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A look at key U.S. oil suppliers

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  • A look at key U.S. oil suppliers

    A look at key U.S. oil suppliers

    By Associated Press
    May 6, 2006

    The nuclear standoff with Iran and insurgencies in Iraq and Africa
    have rattled world energy markets. But the threat to supply extends
    far beyond these hotspots.

    The United States depends on resources from a number of overseas
    markets, which threaten to become more of a risk.

    Those suppliers also include:

    â~@¢ Russia, whose brief energy conflict with Ukraine last winter
    severely hit the European Union. Moscow, which is flexing its energy
    muscle for geopolitical leverage, accounts for more than 10 percent
    of the world's daily oil output and a fifth of its natural gas.

    President Vladimir Putin's drive to reassert state influence over
    the nation's oil and gas sectors has spooked consumer nations.

    â~@¢ Saudi Arabia, the world's No. 1 oil producer and a key U.S.

    supplier. It has been singled out as a target by Osama bin Laden, and
    the country remains on alert after foiling an al-Qaida-linked attack on
    its vast Abqaiq oil processing plant in February. That attack prompted
    Kuwait to express concern about the security of its own oil facilities.

    An additional threat to oil installations is the potential for
    insurgency fomented by Tehran among the Saudi Shiite minority -
    and those in neighboring oil-producing nations.

    â~@¢ Venezuela and Bolivia, where moves by populist leaders to impose
    more state control over the gas or oil sectors, gives them growing
    leverage to use energy as a political tool. Bolivia, which recently
    called out the army to enforce its claims, has South America's
    second-largest natural gas reserves after Venezuela.

    Venezuela, whose President Hugo Chavez has threatened to blow up his
    country's oil fields in case of U.S. attack, is the fourth-largest
    supplier of crude to the United States - for now. Chavez is
    increasingly selling to China and Cuba, and his oil minister has
    threatened to stop supplying America.

    â~@¢ The Caspian Sea region, which has estimated oil reserves between
    17 billion and 44 billion barrels and is potentially a key transit
    point for oil to the West. But it is rife with ethnic conflicts in
    Chechnya, Georgia and the autonomous enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Energy nationalism is also a factor - with Turkmenistan recently
    declaring its on-land gas and oil fields off-limits to foreign
    companies. The Shanghai Cooperation Organization, a regional alliance
    led by China and Russia, last year called on the United States to
    set a date for withdrawing forces from the region.

    â~@¢ The East China Sea, where conflicting claims to rich underwater
    gas reserves have added to historical rivalries between Japan and
    China.

    In the first three months of this year, the Japanese military said it
    had scrambled fighter jets 107 times to intercept suspected Chinese
    spy planes - most of them over the East China Sea - compared to 13
    times in all of 2005.

    Copyright 2006, The Albuquerque Tribune. All Rights Reserved.

    --Boundary_(ID_p2Kghtz5o4Djw++B2H0KMQ)- -

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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