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Bad News at the Pump: The Dangerous Implications of $100-Plus Oil

By Michael T. Klare, Tomdispatch.com. Posted March 15, 2008.


On March 3, the price of crude reached its highest ever. Are energy costs becoming the decisive factor in the balance of global economic power?
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On Monday March 3, the price of crude oil reached $103.95 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, surpassing the record set nearly 30 years ago during another moment of chaos in the Middle East. Will that new mark prove distinctive in the annals of world history or will it be forgotten as energy prices drop, just as they did following their April 1980 peak?





When oil costs are plotted over time, the 1980 oil crisis -- prompted by Ayatollah Khomeini's Iranian revolution -- stands out as a sharp spike on that price curve. Both before and after that moment, however, oil supplies proved largely sufficient to meet rising global demand, in part because the Saudis and other major producers were capable of compensating for declining Iranian production. They simply increased their output substantially, dumping a surplus of oil onto the global market. Aided by the development of new fields in Alaska and the North Sea, prices dropped precipitously and stayed low through the 1990s (except for a brief spike following the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in August 1990).



Nothing similar is likely to happen now. For the present surge in prices -- crude oil costs have risen by 74% over the past year -- no such easy solution is in sight. To begin with, we face not a sudden spike, but the results of a steady, relentless climb that began in 2002 and shows no signs of abating; nor can this rise be attributed to a single, chaos-causing factor in the energy business or in global politics. It is instead the product of multiple factors endemic to energy production and characteristic of the current era. There is no prospect of their vanishing any time soon.



Three factors, in particular, are responsible for the current surge: intensifying competition for oil between the older industrial powers and rising economic dynamos like China and India; the inability of the global energy industry to expand supplies to keep pace with growing demand; and intensifying instability in the major oil-producing areas.




A Tsunami of Energy Needs




The crucial role of the developing economic dynamos in Asia on the global energy market was already evident as this century dawned. With their phenomenal rates of growth, these countries must have more oil (and other forms of energy) to power their expanding industries, fuel their new cars and trucks, and satisfy the aspirations of their burgeoning middle classes. According to the U.S. Department of Energy (DoE), combined oil demand from China and India, already at 8.9 million barrels per day in 2004, is expected to hit 12.1 million barrels by 2010 and 15.5 million barrels by 2020. These are staggering rises. If you include anticipated consumption by Brazil, Mexico, South Korea, and other rapidly industrializing nations, demand from the developing world is truly expected to soar.



To this tsunami of new energy needs must be added an already high level of consumption by the mature industrial powers led by the United States, the European Union, and Japan. This shows little sign of lessening, which means we face an unprecedented surge in the total demand for oil. According to the DoE, combined world oil consumption, which reached 83.7 million barrels per day in 2006, is projected to hit 90.7 million barrels in 2010 and 103.7 million in 2020. We're talking about an increase of 20 million barrels per day in just 15 years. To achieve this would require a mammoth, unbelievably costly effort on the part of the world's giant oil companies (and their lenders and government backers), and even then it might not be possible.




American consumers, facing gas-pump hell, are, at the moment, being further punished by the fact that most global oil transactions are denominated in dollars. Given the declining value of the dollar relative to other currencies, we wind up paying more per barrel than competitors who can convert their euros, yen, or other strong currencies into dollars before bidding against us on the international energy market. Global investors, sensing the trend, are dumping the dollar for these other currencies or buying oil futures, only adding to the slide of the U.S. currency and the rising price of crude.



A Tough Oil World




Lurking behind soaring demand is another crisis entirely -- a crisis of production. The energy industry is now in the difficult process of transitioning from a world of easily tapped oil supplies to one in which mainly tough-oil options prevail. Those "easy-oil" supplies are the ones we've long been familiar with: the giant petroleum reservoirs in friendly, stable countries that provided most of the world's oil during the formative years of the Petroleum Age, stretching from the late nineteenth century until the Arab oil embargo of 1973.



These mammoth reservoirs include Ghawar in Saudi Arabia, Burgan in Kuwait, and Cantarell in Mexico -- monster fields that produce hundreds of thousands or even millions of barrels of crude per day. In the last quarter-century, however, discoveries of "elephant" fields like these have been almost nonexistent. The world is, as a result, becoming increasingly dependent on smaller fields, often in remote, unwelcoming locations that require far more expense to develop and bring online. This, too, is adding to the price of oil.



As an illustration of this trend, take Kashagan, a giant oil field discovered in 2000 in Kazakhstan's sector of the Caspian Sea. It represents the single largest discovery worldwide in the past 40 years. Although it does harbor significant reserves of oil and gas, the field poses staggering challenges to the international consortium of energy companies attempting to develop it. It contains, for example, high concentrations of poisonous hydrogen sulfide gas, which makes its development using conventional (and so cheaper) production technology impossible. Development costs to bring the field online have already soared from an estimated $57 billion to $135 billion with no end in sight. In the meantime, the projected date for the start-up of production at Kashagan has been continually pushed back. Once expected to come online in 2005, it's now slated for 2011 -- at the earliest. This, in turn, has led a frustrated Kazakh government to demand that the state-owned KazMunaiGaz energy company be given a larger stake in the field's operating consortium.





Most of the other big discoveries of recent years -- the "Jack" field in the deep waters of the Gulf of Mexico, the Doba field in Chad, fields off Russia's Sakhalin Island, and the Tupi field in the deep Atlantic off Brazil -- exhibit similar characteristics. They are either far offshore and difficult to develop or entail problematic relationships with unreliable governments -- or, worse yet, some combination of the two. You can essentially do the math yourself when it comes to the future cost of oil produced at such sites.



So here's the bad news at the pump: The inability of the global energy industry to keep pace with rising demand is only likely to become more pronounced as, in the years ahead, the world reaches maximum sustainable daily petroleum output and commences what just about all energy experts now agree will be an irreversible decline. No one can be sure when exactly this will occur, but a growing chorus of specialists believes that we are moving ever closer to that moment of "peak" oil output -- with some specialists placing it as soon as 2010-12.



Oil as a Conflict-producer




Finally, let's not forget that the equivalent of the Iranian Revolution of 1980 remains with us. The oil heartlands of the planet are increasingly in crisis and the price of oil is regularly driven up by that as well. Iraq, with the world's second largest reserves of petroleum, is convulsed by war. Nigeria, a major supplier to the United States and Europe, has experienced a significant reduction in output recently due to ethnic violence in the oil-rich Niger Delta region. Venezuela's production has fallen because many anti-Chvez oil technocrats have been purged from the state-owned oil monopoly PdVSA. Iran's output has suffered as a result of the economic sanctions imposed by the United States. Political violence, corruption, and state interference in the energy sector have also led to depressed output in Chad, Mexico, Russia, and Sudan.





At one time, the world's major oil producers could compensate for a downturn in output in any area by ramping up production from the "spare" (or reserve) capacity at their disposal. This was critical in 1990, following the Iraq invasion of Kuwait, and again in 2001, following the attacks of 9/11. Both times, Saudi Arabia simply upped production, adding hundreds of thousands of barrels per day in spare capacity, thereby averting a catastrophic energy crisis in the United States. But the Saudis and the other members of OPEC no longer possess significant spare capacity. They're pumping oil for all they're worth in order to benefit from the current surge in prices. Hence, any sudden loss of production in conflict-torn areas translates quickly into rising prices.



Can we expect the levels of conflict in oil-producing regions to subside sooner or later, bringing prices down? Unfortunately, this is a wholly unrealistic prospect because oil production itself increasingly acts as a goad to conflict. While extracting petroleum generates enormous wealth for privileged elites, it leaves others in many countries, usually of a different ethnic or religious identity, with few benefits from the resource in their midst. Take the Niger Delta area, where ethnic minorities continue to fight to obtain a larger share of oil revenues that historically have been monopolized by elites in the distant national capital, Abuja. The Kurds in Iraq have similarly been struggling to take control over the oil revenues generated by the giant fields in portions of that war-ravaged country they claim. This threatens to turn the oil-producing city of Kirkuk, in particular, into a future battleground.



While no one can predict just where the next conflicts will break out over the allocation of oil revenues or the control of valuable oil fields, it is safe to predict that such conflicts will remain an abiding, price-hiking feature of the global political landscape. Instability is now not only the norm, but spreading in these areas, and high oil prices are an inevitable corollary.





An Energy "Black Monday"




The bottom line: Oil prices are high today not, as in 1980, due to a temporary disruption in the global flow of petroleum but for systemic reasons that are, if anything, becoming more pronounced. This means news headlines with the phrase "record oil price" are likely to be commonplace for a long time to come. The only good news may lie in just how bad the news really is. Sooner or later, ever rising energy costs are likely to push the United States and other oil-consuming nations into deep recession, thus depressing demand and possibly beginning to bring energy prices down. But this is hardly a recipe for lower prices that anyone would voluntarily choose.



What, then, will be the lasting consequences of higher energy costs? For the ordinary American consumer the answer is simple, if grim: A diminished quality of life, as discretionary expenses disappear in the face of higher costs for transportation, home heating, and electricity, not to speak of basics like food (for which, from fertilizers to packaging, oil is a necessity). For the poor and elderly, the implications are dire: In some cases, it will undoubtedly mean choosing among heat in winter, adequate nutrition, and medicine.



Finally, there are the implications for the United States as a whole. Because the U.S. relies on petroleum for approximately 40% of its total energy supply, and because nearly two-thirds of its crude oil must be imported, this country will be forced to devote an ever-increasing share of its national wealth to energy imports. If oil remains at or above the $100 per barrel mark in 2008, and, as expected, the United States imports some 4.75 billion barrels of the stuff, the net outflow of dollars is likely to be in the range of $475 billion. This will constitute the largest single contribution to America's balance-of-payments deficit and will surely prove a major factor in the continuing erosion of the dollar.





The principal recipients of petro-dollars -- the major oil-producing states of the Persian Gulf, the former Soviet Union, and Latin America -- will undoubtedly use their accumulating wealth to purchase big chunks of prime American assets or, as in the case of Hugo Chvez of Venezuela or the Saudi princes, pursue political aims inconsistent with American foreign policy objectives. America's vaunted status as the world's "sole superpower" will prove increasingly ephemeral as new "petro-superpowers" -- a term coined by Senator Richard Lugar of Indiana -- come to dominate the geopolitical landscape.



So, while March 3 may have only briefly made the headlines here, it may well be remembered as the true "black Monday" of our new century, the moment when energy costs became the decisive factor in the balance of global economic power.



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Michael T. Klare, the author of Resource Wars (2001) and Blood and Oil (2004), is a professor of Peace and World Security Studies at Hampshire College in Amherst, Mass. His latest book, Rising Powers, Shrinking Planet: The New Geopolitics of Energy, will be published on April 15th by Metropolitan Books.

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Mission Accomplished
Posted by: vox persona on Mar 15, 2008 12:38 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Did anybody really think that 'electing' these cretins would yield anything but the coming catastrophe being brought on like an approaching hurricane or massive forest fire, by the idiotic policies of CheneyBu$hCo? They use the fear they could generate from 'lucky' attacks (totally preventable if they were listening to the CIA Director with his hair on fire, or if W didn't take the month off after that Presidential Daily Briefing warning 'Bin Laden Determined To Attack Inside U.S., or cared about the FBI warnings that suspicious types were taking flying lessons but not wanting to learn to land) to declare war on a tactic (terror), then launch a very real war on a country unrelated to 9/11, now to the tune of $5,000-6,000 per second since the war started, off budget and borrowed from the likes of China. Of course our dollar will spiral out of control, soon to be the lira of North America. Of course that will send oil prices spiraling upward, to get the same value from a barrel, they have to keep charging more and more as the dollar is worth less and less. Of course, only an idiot would not see the error of our fiscal policies.We wage war on borrowed money, while China holds enough of our paper to critically disrupt our economy by shifting our former money around. Thankfully, they are cognizant enough to realize that such a maneuver would not be in their interest....yet. We'd just better not tick them off. Talk about a leverage disadvatange. This is nothing short of a world-class historically unprecedented raping and plundering of our treasury in the most massive and full scale wealth transfer from taxpayers to war profiteers, corporate cronies, and the super-rich; where the only winners are jihadist recruiters, the military industrial complex, and iof course Iran. Oil reaches daily record highs while the dollar reaches daily record lows. Mission accomplished.

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» RE: Mission Accomplished Posted by: willymack
» RE: Mission Accomplished Posted by: QuestionAuthority
» RE: Mission Accomplished Posted by: democracynowiniraq
Peak Oil is Upon Us ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Mar 15, 2008 1:01 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Michael Klare knows this subject well. He was among the first to start covering the oil story.

Here is his article from October 21, 2004 : Crude Awakening

Crude Awakening

The fact is we are now going to face a challenge of epic proportions. The energy we get from oil is used to produce just about everything eat, drink or transport. The more expensive oil gets the more expensive just about everything gets.

The price increases will be major, life changing and brutal ... Of course the lower on the economic spectrum you are the worse it will be . There are no technological solutions that will come close to solving this oil price catastrophy.

As more and more income is devoted to food and fuel other sectors of the economy will be starved for customers and income causing rolling lay offs throughout the economy of ever greater proportion.
The banking system, already in trouble, will stagnate, and implode as loans go bad with ever more frequency while customers will increasingly be denied credit as the economy shrinks. There may be moments of more oil supply, but that will be due to economies around the world failing and falling into chaos.

What can we do ? Declare an energy emergency ! Immediately reduce all posted speed limits by 20%, and replace our internal combustion engines with plug in battery cars while upgrading the electric grid and preparing it for renewable energy to be plugged in ...

Anything less will be too little too late.

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» Actually space aliens are behind it Posted by: ReallyBearish
» Brilliant comment Posted by: joeunix
» OK Mr. Computer expert Posted by: ReallyBearish
the MDI Air car
Posted by: lenioui on Mar 15, 2008 4:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The air car in France sounds great...I've emailed them to please send information and have heard nothing back. The USA is not listed in their investor relations to expand their product line. Go figure.

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» RE: the MDI Air car Posted by: opmoc
» Off-subject, can't resist Posted by: 2dogarage
High oil prices are a needed signal to change our ways.
Posted by: stockpix on Mar 15, 2008 4:43 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Fossil fools! High oil prices may not drive the hummer out of existence since their owners already by buying one have clearly proved that they have way more money than sense. But it may persuade a growing percentage of Americans engaged in the I'm bigger therefore I'm safer completely irrational vehicle size wars to actually reduce their irrationally wasteful carbon footprint.

I find it mildly amusing that another article in today's alternet is titled "If We Want to Survive the Climate Crisis We Must Change".

I do not mean to dismiss the horrid iniquities of the oil economy in producing countries or the serious potential for more oil and food wars. But in this country high prices may well be the only cure for America's mainlining tanker and pipeline jonesing. I hope they stay high and that we wise up and tax the hell out of Exxon et. al. to funnel money into clean renewables before both Florida and Bangladesh are submerged.

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Preachin' to the choir- but no one I know wants to listen
Posted by: drabikmr on Mar 15, 2008 4:59 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mr. Klare is preaching to the choir here - at least for me. I'm trying to do what I can - ride the bus; walk and I use a motor scooter whenever I can. But where I live (the cartoon car town of Toledo, Ohio - makers of the famous Jeep Liberty, recently ranked one of the worst cars produced in America by Consumers Reports) hardly anyone is listening.

The city buses run mostly empty during the work week while thousands commute in from the suburbs - solo - in their SUV's, minivans, huge pickup-up trucks and even Hummers. The general mentality about the cost of gasoline is 'Gut is out, this is only temporary'.

Further most of people who ride the buses in Toledo are the economically marginalized - most of whom are black or hispanic, the disabled and those rendered carless for some reason (e.g. can't afford one, lost their license, etc. . .). To ride the bus here Toledo, then, is to be among the socially stigmatized.

Yet even many of these stigmatized bus riders dream of having their beautiful car. I know because I hear folks talking to each other when I ride the bus with them. They gripe about TARTA (i.e. the Toledo Area Regional Transit Authority) and wish they didn't have to use it.

The gripes are legit - the bus system in this rust belt town is fer shit: even during the morning and evening rush only two coaches are running per hour on any one route - and in the morning they're also packed with rowdy school kids because the Toledo Board of Education uses TARTA as a supplement to the school bus system. It's a real trip to ride at 6:45 AM - worker commuters like me often end up in the minority on the bus adding an additional concern - getting caught in the middle of a student melee over some silly childish behavior.

And the students are not any better off: none of these buses are marked prominently as carrying school children. Recently one child was hit after trying to cross the street after getting off a city bus used as school bus. The kids are told to be more careful, but kids will be kids. So, for those who can afford it - and usually that's the bourgeois middle class around here - cart their kids off to school as part of their morning commute - even if their children's school is in the opposite direction from their work destination (and that encourages 'lead-footing it' on the gas pedal to avoid being late for work causing even more gasoline to be burned, road rage indicents and traffic accidents).

So of course all of that discourages bus riding and energy conservation. What I believe is that the powers that be around here don't really want anyone riding the city buses at all. They want folks to buy cars - especially the gas guzzling Jeeps. So, I believe, TARTA soley really exists to satisfy the Feds so Toledo can get its road repair money with transportation for the socially stigmatized bus riders as only an afterthought.

I wish my fellow Toledoans, and indeed all Americans, would simply open their eyes and see. A few changes in behavior in terms of transportation would go a long way in helping to solve this crisis. But as is usual nothing is going to happen until the disaster is almost upon us and by that time it will be too late to blunt the deleterious effects of it.

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» RE: Stigma of using public transport Posted by: Romantic Violence
The elephant in the room is still health insurers
Posted by: B. Spoon on Mar 15, 2008 5:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Health insurers make oil barons and military-industrial giants look like chump changers. The Invasion of Iraq and the price of oil are huge problems, but when placed next to how much we're losing in human collateral and wasted health care dollars (101,000 easily preventable American deaths according to a recent study in Health Affairs, and $350 billion dollars of potential savings we spend but are diverted away from health care by insurers each year and rising ... that would be our collective savings AFTER all Americans are covered reliably and comprehensively from cradle to grave according to Physicians for a National Health Program)...the price of oil and gas doesn't look nearly so large.

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Population Reduction
Posted by: atheistcable on Mar 15, 2008 6:12 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's not easy to predict the future more than about five years. Yet Lester Brown of the World Watch Institute predicted in 1985 that by 2000 oil production would reach a plateau. In fact, the plateau was reached in 2006.
I should have waited until tomorrow before I entered this post, because I know already that no one--absolutely no one--would come close to mentioning the word "overpopulation." stockpix comes close by saying that we need to change--but he missed the mark otherwise.
My favorite phrase is "population reduction." And in view of the material lifestyles Americans lead, which I'm not overly critical of, it is Americans who need to learn to lead lives without children. No, not limit families to 2 kids, but to have no kids.
Most of us already know that this planet can support only 2 billion people--and be able to preserve a certain level of fish in the sea, clean water, our forests, etc., and be able to manage all the trash we produce. Consumption means production of waste. The United States can comfortably handle 175 million. Therefore, we need to think in terms of: population reduction, vasectomies, tubal ligations and abortions. I encourage abortions for whatever reason. There is no such thing as an abortion for a frivolous reason.
Unfortunately today, people who get married and decide not to have children, are put under considerable pressure by couples (married or not) who do have children. Children are very expensive.
I've known a number of couples, however, who decided not to have children and lead a good life of travel and were able to attend college and get higher degrees. This enriched their lives through education--which they would not have been able to do with having the responsibilities of children.
Two classes of people we should be celebrating: gay couples and straight couples without children.
And the other solution is already on the table: solar energy--much information can be found in Scientific American and New Scientist magazines.

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» RE: Population Reduction Posted by: EncinoM
» RE: Population Reduction Posted by: JSquercia
» RE: Population Reduction Posted by: EncinoM
» RE: Population Reduction Posted by: dmmaze6
» RE: Population Reduction Posted by: Romantic Violence
It is about population stupid!
Posted by: leemiller38 on Mar 15, 2008 6:27 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Peak oil is happening or about to happen, but population growth continues. In 1960 we were only 3 billion and now we are 6.5 billion. Our numbers increase by over 75 million per year. While some will have a chance to participate in the end of the fossil fuel era, many will starve as food will be used for auto fuel or there simply won't be enough food, as food prices soar along with oil. This on top of global warming from burning the stuff. What a future! We need leaders who are willing to address the overpopulation problem worldwide. Where are they? Cowereing where the conservative religions won't pick on them or where they won't be seen as controversial or are most politicians too stupid to know what's happening?

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Trains and Trolleys...Trains and Trolleys...Trains
Posted by: Centavo on Mar 15, 2008 6:58 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
..and trolleys...trains and trolleys...trains and trolleys... chugga chugga choo choo...chugga chugga choo choo...chugga chugga choo choo...chugga chugga choo choo...........

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» Forgotten Trolleys Posted by: Centavo
» RE: Trains and Trolleys...Trains and Trolleys...Trains Posted by: Fat Man at the Buffet Line
Working Top Down
Posted by: Gretchen360 on Mar 15, 2008 7:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My cousin was one of the pioneers in television manufacture. They built the first model to be the best. To make it cheaper for the consumer they removed parts until the set ceased to function.
Clearly, the auto manufacturers, the oil barons, the military industrial complex, the health insurers and the Federal Government do not function in the best interest of the country.
The current mess was at least 60 years in the making and the components are too entrenched to reform them.
Under current laws, we can declare the top leaders as enemy combatants for swift removal. Moving down the chain of command, we will find the managers who can function in a socially productive way.

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» RE: Working Top Down Posted by: donl51
The writing has been on the wall for forty years
Posted by: SENILEBIKER on Mar 15, 2008 7:10 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a student in the early 70's we often discussed a book called the limits to growth by the club of Rome. This book simply stated an obvious fact - in a finite resource situation ( the planet) and with exponentially growing consumption and population there would arrive a point where there would be inadequate resources to meet demand.

This is now called peak oil, but we will also run out of food, water and basic raw materials - metals.

Unlike America, Europe reacted, albeit half heartedly, by swuch measures as high gas taxes, subsidies for eco friendly building, forms of pollution taxes, and the result is that European cars consume only half of what US cars consume, and that the increase in the crude price is proportionally a lot less (European gas prices have increased 50% over 4 years, whilst US prices have increased 200% - some of the offset due to the falling dollar), and because of this Europe is withstanding the shock and not heading for recession.

The US energy providors have been solely motivated by their profits, the US politicians have been enamoured by the contributions from big oil and moter manufacturers and the US public has firmly stuck their heads in the sand like ostriches.

Welcome to reality US - you have no-one to blame but yourselves.

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Dead End
Posted by: Southern Gal on Mar 15, 2008 7:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our policies of making war on countries with energy resources in order to control those resources are not working. There is no way that we can continue to pump money and lives into the military industrial complex to seize resources to maintain our level of energy consumption. We are driving this country into obscene levels of debt to support this way of living. Perhaps the realities of the declining dollar and pain at the gas pump and heating oil suppliers will disturb the public enough that they demand action from our government. We can hope that the action demanded from the public is not further invasion of other countries. Our Democrat candidates are voicing the need to invest in alternative sources of energy and to instigate conservation policies. We can hope that this rhetoric will follow them into the White House and be acted upon. We certainly kow that with John McCain we will be facing unending war.

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Expensive Oil Will Help Bring About Welcome Changes to USA Foreign and Defense Policy
Posted by: sofla100 on Mar 15, 2008 8:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A silver lining with high oil prices, and its consequent disruption of the American economy, is that funding the Iraq war at $3 billion a week has become increasingly difficult. It will become increasingly harder and harder, with high oil and a collapsing US dollar, for the USA to maintain large military forces abroad and conduct wars. Countries with oil, like Venezuela and Russia, will rise in power and act to counter the USA as well. We can also expect Israel to lose some clout in the Middle East. But, the beneficial effects of this are multiple. First of all, the USA will have to think twice before engaging in unprovoked and foolish wars like Iraq. She will have to think twice about expanding NATO and putting missles in former Warsaw Pact countries. Hence, relations with Russia will improve. Also, in the Middle East, if Israel can be squeezed, the prospect for a genuine peace settlement with the Palestinians becomes much more probable. Finally, expensive oil will hurt the USA economy and her lower income people. This will be a bad thing and especially hard for them. But, perhaps it will also act to stop the USA from engaging in "free-trade," which solely benefits only her elite business owners at the expense of her citizens. So, having expensive oil has cons but certainly does have some positive benefits.

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CYA ...
Posted by: TarryFaster on Mar 15, 2008 8:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
w/USO.

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Poor Mr. Klare. He forgot to mention that the market is RIGGED first off.
Posted by: maxpayne on Mar 15, 2008 8:46 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Much as we all believe we're in a "free" market, the truth is the market is not free but RIGGED. Now Mr. Klare can keep putting the same old stuff he's been posting for the past decade but without mentioning what happened in the 1930s that got us where we are today, crying about the rising prices of oil and giving a pigshit lecture on "conservation" ain't gonna mean jack. It's like a professor trying to lecture a pig and in the process the pig gets bored while the professor gets annoyed.

Let's recap and connect the dots. When petroleum made its way into the market, the engines of the original cars were not designed to work with petroleum. They were in fact designed to work with plant oils especially hemp. As a matter of fact, manufacturing glass with plant oils such as hemp would make the glass harder to break, something you wouldn't find with the current glass. But Big Oil did not want a people's market to come to life. As a matter of fact, right after the Great Depression, Big Oil collaborated with Big Coal, Chemical, Cotton, Paper, Pharma, Tobacco, and the rest of the Big Business Interests and made sure that they could install puppets in the Congress. FDR, much as he had a lot of great things going, made the biggest mistake of signing the OBSCENE Marijuana Tax bill written up by the corporate interests. In addition, government made sure that oil, coal, and later nuclear were given special subsidies over renewable resources such as wind, solar, and geothermal. Ever wonder why your fucked up gubbmint refuses to subsidize solar, wind, and geothermal and yet they go out of their way to heavily subsidize Big Oil and Big Coal with Big Nuclear to come? You see, the currently RIGGED market is funded by gubbmint with your taxpayer money.

Until the Left learns to connect the dots and go on the offensive, it's going to be a lose-lose for the next 20 years and Michael Klare can keep sitting in his big fat couch giving boring articles which are no new news and offer nothing for us to fight for.

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kab
Posted by: KAB on Mar 15, 2008 8:59 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My father went to college in a small town 17 miles across farmland from where he lived. He made the daily commute by trolley. What happened to a nation that once relied on high efficiency mass transit? General Motors, that's what. In the 1920s GM decided to sell busses, which could not compete with trollies for efficiency or cost, soGM used it's near monopoly power to sell busses to transit systems well below cost to drive the now more expensive trolly car makers out of business. If I recall correctly, Los Angeles was GM's first target city, and looked how well it worked. Made a ton of money for GM.

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» RE: kab Posted by: EncinoM
Finally - we see true cost commodity pricing!
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Mar 15, 2008 9:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are some very positive implications of >$100 a barrel oil, actually.

But first: is peak oil for real? Well, if you look at U.S. oil corporations, they're all refitting refineries to deal with low-quality, heavy, sulfurous sour oil. We also see a push towards dirty tar sands and shale oil. We also see that oil companies are only able to increase their holdings by taking over other oil companies, not by exploration and discovery. We see Europe fretting over actual cutoffs of gas supplies. Cheap oil is over. End of a historical era. It's almost like the end of the Bronze Age - it's that significant.

Over and over, we've seen fossil fuel representatives tell us that renewable energy is not affordable or effective; that conservation is a bad idea, and that peak oil is not a reality. The U.S. public has been encouraged to buy gas guzzlers and the truly efficient vehicles aren't even imported into the U.S. Utility companies run ads about how green they are and why you should conserve, but any gaping idiot could tell you that they'd rather have customers paying $300 every month, rather than $100.

It's called demand stimulation, and it's a fundamental feature of the fossil fuel industry, and it's a consequence of the fact that for most of the 20th century there was an oversupply problem in the oil business: floods of new oil would destroy prices every few years, from 1900 onwards. This is no longer the case, but old habits die hard.

Most recently, late 1970s post oil-shock conservation efforts, followed by the North Sea and Alaskan oil booms, resulted in major price collapses in the 1980s. What lesson did the fossil fuel industry, from the Saudi producers to the Texas refiners, take from that?

It's obvious: conservation and renewable energy are serious threats to the financial interests of the established energy industries.

That's when the U.S. car companies developed the gas-guzzling SUVs, and all biofuel and solar and wind plans were shelved by the Department of Energy. The fairly meager renewable energy plans of the Carter Admin were flushed completely at that time - and Three Mile and Chernobyl killed any idea of nuclear power.

Despite all this political maneuvering, the fact is that if we had hit peak oil back in 1950, we'd already be running everything using sunlight and wind as the primary energy sources, backed up in different areas by locally useful sources: biofuels, geothermal, tidal, or nuclear energy.

For example, see Solar Thermal Power Could Supply Over 90 percent Of US Grid Plus Auto Fleet, 2008. That's just one example. With a good electricity grid and efficient technology (such as the Tesla Electric Car) you really can survive pleasantly without fossil fuels (or nuclear, really).

However, if that happened, the likes of Chevron and Exxon, their financial backers (from U.S. investment and commercial banks to the biggest U.S. pension funds) and the existing oil producing nations like Saudi Arabia and Venezuela would suddenly be staring at massive change.

Until the public gets government to stop backing fossil fuels interests over those of renewable energy, not much will change - and now that oil is at $100 a barrel, people will be motivated to get off their fossil fuel addictions.

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pricing in dollars is immaterial
Posted by: billwald on Mar 15, 2008 9:35 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gas prices are not high because crude is priced in dollars. If anything, just the opposite. Some (even) claim that Bush started the Iraq war because Saddam was planning to price his oil in euros.

The international money market balances the exchange rates so that the unit value of the major commodities is the same in every major port. In other words, if one buys oil at spot price in New York or London with the equivalent value in dollars or pounds one will receive the same quantity of crude.

Third, compare the hours worked to buy a gallon of gas back when it was 25 cents with the hours needed today and one will see that our $3.25 gas is cheaper.

Anyway, inflation caused by the war is driving the price of gas, not supply and demand.

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The speech that SHOULD (but won't) be made
Posted by: willymack on Mar 15, 2008 10:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hello; I'm Barack Obama/Hillary Clinton, and I want to be the next President of the United States. If anyone listening to this STILL thinks the bush years were good for our country, or that more of the same under Mccain would be good, then listening to me will be a waste of your time, and shame on you. What I'm proposing is nothing short of peaceful, but revolutionary change. If elected President, I will: 1. See to it that the criminals who stole the 2000 and 2004 elections, and who now occupy their respective offices ILLEGALLY are arrested and brought to trial for crimes too numerous to recite here and too heinous to ignore. 2.Enforce existing anti-trust laws, so that the illegal conglomerates which have a stranglehold on our once free press are broken up, and their owners subjected to legal action.3. Enact a government run, not-for-profit Universal Healthcare program for EVERYONE, without the participation of drug or insurance companies, who are put on notice that ANY resistance on their part, either overt or covert will be met with swift and sure legal action. 4. Take the steps necessary to convene a Constitutional Convention, with the full participation of the American people, the principle aims of which would be the elimination of the Electoral College, A Voter Rights Amendment, and a process whereby a vote of No Confidence may be used to remove an unfit President, Vice President, Cabinet member, or Supreme Court Justice, whether by Congress or referendum voted on by the American people. A Balanced Budget Amendment, and Equal Pay Amendment. 5. An immediate and COMLETE withdrawal of all military personnel from every theatre of war now extant, and a phased withdrawal from Japan, Korea, Germany, and any other country currently used as a military base or staging area. 6. Rollback of the egregious tax breaks given to the wealthiest 2% of our citizens, RETROACTIVE TO Jan 1, 2009. 7. A reduction of our military establishment to about one third its present size, which would be more than enough for home defense. There are but a few of the measures I plan to initiate upon my inauguration to the office of POTUS. The help and input of the American people are respectfully elicited and encouraged in this endeavor. We can, and should make a new beginning and re-unite our people as one again. Together, we can emerge from the nightmare of the past eight years into a hopeful and confident New Day. Thank you.

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» RE: i think kucinich DID make this speech... Posted by: democracynowiniraq
Jimmy Jersey
Posted by: Jimmy Jersey on Mar 15, 2008 10:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While geopolitical developments and looming problems with dwindling resources affect our gas prices, another key issue was not mentioned in this piece or the above comments, i.e. the immense profits being taken by the oil giants. Those record profits in the last quarter of 2007, e.g. Exxon Mobile's $9.92 billion and Royal Dutch Shell's $8.87 billion, represent extortion of the US consumer by an oligarchic trust, and are another close-to-home instance of "disaster capitalism."

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David McGowan Analysis Written 4 Years Ago Says It All
Posted by: opmoc on Mar 15, 2008 11:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He exposes in great detail the history leading up to where we are today and totally destroys the myths propagated by both the left and the right. Spend half an hour reading it - and you may discover what is really going on rather than what you have been led to believe.

linked text

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At This Time I'd Like To Give A Big, Fat "THANK YOU"....
Posted by: Animal on Mar 15, 2008 12:18 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
....To everyone who thought that keeping gays from marrying was more important than keeping our economy healthy and viable.

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Webster Tarpley on "Peak Oil" FRAUD.
Posted by: joeunix on Mar 15, 2008 3:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Webster Tarpley on "Peak Oil" FRAUD

Webster Tarpley is a graduate of Princeton University and author of George Bush--The Unauthorized Biography and 911--Synthetic Terror.

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thoughtcriminal, you are amazingly resistant to truth.
Posted by: AsteroidMiner on Mar 15, 2008 6:41 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A friend of mine from Oak Ridge National Laboratory wrote to
me: "The reactor that had the accident at Chernobyl was very out-
of-date (1st generation) design that has to be precisely controlled
to prevent cooling water from boiling. Water carries away heat
and moderates far better than bubbles, and as bubbles form in
water, the reactor goes increasingly unstable. What caused
Chernobyl to blow its top was residual water in the core suddenly
going to high pressure steam and erupting into a steam explosion.
Since the building top was simply resting by its weight on the
walls, not a containment vessel at all, the steam explosion burped
the top off its position allowing outside air in, subsequently
igniting a carbon fire." The United States and other Western
countries DO NOT now build and do not now posses or operate
ANY reactors of such primitive design. Nor do we allow
containment buildings to have easily removable tops.
Containment buildings in the Western hemisphere are required to
be pressure vessels.
The Chernobyl accident released only 200 tons of
radioactive material, as much as a coal-fired power plant would
release in 7 years and 5 months. The Chernobyl accident had a
shorter "stack" than coal-fired power plants. The radioactive
material was released in a short time at ground level. That is why
the Chernobyl accident had impact. The Three Mile Island
incident did NOT release a noticeable amount of radiation into its
neighborhood because it had a good containment building and
because it was a more modern design.
I have no information that would lead me to believe that
Chernobyl was a plutonium breeder. I think it was a power
reactor. The real point is that the Soviet Union didn't spend
money on R&D for nuclear safety. The US did. Over 60 years,
American reactors have become so safe it is ridiculous. We have
way overspent on nuclear reactor safety, driving up the cost of
electricity. Meanwhile, back at the ranch, coal fired electric
power plants kill 20,000 to 30,000 people per year in the US
according to Discover magazine. Reactors built in the US in
2008 are nothing like the very first reactor ever, built in the US in
1944. Soviet built reactors were just copies of the 1944 reactor.

PS: I don't remember the source, but I read within the last week
that 1 Million people in China die each year from air pollution.

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peak oil, peak food
Posted by: lukitas on Mar 15, 2008 7:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As crude is such a major part of our food economy, everything, flour, milk, eggs, meat, will become very dear soon. It is a good time to be a farmer.
A lot of people will find themselves priced out of a meal. A lot of people will die hungry.
If anything good ever comes from this, it will come from below, from the hungry. The bigwigs have proven time and time again they can't keep their hands out of the till. They've got Iraq by the jugular now, and they won't release it till every last drop of its oil has gushed out.
Humans are subversive monkeys. We like to challenge authority, we like to see it done. Add economic decline and even hunger to the recipe, and by golly, we could have a revolution on our hands. But it will only work from below. Somebody tries to get on top, most probably (s)he'll make a mess of it.

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If Peak Oil is real,
Posted by: kellysgarden on Mar 15, 2008 8:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If Peak Oil is real, we'd better start conserving now.

If Peak Oil is a hoax, we'd better start conserving now.

The reason it doesn't matter, is that the NWO seeks to control oil, in their attempt to keep controlling us.

The only way we can take the power out of the hands of the NWO is to conserve, so that this type of NWO control has less effect upon us.

The NWO's attempt to control oil by any means possible (illegal wars being the ultimate evil method to control this resource) should make any one of us suspect that either of two scenarios are true: 1) By controlling oil and supressing any other type of energy resources, the NWO will continue to control us. OR 2) oil is at peak production now, and so they'd better make their final moves to gain ultimate power over us now, in order to cement their hold of power over us.

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» RE: If Peak Oil is real, Posted by: donl51
peak oil will happen, mathematical certainty
Posted by: andy on Mar 15, 2008 10:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Peak oil, like every resource in life including population, will and has peaked. This is a mathematical phenomonon of our universe. however, noone knows when this will ever happen, NO-ONE!

The methods of estimating oil reserves are primitive at best, not to mention every country bullshitting their reserves so they can sell higher quotas.

All the oil companies know is that it gets harder and harder and requires more and more capital to extract the oil.

The fact is it WILL happen, but when it will happen is likely to be predicted by a homeless bum as much as a oil executive. Cos quite simply no one knows!

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Physchological Barrier Broken
Posted by: JSquercia on Mar 16, 2008 5:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The $100 a barrel price barrier was a kind of Physchological barrier but once it was broken
prices continued to rise rapidly . I believe oil closed at over $110 on Friday . It reminds me with the price of tickets for Broadway Shows once the $100 Ticket price was broken it has quickly escalated to $121 .
You have to love how Bush's Buddies the Saudi's reacted to his plea . The basically told him to go F himself . Of course George it's nothing Personal JUST BUSINESS .

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Must reads for folks who promote "Peak Oil" orthodoxy
Posted by: joeunix on Mar 16, 2008 9:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
» As I posted before... Posted by: ReallyBearish
» Listen, Jr., you're out of line Posted by: ReallyBearish
Great Article
Posted by: mwinmag300 on Mar 18, 2008 6:23 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a thoughtful and well thought out article. The idea of peak production being reached sometime in the near future is real and was predicted domestically in the past, when the US had vast oil reserves. Many of the super-rich oil fields in Saudi-Arabia and other regions are "making alot of water" these days.

It should be a primary focus of the US government to incentivise broad energy conservation efforts and investment in new technology. Unfortunately the focus lately has been corporate welfare and socialism.

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Extremely Far Reaching Implication
Posted by: LeaderofMen on Mar 23, 2008 6:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For everyone's edification, I've provided a listing of just SOME of the products we use that are derived from OIL. The cost of a barrel does not ONLY affect the pump price. It affects E.V.E.R.Y.T.H.I.N.G.

BushCo knows this. They know it extremely well. And... they don't give a rat's a**.



Clothing Ink
Heart Valves
Crayons
Parachutes
Telephones
Enamel
Transparent tape
Antiseptics
Vacuum bottles
Deodorant
Pantyhose
Rubbing Alcohol
Carpets
Epoxy paint
Oil filters
Upholstery
Hearing Aids
Car sound insulation
Cassettes
Motorcycle helmets
Pillows
Shower doors
Shoes
Refrigerator linings
Electrical tape
Safety glass
Awnings
Salad bowl
Rubber cement
Nylon rope
Ice buckets
Fertilizers
Hair coloring
Toilet seats
Denture adhesive
Loudspeakers
Movie film
Fishing boots
Candles
Water pipes
Car enamel
Shower curtains
Credit cards
Aspirin
Golf balls
Detergents
Sunglasses
Glue
Fishing rods
Linoleum
Plastic wood
Soft contact lenses
Trash bags
Hand lotion
Shampoo
Shaving cream
Footballs
Paint brushes
Balloons
Fan belts
Umbrellas
Paint Rollers
Luggage
Antifreeze


Model cars
Floor wax
Sports car bodies
Tires
Dishwashing liquids
Unbreakable dishes
Toothbrushes
Toothpaste
Combs
Tents
Hair curlers
Lipstick
Ice cube trays
Electric blankets
Tennis rackets
Drinking cups
House paint
Rollerskates wheels
Guitar strings
Ammonia
Eyeglasses
Ice chests
Life jackets
TV cabinets
Car battery cases
Insect repellent
Refrigerants
Typewriter ribbons
Cold cream
Glycerin
Plywood adhesive
Cameras
Anesthetics
Artificial turf
Artificial Limbs
Bandages
Dentures
Mops
Beach Umbrellas
Ballpoint pens
Boats
Nail polish
Golf bags
Caulking
Tape recorders
Curtains
Vitamin capsules
Dashboards
Putty
Percolators
Skis
Insecticides
Fishing lures
Perfumes
Shoe polish
Petroleum jelly
Faucet washers
Food preservatives
Antihistamines
Cortisone
Dyes
LP records
Solvents
Roofing

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