
can increase production quickly, as promised. If they can't, then the US economy is going
to suffer bitterly, and it is certain that the Saudi monarchy will collapse into
chaos....So far the Saudis haven't had to prove that they could increase production due to
convenient terror attacks at oil fields, and more 'debates' within OPEC. "
Coup D'Etat: The Real Reason Tenet
and Pavitt Resigned from the CIA on June 3rd and 4th
'From
The Wilderness Publications', 8 June 2004
Oil, God and Gold: The Story of Aramco and the Saudi Kings by Anthony Cave Brown - Click Here
"As Shell has demonstrated, we don't really know how much
oil is out there. If we can't trust Shell's accounting, what about the Saudis? OPEC's
reserve figures have long been suspected of being subject to political inflation. We may
not be sure how much is left but we do know we want to use more. Globally it is estimated
that the use of oil will rise by 50% in the next 20 years. Much of that extra demand will
come from India and China. Just as America seems to be moving against gas guzzlers, new
(sub) continents of consumers are coming on line."
On Wall Street:
Dominic Rushe: The only way is up for oil prices
London
Times, 23 May 2004
"The reserves scandal that
has been dogging Shell all year was back on centre stage yesterday as the company
downgraded its figures for the fourth time.....This brings the total of
reserves restated since the start of 2004 to 4.47bn barrels, and means the group's
replacement ratio last year was 63 per cent."
Shell Forced To Make Fourth Downgrade
Guardian, 25 May
2004
"In 1973, the year of the first oil price crisis, the omens
were never very auspicious. Donny Osmond was in the charts. The White House was mired in
Watergate. Israel was fighting the Arabs. And Edward Heath was fretting in Downing Street
as strikes beset the mines, railways and power stations. Against that background, Opec
flexed its muscles. Arab members, angry at western support for Israel in the Yom Kippur
war, imposed an embargo on supplies then pushed up prices. That November the Tory
government announced it was printing 16m petrol rationing books. The crisis was so serious
that senior figures in the US administration considered invading Saudi Arabia to secure
the oilfields. British intelligence chiefs, according to government records released only
last January, feared America would ask the UK to help. Sound worryingly familiar?"
Focus: Over a
barrel
London
Times, 23 May 2004
"Saudi [has] promised to boost its output to 9.1 million
barrels a day in an effort to stem record prices. The offer came just hours after the G7
group of rich states called for lower oil prices....Analysts have voiced fears that
Saudi's increase would be unable to meet surging global demand. ...The [OPEC] cartel -
which supplies about a third of the world's oil - targets daily output of 23.5 million
barrels per day, but members are already pumping out an extra two million barrels a day -
the equivalent of 2.5% of global demand. As a result, any Opec increase would largely be
met by Saudi Arabia as most other members now have very little spare capacity. Analysts
have also begun to fret that any additional oil will not hit the market in time, as the
Saudi plans require the introduction of new oilfields. Marshall Steeves, energy market
analyst at Refco, said: 'There is scepticism perhaps that the Saudis can increase
production as much as they claim'.... Other experts argued that any future increase by
Opec would simply be gobbled up by rising global demand - driven by a healthier US economy
and rapid growth in China."
Oil price soars despite Saudi vow
London, 24 May 2004
"In the 1970s and early 1980s, the oil shocks were caused by
the oil sheikhs. The first cut in production was motivated by the Arab reaction to defeat
in the war of Yom Kippur in 1973. Arab Opec cut its production to penalise the Western
countries for their support of Israel...... This year, for the first time, the oil shock,
though a milder one, has come from the demand rather than the supply side. Opec could
indeed produce the extra couple of a million barrels, and the non-Opec countries could
produce their extra barrels, but total world capacity is now uncomfortably close to
current demand. Extra investment and the exploitation of higher-cost oils can produce a
larger supply, but it would need both time and money. The G8 countries continue to consume
huge quantities of oil, but it is China which is the new factor..... China is becoming a
normal advanced industrial society, but an industrial society of more than one billion
people. The advanced industrial countries of the existing order, the G8 countries -
America, Britain, Japan, Germany, France, Italy, Canada and Russia - are about to be
joined by G9, China. In rough terms, China will have the population of all the old G8 put
together. China already uses nearly 30 per cent of world steel and 40 per cent of world
cement. How is China's demand for oil to be fitted into a limited world supply?
There are four sides to this balance of trade: money, oil, China and the US. The US runs a
$500 billion deficit with the rest of the world, financed by foreign borrowing,
particularly from Japan and China; this deficit is largely spent on importing cheap
manufactured goods from Asia, particularly from China; China uses the money paid by the
United States to buy the commodities, including oil, which are needed for Chinese
development.... this quadrilateral trade depends on the stability of each of its sides. In
itself, Chinese manufacturing growth is probably the most secure, but China depends on the
availability of commodities, particularly oil, and on the continued strength of US demand
for Chinese products. The US depends on oil, at a reasonable price, and on money. If the
Boston analysts prove correct, and oil prices and interest rates are destined to rise,
that will be a double threat to the American economy, a threat therefore to China, and
potentially to the structure of world trade. It is in Washington that the potential
fragility of the structure is seen most clearly because the Americans have to defend it.
In geopolitical terms, Washington is not willing to tolerate hostile governments in the
two largest Arab Opec countries, Saudi Arabia and Iraq...."
As China gets
motoring, will the pumps run dry?
London
Times, 24 May 2004
"The solution to America's dependence on foreign oil, and
especially on oil from the increasingly threatened Saudi royal family, does not lie in
anything the administration proposes. It lies, instead, in making imported oil more
expensive, thereby discouraging demand for it and encouraging the development of
alternative sources of supply and new technologies. But making imported oil still more
expensive is not considered as great a vote winner as encouraging fantasies about the SPR
(Democrats), pressing for more drilling in Alaska (Republicans), or relying on the Saudis
to keep their word about prices (the IEA). If Bush had the nerve to tax imports,
motorists' dollars would flow into America's treasury rather than those of Opec. But this
is just too sensible to be considered in an election year."
American
Account: Irwin Stelzer: Politicians go for fantasy not action as oil price soars
London
Times, 23 May 2004
London
Times - 26 January 2004 |
"The United States cannot afford
to wait for the next energy crisis to marshal its intellectual and industrial resources.... Our growing
dependence on increasingly scarce Middle Eastern oil is a fool's gamethere is no way
for the rest of the world to win. Our losses may come suddenly through war, steadily
through price increases, agonizingly through developing-nation poverty, relentlessly
through climate changeor through all of the above."
James Woolsey, US Director of Central Intelligence, 1993 - 1995
Bush II Administration Adviser and Envoy, 2001 - Present
James Woolsey - Ex-CIA Chief Predicted 'Peak' Oil Crisis In 1999 CFR Paper - 23 May 2004
"Our
industry can certainly be proud of its past achievements. Yet the challenges we will face
in the coming years will be every bit as great as those encountered in the past, due in
part to ever-increasing global energy use. For example, we estimate that world oil and gas
production from existing fields is declining at an average rate of about 4 to 6 percent a
year. To meet projected demand in 2015, the industry will have to add about 100 million
oil-equivalent barrels a day of new production. That's equal to about 80 percent of
today's production level. In other words, by 2015, we will need to
find, develop and produce a volume of new oil and gas that is equal to eight out of every
10 barrels being produced today."
John Thompson, President of
ExxonMobil, the world's largest oil company
The Lamp (published for ExxonMobil
shareholders), 2003, Vol. 85 No.1

Graph from
ExxonMobil report 4 February 2004, p4 (2004 marker added for illustration)
'A Report on Energy Trends, Greenhouse Gas
Emissions, and Alternative Energy'
GLOBAL
ENERGY CRISIS LOOMING
Click
Here
London Times - 26 January 2004 |
"We must not be prisoners of
our own time. The horrific terrorist attack in Bali, the attack on the French tanker off
Yemen the other week - these threats are coming at the world from all directions....And
you can't continue.... to just keep erecting security and defence barriers all around
you..... We have a way of life, a set of [energy] consumption patterns, that are going to
have to change - all of us. We have to recognise that without a major shift in the whole
way we organise ourselves, our pattern of life is simply not sustainable."
Peter Hain, UK Minister for Europe
Mid-East oil 'too costly' for Europe
BBC
Online, 17 Oct 2002
Alternative
Energy Technology |
'The yet to be used' - Storing renewable energy
NATURAL
LAW PARTY WESSEX
nlpwessex@btinternet.com
www.btinternet.com/~nlpwessex