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  • Spoils Of War

    SPOILS OF WAR
    by Lutz Kleveman

    New Statesman
    October 3, 2005

    Spoils of war: Years of work in battle zones have convinced Lutz
    Kleveman that the role energy resources play in causing conflicts is
    the big story behind the headlines

    About three years ago, I visited the American airbase of Bagram in
    Afghanistan. A US army public affairs officer gave me a tour of the
    sprawling camp, set up after the ouster of the Taliban in December
    2001. As we walked past the endless rows of tents and men in desert
    camouflage uniforms, I spotted two makeshift wooden street signs.

    They read "Exxon Street" and "Petro Boulevard". Slightly embarrassed,
    the officer explained: "This is the fuel handlers' workplace. The
    signs are a joke, a sort of irony."

    As I am sure they were. It just seemed an uncanny sight given that
    I was researching potential links between the "war on terror" and
    American oil interests in Central Asia. Years of work in war zones
    have convinced me that the role energy resources play in causing armed
    conflicts is the big story behind the headlines. Dwindling supplies and
    the ever-surging global consumption of oil, especially in China and
    India, have caused its price to soar to new heights. As doubts grow
    about the true size of Saudi reserves, global production is expected
    to peak soon, making oil unaffordable to many people and countries,
    and raising the prospect of a "last man standing" oil endgame.

    The deepening rivalry over fossil reserves, especially between the
    US and China, makes energy wars increasingly likely. No Iraqi I know
    believes America would send soldiers to the Gulf region if there
    were only strawberry fields to protect. My research in places such as
    Nigeria, Azerbaijan and Iraq has shown that oil wealth is more of a
    curse than a blessing. In all oil-producing countries (except Britain
    and Norway), it has led to environmental degradation, economic decline,
    corruption, political instability, coup d'etats or even civil wars.

    Central Asia offers a perfect case study of what is the trouble
    with oil. The warlords, diplomats, politicians, generals and
    oil bosses I have interviewed in the region are all players in a
    geostrategic struggle that has become increasingly intertwined with
    the anti-terrorist campaigns: the "New Great Game". The main spoils
    in this rerun of the 19th-century "Great Game" are the Caspian oil
    and gas reserves, the world's biggest untapped fossil fuel resources.

    While estimates range widely, the US Energy Department believes that
    Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan alone could sit on more than 130 billion
    barrels of crude. Oil giants such as ExxonMobil, ChevronTexaco and
    BP have already invested more than $40bn in new production facilities.

    In May 2001 Dick Cheney, the US vice-president and ex-CEO of
    Halliburton (a provider of products and services to the oil and
    gas industries), recommended in the seminal national energy policy
    report that "the president make energy security a priority of our
    trade and foreign policy", singling out the Caspian Basin as a
    "rapidly growing new area of supply". Since 11 September, the Bush
    administration has accordingly used the "war on terror" to further
    American energy interests in Central Asia, deploying thousands of
    US troops not only in Afghanistan, but also in the newly independent
    republics of Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Georgia.

    By 2010, the US will have to import more than two-thirds of its
    energy needs, and the Caspian region has become vital to its policy
    of "diversifying energy supply", designed to wean America off its
    dependence on the volatile Middle East. Yet Central Asia is no less
    volatile than the Middle East, and oil politics are making matters
    worse. Disputes persist over pipeline routes from the Caspian
    region to high-sea ports. While Russia promotes crude transport
    across its territory, China wants to build eastbound pipelines from
    Kazakhstan, and Iran is offering its pipeline network for exports via
    the Persian Gulf. Washington, on the other hand, has championed the
    $3.8bn Baku-Ceyhan oil pipeline through the South Caucasus, which was
    recently inaugurated amid much pomp. Controversial for environmental
    and social reasons, the project has also perpetuated instability in
    the South Caucasus.

    With thousands of Russian troops still stationed in Georgia and
    Armenia, Moscow has for years sought to deter western pipeline
    investors by fomenting bloody ethnic conflicts near the pipeline
    route, in the Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh and in the
    Georgian breakaway regions of Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Ajaria. In
    return, the US has despatched 500 elite troops to Georgia. Moscow
    and Beijing resent the growing US influence in their energy-rich
    strategic backyard, and have repeatedly demanded that the Americans
    pull out. Russia's president, Vladimir Putin, has signed new security
    pacts with the Central Asian rulers and, in 2003, personally opened
    a new Russian military base in Kyrgyzstan, only 50km away from a US
    airbase. China, in turn, has conducted major military exercises with
    Central Asian states. In August, China's biggest state-owned oil
    company bought a major oil producer in Kazakhstan for $4,2bn. The
    purchase fits in with China's efforts to quench its enormous thirst
    for oil by intensifying ties to major energy-producing countries and
    buying a wide array of foreign petrol assets.

    Besides raising the spectre of interstate conflict, energy imperialism
    also exacerbates the terrorist problem. Many Muslims hate America
    because for decades successive US governments, in a Faustian pact,
    were indifferent towards how badly the Middle Eastern regimes treated
    their people - as long as they kept the oil flowing. In Central Asia,
    the Bush administration repeats the mistakes that gave rise to Bin
    Ladenism in the 1980s and 1990s. Oil-motivated American support
    for Central Asian autocrats - such as Azerbaijan's Ilham Aliyev,
    Kazakhstan's Nursultan Nazarbayev and Uzbekistan's Islam Karimov -
    causes more and more of their disgusted subjects to embrace militant
    Islam and anti-Americanism. The Caspian region may be the next big
    gas station but, as in the Middle East, there are already a lot of
    men running around throwing matches.

    Ultimately, no matter how many troops are deployed to protect oilfields
    and pipelines, the oil infrastructure might prove too vulnerable
    to terrorist attacks such as in Iraq to guarantee a stable supply
    anyway. In Iraq, chaos and violence have so far prevented any major
    oil companies from investing a huge amount in the country's old petrol
    industry. Efforts by Halliburton and the US army corps of engineers
    to rehabilitate the oilfields near Kirkuk and Basra have been largely
    undermined by insurgent attacks on pipelines. To make matters worse,
    conflicts have broken out between Iraq's Kurds and Arabs over who
    should control the Kirkuk oilfields.

    With so much oil-related trouble looming, old-style policies of
    yet more fossil fuel production and waste continue in the wrong
    direction. The only wise strategy is a sustainable alternative
    energy policy that will steer us into the post-oil era. Reducing
    our dependence on oil will go a long way towards "defuelling"
    terror-breeding regimes and lessening international tension. This
    policy will require saving energy through more efficient technologies,
    increasing the role of other energy carriers (including gas but not
    nuclear power) and introducing next-generation transport fuels on a
    huge scale.

    A new energy policy is badly needed anyway to slow the greenhouse
    effect and global climate change, which might turn out to be the
    worst energy-related source of conflict. Hurricane Katrina - with
    violence, anarchy and refugees in its wake - gave merely a foretaste
    of the suffering that global warming could cause. That was nature,
    some say with a shrug, but in fact it was nature on drugs - and we
    need a detox soon.

    Lutz Kleveman ([email protected]) is the author of The New Great Game:
    blood and oil in Central Asia (Atlantic Books, www.newgreatgame.com),
    and the host of an authors' conference on climate change. For more
    information visit www.ankeloheconversations.com

    Natural gas is by some distance the least fascinating of all energy
    sources - at least, it is to most British citizens and their media.

    In the "debate" on energy and carbon policy, which largely amounts to
    special pleading for government funding or regulatory protection for
    (in particular) clean coal and nuclear power, there is virtually no
    interest in gas. The subject surfaces mainly in the context of claims
    made by supporters of other forms of generating capacity that, in 15 to
    25 years from now, the power sector will be overwhelmingly dependent
    on imported gas from "unstable" countries, and that this will expose
    the British public to unacceptable security risks. A BBC2 docudrama -
    set in the future - showed Chechen terrorists blowing up a gas pipeline
    running from Russia's Baltic coast to Britain, plunging London into
    darkness an hour later. The debate that followed was largely about the
    future of nuclear power, rather than the unreality of such a scenario.

    This lack of public interest in, or information about, gas is slightly
    strange given that it is the country's most important source of energy,
    accounting for 41 per cent of primary energy last year (compared
    with oil at 34 per cent), and 40 per cent of electricity generation
    (compared with 33 per cent from coal and 19 per cent from nuclear
    power). This was never intended to happen. But the post-privatisation
    "dash for gas" in power generation - partly a dash away from the
    problems of the coal and nuclear power industries - was followed by
    a realisation that the switch from coal-fired to gas-fired generation
    had made a big contribution towards meeting CO2 reduction targets.

    In 2000, North Sea gas production peaked and began to decline at
    a faster rate than had been anticipated. Over the past few years,
    there has been a growing tightness of supply in the winter months,
    when gas usage peaks. This has been accompanied by much higher
    levels of prices, with substantial volatility and price spikes. These
    developments have caused regulatory and parliamentary investigations
    into the functioning of gas markets and improper corporate behaviour,
    which have failed to substantiate any allegations of wrong-doing. At
    the same time, an unprecedented amount of new import infrastructure
    is under construction, with two new pipelines, the expansion of an
    existing line, and three new liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminals.

    This sudden interest in supply, demand and prices is a far cry from
    the focus of the past two decades, which has been on developing
    competition in utility markets. Since the mid-1980s, politicians,
    regulators and consultants have marched around the world lecturing
    the less fortunate on the wonders of "British experiment". The answer
    to all problems was to "privatise and leave it to the market", which
    would produce "the most efficient outcome". This proved to be the
    case for much of the 1990s and early 2000s, when British businesses
    and citizens enjoyed substantially cheaper gas prices than their
    counterparts in Continental Europe, where governments have been
    reluctant to liberalise their markets.

    Gas production was allowed to proceed at the fastest possible rate -
    abandoning the careful "depletion policy" of the nationalised industry
    era, which was designed to eke out UK resources with the judicious use
    of imports. Government was also responsible for starting the process
    that resulted in a pipeline between Britain and Belgium exporting
    surplus UK gas, with the aim of accelerating European competition. With
    the peaking of domestic production, that pipeline is increasingly being
    used to import, and 2004 marked the end of the country's relatively
    short-lived spell as a net gas exporter, giving rise to dire warnings
    of impending disaster arising from dependence on foreign supplies.

    Large-scale imports, when they begin in 2007-08, will initially return
    the UK to the position 20 years ago, when more than 20 per cent
    of gas demand was imported from Norway. Subsequently, and assuming
    higher prices do not stimulate the discovery and production of new
    gas, import dependence on piped and liquefied gas will increase
    from a variety of sources: Norway, Netherlands, Russia, Algeria,
    Egypt, Qatar and others. The diversity of sources and supply routes
    provides protection against problems with any individual supplier or
    facility. Gas imports, far from being the main problem, are going to
    be a large part of the solution to supply problems.

    "Unreliable and nasty foreigner" theories of security ignore the
    most important current problem - the reliability of ageing North Sea
    infrastructure and concern about how these may perform in severe
    weather conditions. The impact of severe weather on offshore and
    coastal oil and gas infrastructure - as demonstrated by Hurricane
    Katrina - is a major potential problem.

    Both Transco and Ofgem have given assurances that, even if it is
    very cold, there will be sufficient gas and delivery capacity to get
    through next winter. But experience of the past year suggests that
    any significant supply problem or severe weather causing increases
    in demand, even of short duration, will at the very least lead to
    short-term price spikes. After this winter, imported supplies start
    to flood in and new gas storage (which was not needed when supply
    was overwhelmingly from domestic sources) will open up, making the
    position much more comfortable. In fact, so much new supply will be
    available that, through the early 2010s, exports may continue for a
    significant part of the year.

    The future of UK energy supplies may be renewables, clean coal, some
    form of nuclear power and, more distantly, hydrogen. For the next 20
    years, and probably for a great many more, natural gas will dominate
    the UK energy balance outside the transport sector. This is a closely
    guarded secret revealed only in discussions about supply security.

    But there is no specific reason to think that security of gas supplies
    will be a major problem - once we get through this winter.

    Jonathan Stern is director of gas research at the Oxford Institute
    for Energy Studies and honorary professor at the Centre for Energy,
    Petroleum and Mineral Law and Policy, University of Dundee
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