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[A-List] The Oil Crisis Is Now



We know what needs doing. By not acting, we leave ourselves at the mercy of the
market and those who would manipulate it.

by Richard N Haass

Newsweek International (May 15-22 2006 issue)


No doubt it's a sign of the times. Today's war games have more to do with the
falling supplies and rising price of oil than with tanks and armored personnel
carriers rolling across borders. Consider just such an exercise, conducted
several months ago at the World Economic Forum in Davos. The setting was late
December 2006. In a simultaneous three-front strike, terrorists sank a tanker in
the Bosporus, blocking the Turkish straits linking the oilfields of the Caspian
Sea with the Mediterranean. They also successfully attacked the oil port of
Valdez in Alaska. An assault on the critical Ras Tanura complex in Saudi Arabia
was rebuffed, but several million barrels a day (roughly five percent of world
supply) were taken off the oil market for at least four months.

Overnight, prices jumped to $120. US gasoline prices shot to $5 a gallon.
Participants in the game included the CEO of a major global oil company, 
a head of the national oil company of an important Middle East producer, 
senior officials from the International Energy Agency and the US government, 
the president of a large insurance company and various counterterrorism and
energy experts. I played the US Secretary of State. The wargamers recommended
specific steps, including parallel drawdowns of national strategic oil reserves,
a temporary relaxing of environmental regulations to make it easier to refine
crude oil into gasoline, lower speed limits and requirements for a minimum
number of passengers in private vehicles. These relatively modest moves ensured
adequate supplies but did not eliminate upward pressure on prices, which stayed
high until the integrity of the global oil network could be re-established.
Longer-term recommendations focused on preventive measures to guard global oil
installations and transit routes so that a bad situation did not grow worse.

What surprised me is how sanguine the participants seemed about the political
and economic consequences of far more costly oil. But it is highly unlikely 
that this muted reaction would be mirrored in the real world, especially if US
gasoline prices were to reach $5 or $6 per gallon. Nor did the players consider
other eventualities, such as a meltdown of the global financial system.

What can we learn from this exercise? First: with global demand and supply
balanced so closely,      and with so little excess production capacity, 
it doesn't take much for oil prices to skyrocket. In the scenario, a slender
loss of supply caused prices to more than double. In the real world, similar
results could be caused by any number of events: terror, conflict with Iran 
over its nuclear program, political instability in Nigeria or irresponsibility
in Venezuela, even a hurricane or earthquake. And as opposed to the Davos
scenario, there's no guarantee that such a disruption would be short-lived.

A second lesson: waiting to develop a serious energy policy until catastrophe
hits only increases the pain. It takes years to increase supply or introduce
meaningful energy efficiencies that will not prove overly disruptive or costly.
The good news is that we know what needs doing. The bad news is that we remain
largely unwilling to act. And by not acting, the United States and other
oil-consuming nations leave themselves at the mercy of the market, or to
individual producers who would manipulate it.

America's reaction to the recent energy crunch is not reassuring. Proposals for
$100 gasoline rebates. Threats to investigate oil companies. Calls to suspend
the already low federal gas tax. None would make an appreciable difference.
Energy politics is one thing. Energy policy is fundamentally different. We have
too much of the former and not enough of the latter.

Current high prices largely reflect the fact that demand is rising faster than
supply. India and China are growing rapidly, as is their consumption of oil and
natural gas. The world cannot drill its way out of this conundrum. The answer
mostly lies in using less oil - something that will result from increasing
efficiency and accelerating alternatives. In the United States, the best way to
cut back on demand is through much higher gas taxes. Fuel-efficiency standards
for new cars, SUVs and light trucks should be raised. There must be new
incentives for companies to produce and people to purchase fuel-efficient
hybrids and advanced diesel cars. The emergence of substitutes can best be
hastened not by government-directed R&D but by guarantees that gas taxes will 
be kept high enough to discourage wanton consumption and to ensure a decent
return on investment in alternatives.

Today's situation may lack drama in the sense that there has been no successful
terrorist attack on some tanker or refinery. But current energy policy (or the
lack of one) empowers some of the most repressive and reckless regimes in the
world, further impoverishes hundreds of millions of the world's poor and
contributes to global climate change. If this isn't a crisis, what is?

_____

Haass is president of the Council on Foreign Relations and author of The
Opportunity: America's Moment to Alter History's Course (PublicAffairs, 2005).

(c) 2007 Newsweek, Inc.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12666622/site/newsweek/

(c) 2007 MSNBC.com


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