|
Iraq
and
the
Problem
of
Peak
Oil
by
F.
William
Engdahl Current
Concerns,
No
1,
2004
6
August
2004
The
URL
of
this
article
is:
http://globalresearch.ca/articles/ENG408A.html
Today,
much
of
the
world
is
convinced
the
Bush
Administration
did
not
wage
war
against
Iraq
and
Saddam
Hussein
because
of
threat
from
weapons
of
mass
destruction,
nor
from
terror
dangers.
Still
a
puzzle,
however,
is
why
Washington
would
risk
so
much
in
terms
of
relations
with
its
allies
and
the
entire
world,
to
occupy
Iraq.
There
is
compelling
evidence
that
oil
and
geopolitics
lie
at
the
heart
of
the
still-hidden
reasons
for
the
military
action
in
Iraq. It
is
increasingly
clear
that
the
US
occupation
of
Iraq
is
about
control
of
global
oil
resources.
Control,
however,
in
a
situation
where
world
oil
supplies
are
far
more
limited
than
most
of
the
world
has
been
led
to
believe.
If
the
following
is
accurate,
the
Iraq
war
is
but
the
first
in
a
major
battle
over
global
energy
resources,
a
battle
which
will
be
more
intense
than
any
oil
war
to
date.
The
stakes
are
highest.
It
is
about
fixing
who
will
get
how
much
oil
for
their
economy
at
what
price
and
who
not.
Never
has
such
a
choke-hold
on
the
world
economy
been
in
the
hands
of
one
power.
After
occupation
of
Iraq
it
appears
it
is. The
era
of
cheap,
abundant
oil,
which
has
supported
world
economic
growth
for
more
than
three
quarters
of
a
century,
is
most
probably
at
or
past
its
absolute
peak,
according
to
leading
independent
oil
geologists.
If
this
analysis
is
accurate,
the
economic
and
social
consequences
will
be
staggering.
This
reality
is
being
hidden
from
general
discussion
by
the
oil
multinationals
and
major
government
agencies,
above
all
by
the
United
States
government.
Oil
companies
have
a
vested
interest
in
hiding
the
truth
in
order
to
keep
the
price
of
getting
new
oil
as
low
as
possible.
The
US
government
has
a
strategic
interest
in
keeping
the
rest
of
the
world
from
realising
how
critical
the
problem
has
become. According
to
the
best
estimates
of
a
number
of
respected
international
geologists,
including
the
French
Petroleum
Institute,
Colorado
School
of
Mines,
Uppsala
University
and
Petroconsultants
in
Geneva,
the
world
will
likely
feel
the
impact
of
the
peaking
of
most
of
the
present
large
oil
fields
and
the
dramatic
fall
in
supply
by
the
end
of
this
decade,
2010,
or
possibly
even
several
years
sooner.
At
that
point,
the
world
economy
will
face
shocks
which
will
make
the
oil
price
rises
of
the
1970"s
pale
by
contrast.
In
other
words,
we
face
a
major
global
energy
shortage
for
the
prime
fuel
of
our
entire
economy
within
about
seven
years. Peak
oil The
problem
in
oil
production
is
not
how
much
reserves
are
underground.
There
the
numbers
are
more
encouraging.
The
problem
comes
when
large
oilfields
such
as
Prudhoe
Bay
Alaska
or
the
fields
of
the
North
Sea
pass
their
peak
output.
Much
like
a
bell
curve,
oil
fields
rise
to
a
maximum
output
or
peak.
The
peak
is
the
point
when
half
the
oil
has
been
extracted.
In
terms
of
reserves
remaining
it
may
seem
there
is
still
ample
oil.
But
it
is
not
as
rosy
as
it
seems.
The
oil
production
may
hold
at
the
peak
output
for
a
number
of
years
before
beginning
a
slow
decline.
Once
the
peak
is
past
however,
the
decline
can
become
very
rapid.
Past
the
peak,
there
is
still
oil,
but
each
barrel
becomes
more
difficult
to
exploit,
and
more
costly,
as
internal
well
pressures
decline
or
other
problems
make
recovery
more
expensive
for
each
barrel.
The
oil
is
there
but
not
at
all
easy
to
extract.
The
cost
of
each
barrel
past
peak
is
increasingly
higher
as
artificial
means
are
employed
to
extract
it.
After
a
certain
point
it
becomes
uneconomical
to
continue
to
try
to
extract
this
peak
oil. Because
most
oil
companies
and
agencies
such
as
the
US
Department
of
Energy
speak
not
of
peak
oil,
but
of
total
reserves,
the
world
has
a
false
sense
of
energy
supply
security.
The
truth
is
anything
but
secure. Case
studies Some
recent
cases
make
the
point.
In
1991
the
largest
discovery
in
the
Western
Hemisphere
since
the
1970"s,
was
found
at
Cruz
Beana
in
Columbia.
But
its
production
went
from
500,000
barrels
a
day
to
200,000
barrels
in
2002.
In
the
mid-1980"s
the
Forty
Field
in
North
Sea
produced
500,000
barrels
a
day.
Today
it
yields
50,000
barrels.
One
of
the
largest
discoveries
of
the
past
40
years,
Prudhoe
Bay,
produced
some
1.5
million
barrels
a
day
for
almost
12
years.
In
1989
it
peaked,
and
today
gives
only
350,000
barrels
daily.
The
giant
Russian
Samotlor
field
produced
a
peak
of
3,500,000
barrels
a
day.
It
has
now
dropped
to
325,000
a
day.
In
each
of
these
fields,
production
has
been
kept
up
by
spending
more
and
more
to
inject
gas
or
water
to
maintain
field
pressures,
or
other
means
to
pump
the
quantity
of
oil.
The
world"s
largest
oil
field,
Ghawar
in
Saudi
Arabia,
produces
near
60%
of
all
Saudi
oil,
some
4.5
million
barrels
per
day.
To
achieve
this,
geologists
report
that
the
Saudis
must
inject
7
million
barrels
a
day
of
salt
water
to
keep
up
oil
well
pressure,
an
alarming
signal
of
near
collapse
of
output
in
the
world"s
largest
oil
kingdom. The
growing
problem
of
peak
oil
has
been
known
among
oil
industry
insiders
since
the
mid-1990"s.
In
1995,
the
leading
oil
consulting
firm,
Petroconsultants
in
Geneva,
published
a
global
study,
"The
World
Oil
Supply."
The
report
cost
$35,000,
written
for
the
oil
industry.
Its
author
was
petroleum
geologist,
Dr.
Colin
Campbell.
In
1999
Campbell
testified
to
the
British
House
of
Commons,
"Discovery
of
(new
oil
reserves)
peaked
in
the
1960"s.
We
now
find
one
barrel
for
every
four
we
consume
..." No
new
giant
discoveries After
OPEC
raised
oil
prices
in
the
1970"s,
non-OPEC
oil
projects
began
to
be
profitable
in
the
North
Sea,
Alaska,
Venezuela
and
other
places.
Oil
production
increased
markedly.
At
the
same
time,
in
response
to
the
higher
oil
price,
many
industrial
countries
like
France,
Germany
USA,
Japan
dramatically
increased
the
energy
from
nuclear
power
plants.
The
combination
gave
the
illusion
that
the
oil
problem
had
vanished.
It
has
not,
far
from
it. If
in
fact
many
of
today"s
major
sources
of
oil
have
peaked,
and
are
about
to
fall
off
drastically,
and
at
the
same
time,
if
world
energy
demand
continues
to
grow,
and
not
enough
oil
is
found
even
to
replace
existing
depletion,
the
global
economy
faces
a
crisis
of
staggering
dimension.
This
would
also
begin
to
explain
the
shift
of
US
foreign
policy
in
the
direction
of
a
crude
neo-imperial
military
presence
globally,
from
Kosovo
to
Afghanistan,
from
West
Africa
to
Baghdad
and
beyond. Obviously,
the
easiest,
most
economical
solution
is
to
find
new
giant
or
super
giant
oilfields
where
large
volumes
of
oil
can
be
extracted
and
brought
to
world
markets
at
low
cost.
That
is
just
what
is
not
the
case
today.
According
to
a
recent
report
from
the
Colorado
School
of
Mines,
"The
World"s
Giant
Oilfields,"
the
world"s
"120
largest
oilfields
produce
close
to
33
million
barrels
a
day,
almost
50%
of
the
world"s
crude
oil
supply.
The
fourteen
largest
account
for
over
20%.
The
average
age
of
these
14
largest
fields
is
43.5
years."
1 The
above
study
concludes
that
"most
of
the
world"s
true
giants
were
found
decades
ago."
Over
the
past
20
years
despite
investment
of
hundreds
of
billions
dollars
by
major
oil
companies,
results
have
been
alarmingly
disappointing. The
world"s
major
oil
companies
-
Exxon-Mobil,
Shell,
ChevronTexaco,
BP,
ElfTotal
and
others
-
have
invested
hundreds
of
billions
of
dollars
in
finding
enough
oil
to
replace
the
existing
oil
supply
sources.
Between
1996
and
1999,
some
145
companies
spent
$410
billion
to
find
enough
oil
only
to
keep
their
daily
production
stable
at
30
million
barrels
a
day.
From
1999
to
2002,
the
five
largest
companies
spent
another
$150
billion
and
their
production
grew
only
from
16
million
barrels
a
day
to
16.6
million
barrels,
a
tiny
increase.
With
the
collapse
of
the
Soviet
Union
in
the
early
1990"s,
western
oil
companies
placed
high
hopes
on
the
oil
potentials
of
the
Caspian
Sea
in
Central
Asia. Disappointing
Caspian
results In
December
2002,
just
after
US
troops
took
Afghanistan,
BP,
a
major
oil
company
announced
disappointing
Caspian
drilling
results
which
suggested
that
the
"oil
find
of
the
century"
was
little
more
than
a
drop
in
the
ocean.
Instead
of
earlier
predictions
of
oil
reserves
above
200
billion
barrels,
a
new
Saudi
Arabia
outside
the
Middle
East,
the
US
State
Department
announced,
"Caspian
oil
represents
4%
of
world
reserves.
It
will
never
dominate
the
world"s
markets."
PetroStrategies
published
a
study
estimating
that
the
Caspian
Basin
contained
a
mere
39
billion
barrels
of
oil,
and
of
a
poor
quality.
Soon
after
this
news,
BP
and
other
western
oil
companies
began
reducing
investment
plans
in
the
region. Interest
in
West
Africa One
of
the
most
active
areas
of
new
exploration
is
in
the
offshore
region
of
West
Africa
from
Nigeria
to
Angola.
President
Bush
made
a
high
profile
trip
to
the
region
earlier
in
the
year,
and
the
US
Pentagon
has
signed
military
basing
agreements
with
two
small
strategic
islands,
Principe
and
San
Tome,
insuring
a
military
presence
should
anything
threaten
the
flow
of
oil
across
the
Atlantic.
Yet,
while
the
volume
of
oil
is
important,
it
also
is
hardly
a
new
Saudi
Arabia.
Geologist
Campbell
estimates
that
if
all
deepwater
oil,
perhaps
85
billion
barrels,
were
produced
from
fields
off
Brazil,
Angola
and
Nigeria,
it
would
meet
global
demand
for
3-4
years. Growing
energy
demand Against
the
prospect
that
many
of
the
largest
oil
fields
today
are
in
a
marked
decline
in
output,
world
demand
for
oil
is
rising
ruthlessly,
marked
by
the
growing
economies
of
China,
India
and
Asia.
Even
at
today"s
weak
GDP
growth
rates,
economists
estimate
that
world
demand
for
oil
at
today"s
prices
will
rise
by
some
2%
per
year. Ten
years
ago,
China
was
not
a
factor
in
world
import
of
oil.
It
produced
most
of
its
limited
needs
domestically.
Beginning
1993
however,
China
began
to
import
oil
to
meet
its
economic
needs.
By
end
2003
China
has
surpassed
Japan
to
be
the
second
largest
oil
importer
next
to
the
USA.
China
now
consumes
20%
of
total
OECD
industrial
country
energy.
China
oil
imports
are
rising
now
by
9%
a
year
and
this
is
predicted
to
rise
significantly
in
the
coming
decade,
as
China
emerges
as
the
world"s
largest
industrial
nation.
China
currently
is
growing
at
7-8%
a
year.
India
has
recently
emerged
as
a
rapidly
growing
economy
as
well.
Combined
they
account
for
some
2.5
billion
of
the
world
population.
Little
wonder
that
China
vehemently
opposed
the
US
unilateral
war
against
Iraq
in
the
UN
Security
Council.
The
China
National
Petroleum
Company
had
long
sought
to
secure
major
oil
supply
from
Iraq. What
Cheney
knew
in
1999 In
a
speech
to
the
International
Petroleum
Institute
in
London
in
late1999,
Dick
Cheney,
then
chairman
of
the
world"s
largest
oil
services
company,
Halliburton,
presented
the
picture
of
world
oil
supply
and
demand
to
industry
insiders.
"By
some
estimates,"
Cheney
stated,
"there
will
be
an
average
of
two
percent
annual
growth
in
global
oil
demand
over
the
years
ahead,
along
with,
conservatively,
a
three
percent
natural
decline
in
production
from
existing
reserves."
Cheney
ended
on
an
alarming
note:
"That
means
by
2010
we
will
need
on
the
order
of
an
additional
fifty
million
barrels
a
day."
This
is
equivalent
to
more
than
six
Saudi
Arabia"s
of
today"s
size. Perhaps
it
was
no
coincidence
that
Cheney,
as
Vice
President,
was
given
as
his
first
major
assignment
the
head
of
a
Presidential
Task
Force
on
Energy.
He
knew
the
dimension
of
the
energy
problem
facing
not
only
the
United
States,
but
the
rest
of
the
world. Cheney
is
also
well
identified
as
the
leading
Iraq
warhawk
in
the
Bush
Administration,
together
with
Defense
Secretary
Rumsfeld.
Repeatedly
it
was
Cheney
pushing
for
military
action
against
Iraq,
regardless
of
which
allies
support
it. When
we
examine
what
is
known
about
global
oil
reserves,
and
where
they
are,
in
light
of
the
above
"peak
oil"
analysis
of
much
of
today"s
existing
oil
production,
it
becomes
clearer
why
Cheney
would
be
willing
to
risk
so
much
in
terms
of
America"s
standing
among
allies
and
others,
to
occupy
the
oilfields
of
Iraq.
Cheney
knows
exactly
what
the
global
oil
reserve
situation
is
as
former
CEO
of
Halliburton
Corporation,
the
world"s
largest
oil
services
company. The
Achilles
heel
of
the
US? The
burning
question
is
where
will
we
get
such
a
huge
increase
of
oil?
In
the
decade
from
1990
to
2000,
a
total
of
42
billion
barrels
of
new
oil
reserves
were
discovered
worldwide.
In
the
same
period,
the
world
consumed
250
billion
barrels.
In
the
past
two
decades
only
three
giant
fields
with
more
than
one
billion
barrels
each
have
been
discovered.
One
in
Norway,
in
Columbia
and
Brazil.
None
of
these
produce
more
than
200,000
barrels
a
day.
This
is
far
from
50
million
barrels
a
day
which
the
world
will
need. Is
the
era
of
cheap,
abundant
oil
to
fuel
the
world
economy
about
to
end?
One
most
important
issue
in
the
entire
debate
over
why
Washington
went
to
war
in
Iraq
is
the
question
of
how
much
oil
remains
to
be
found
in
the
world
at
today"s
prices.
The
debate
has
been
remarkably
little
over
an
economic
issue
of
enormous
consequences. According
to
the
estimates
of
Colin
Campbell
and
K.
Aleklett
of
Uppsala
University,
five
countries
hold
the
overwhelming
bulk
of
the
world"s
remaining
oil
and
could
potentially
make
up
the
difference
as
other
areas
pass
their
peak.
"The
five
major
producers
of
the
Middle
East,
namely
Abu
Dhabi,
Iraq,
Iran,
Kuwait
and
Saudi
Arabia
(including
the
Neutral
Zone),
with
about
half
the
world"s
remaining
oil,
are
treated
as
swing
producers
making
up
the
difference
between
world
demand
and
what
other
countries
can
produce..."2. These
five
countries
-
Iraq,
Iran,
Saudi
Arabia,
Kuwait
and
the
UAE
-
through
circumstances
of
geology,
contain
the
oil
and
gas
reserves
vital
to
the
future
economic
growth
of
the
world.
In
an
article
in
the
January
7,
2002
issue
of
Oil
and
Gas
Journal
by
A.
S.
Bakhtiari
of
the
National
Iranian
Oil
Company,
noted,
"The
Middle
East
(is)
simultaneously
the
most
geostrategic
area
on
the
globe
and
the
ultimate
energy
prize:
Two-thirds
of
global
crude
oil
reserves
are
concentrated
in
five
countries
bordering
the
Persian
Gulf."3 In
a
paper
published
in
November
2001,
eminent
Princeton
geologist,
Kenneth
Deffeyes
wrote,
"The
biggest
single
question
is
the
year
when
world
oil
production
reaches
a
Hubbert
peak
and
then
declines
forever.
Both
the
graphical
and
the
computer
fits
identify
2004
as
the
probable
year.
The
largest
single
uncertainty
is
the
enormous
reserves
of
Saudi
Arabia."4 If
the
peak
oil
analysis
is
accurate,
it
suggests
why
Washington
may
be
willing
to
risk
so
much
to
control
Iraq
and
through
its
bases
there,
the
five
oil-rich
countries.
It
suggests
Washington
is
acting
from
a
fundamental
strategic
weakness,
not
from
absolute
strength
as
is
often
thought.
A
full
and
open
debate
on
the
problem
of
peak
energy
is
urgently
needed. Footnotes: 1
"The
World`s
Giant
Oilfields",
Matthew
R.
Simmons,
M.
King
Hubbert
Center
for
Petroleum
Supply
Studies,
Colorado
School
of
Mines,
January
2002. 2
Aleklett,
K.
and
Campbell,
C.J.,
"The
Peak
and
Decline
of
World
Oil
and
Gas
Production,"
published
by
the
Association
for
the
Study
of
Peak
Oil
and
Gas,
www.asponews.org
. 3
Bakhtiari,
A.M.
Samsam,
"2002
to
see
birth
of
New
World
Energy
Order,"
Oil
and
Gas
Journal,
January
7,
2002. 4
Deffeyes,
Kenneth
S,
"Peak
of
world
oil
production,"
Paper
no.
83-0,Geological
Society
of
America
Annual
Meeting,
November
2001.
gsa.confex.com
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