by Michael T. Klare
             
 
                This article was originally published at          TomDispatch.com.
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       Here’s the good news about energy: thanks to rising oil prices and deteriorating economic conditions worldwide, the International Energy Agency  (IEA) reports that global oil demand will not grow this year as much as  once assumed, which may provide some temporary price relief at the gas  pump. In its May Oil Market Report,  the IEA reduced its 2011 estimate for global oil consumption by 190,000  barrels per day, pegging it at 89.2 million barrels daily. As a result,  retail prices may not reach the stratospheric levels predicted earlier  this year, though they will undoubtedly remain higher than at any time  since the peak months of 2008, just before the global economic meltdown.  Keep in mind that this is the good news.
       As for the bad news: the world faces an array of intractable  energy problems that, if anything, have only worsened in recent weeks.  These problems are multiplying on either side of energy’s key geological  divide: below ground, once-abundant reserves of easy-to-get “conventional” oil, natural gas, and coal are drying up; above ground,  human miscalculation and geopolitics are limiting the production and  availability of specific energy supplies. With troubles mounting in both  arenas, our energy prospects are only growing dimmer.
       Here’s one simple fact without which our deepening energy  crisis makes no sense: the world economy is structured in such a way  that standing still in energy production is not an option. In order to  satisfy the staggering needs of older industrial powers like the United  States along with the voracious thirst of rising powers like China,  global energy must grow substantially every year. According to the  projections of the U.S. Department of Energy (DoE), world energy output,  based on 2007 levels, must rise 29% to 640 quadrillion British thermal  units by 2025 to meet anticipated demand. Even if usage grows somewhat  more slowly than projected, any failure to satisfy the world’s  requirements produces a perception of scarcity, which also means rising  fuel prices. These are precisely the conditions we see today and should  expect for the indefinite future.
                         It is against this backdrop that three crucial developments  of 2011 are changing the way we are likely to live on this planet for  the foreseeable future.
                Tough-Oil RebelsThe first and still most  momentous of the year’s energy shocks was the series of events  precipitated by the Tunisian and Egyptian rebellions and the ensuing  “Arab Spring” in the greater Middle East. Neither Tunisia nor Egypt was,  in fact, a major oil producer, but the political shockwaves these  insurrections unleashed has spread to other countries in the region that  are, including Libya, Oman, and Saudi Arabia. At this point, the Saudi  and Omani leaderships appear to be keeping a tight lid on protests, but  Libyan production, normally averaging approximately 1.7 million barrels  per day, has fallen to near zero.
       When it comes to the future availability of oil, it is  impossible to overstate the importance of this spring’s events in the  Middle East, which continue to thoroughly rattle the energy markets.  According to all projections of global petroleum output, Saudi Arabia  and the other Persian Gulf states are slated to supply an  ever-increasing share of the world’s total oil supply as production in  key regions elsewhere declines. Achieving this production increase is  essential, but it will not happen unless the rulers of those countries  invest colossal sums in the development of new petroleum  reserves—especially the heavy, “tough oil” variety that requires far  more costly infrastructure than existing “easy oil” deposits. 
       In a front-page story entitled “Facing Up to the End of ‘Easy Oil,’” the Wall Street Journal  noted that any hope of meeting future world oil requirements rests on a  Saudi willingness to sink hundreds of billions of dollars into their  remaining heavy-oil deposits. But right now, faced with a ballooning  population and the prospects of an Egyptian-style youth revolt, the  Saudi leadership seems intent on using its staggering wealth on  employment-generating public-works programs and vast arrays of weaponry, not new tough-oil facilities; the same is largely true of the other monarchical oil states of the Persian Gulf.
       Whether such efforts will prove effective is unknown. If a  youthful Saudi population faced with promises of jobs and money, as well  as the fierce repression of dissidence, has seemed less confrontational  than their Tunisian, Egyptian, and Syrian counterparts, that doesn’t  mean that the status quo will remain forever. “Saudi Arabia is a time  bomb,” commented  Jaafar Al Taie, managing director of Manaar Energy Consulting (which  advises foreign oil firms operating in the region). “I don’t think that  what the King is doing now is sufficient to prevent an uprising,” he  added, even though the Saudi royals had just announced a $36-billion plan to raise the minimum wage, increase unemployment benefits, and build affordable housing.
       At present, the world can accommodate a prolonged loss of  Libyan oil. Saudi Arabia and a few other producers possess sufficient  excess capacity to make up the difference. Should Saudi Arabia ever  explode, however, all bets are off. “If something happens in Saudi  Arabia, [oil] will go to $200 to $300 [per barrel],” said  Sheikh Zaki Yamani, the kingdom’s former oil minister, on April 5th. “I  don’t expect this for the time being, but who would have expected  Tunisia?”
                Nuclear Power on the Downward SlopeIn terms of  the energy markets, the second major development of 2011 occurred on  March 11th when an unexpectedly powerful earthquake and tsunami struck  Japan. As a start, nature’s two-fisted attack damaged or destroyed a  significant proportion of northern Japan’s energy infrastructure,  including refineries, port facilities, pipelines, power plants, and  transmission lines. In addition, of course, it devastated four nuclear  plants at Fukushima, resulting, according to the U.S. Department of  Energy, in the permanent loss of 6,800 megawatts of electric generating capacity.
       This, in turn, has forced Japan to increase its imports of oil,  coal, and natural gas, adding to the pressure on global supplies. With  Fukushima and other nuclear plants off line, industry analysts calculate  that Japanese oil imports could rise by as much as 238,000 barrels per  day, and imports of natural gas by 1.2 billion cubic feet per day  (mostly in the form of liquefied natural gas, or LNG).
       This is one major short-term effect of the tsunami. What about  the longer-term effects? The Japanese government now claims it is  scrapping plans to build as many as 14 new nuclear reactors over the  next two decades. On May 10th, Prime Minister Naoto Kan announced  that the government would have to “start from scratch” in devising a  new energy policy for the country. Though he speaks of replacing the  cancelled reactors with renewable energy systems like wind and solar,  the sad reality is that a significant part of any future energy  expansion will inevitably come from more imported oil, coal, and LNG.
                         The disaster at Fukushima—and ensuing revelations of design  flaws and maintenance failures at the plant—has had a domino effect,  causing energy officials in other countries to cancel plans to build new  nuclear plants or extend the life of existing ones. The first to do so  was Germany: on March 14th, Chancellor Angela Merkel closed  two older plants and suspended plans to extend the life of 15 others.  On May 30th, her government made the suspension permanent. In the wake  of mass antinuclear rallies and an election setback, she promised to shut all existing nuclear plants by 2022, which, experts believe, will result in an increase in fossil-fuel use.
       China also acted swiftly, announcing  on March 16th that it would stop awarding permits for the construction  of new reactors pending a review of safety procedures, though it did not  rule out such investments altogether. Other countries, including India  and the United States, similarly undertook reviews of reactor safety  procedures, putting ambitious nuclear plans at risk. Then, on May 25th,  the Swiss government announced  that it would abandon plans to build three new nuclear power plants,  phase out nuclear power, and close the last of its plants by 2034,  joining the list of countries that appear to have abandoned nuclear  power for good.
                How Drought Strangles EnergyThe third major  energy development of 2011, less obviously energy-connected than the  other two, has been a series of persistent, often record, droughts  gripping many areas of the planet. Typically, the most immediate and  dramatic effect of prolonged drought is a reduction in grain production,  leading to ever-higher food prices and ever more social turmoil.
       Intense drought over the past year in Australia, China, Russia, and parts of the Middle East, South America, the United States, and most recently northern Europe has contributed to the current record-breaking price of food—and this, in turn, has been a key factor  in the political unrest now sweeping North Africa, East Africa, and the  Middle East. But drought has an energy effect as well. It can reduce  the flow of major river systems, leading to a decline in the output of  hydroelectric power plants, as is now happening in several  drought-stricken regions.
       By far the greatest threat to electricity generation exists in  China, which is suffering from one of its worst droughts ever. Rainfall  levels from January to April in the drainage basin of the Yangtze,  China’s longest and most economically important river, have been 40% lower than the average of the past 50 years, according to China Daily. This has resulted in a significant decline in hydropower and severe electricity shortages throughout much of central China.
       The Chinese are burning more coal to generate electricity, but  domestic mines no longer satisfy the country’s needs and so China has  become a major coal importer. Rising demand combined with inadequate  supply has led to a spike in coal prices, and with no comparable spurt  in electricity rates (set by the government), many Chinese utilities are  rationing power  rather than buy more expensive coal and operate at a loss. In response,  industries are upping their reliance on diesel-powered backup  generators, which in turn increases China’s demand for imported oil,  putting yet more pressure on global fuel prices.
                Wrecking the PlanetSo now we enter June with  continuing unrest in the Middle East, a grim outlook for nuclear power,  and a severe electricity shortage in China (and possibly elsewhere).  What else do we see on the global energy horizon?
       Despite the IEA’s forecast of diminished future oil  consumption, global energy demand continues to outpace increases in  supply. From all indications, this imbalance will persist.
       Take oil. A growing number of energy analysts now agree that  the era of “easy oil” has ended and that the world must increasingly  rely on hard-to-get “tough oil.”  It  is widely assumed, moreover, that the planet harbors a lot of this  stuff—deep underground, far offshore, in problematic geological  formations like Canada’s tar sands, and in the melting Arctic. However,  extracting and processing tough oil will prove ever more costly and  involve great human, and even greater environmental, risk. Think: BP’s Deepwater Horizon disaster of April 2010 in the Gulf of Mexico.
       Such is the world’s thirst for oil that a growing amount of  this stuff will nonetheless be extracted, even if not, in all  likelihood, at a pace and on a scale necessary to replace the  disappearance of yesterday’s and today’s easy oil. Along with continued  instability in the Middle East, this tough-oil landscape seems to  underlie expectations that the price of oil will only rise in the coming  years. In a poll  of global energy company executives conducted this April by the KPMG  Global Energy Institute, 64% of those surveyed predicted that crude oil  prices will cross the $120 per barrel barrier before the end of 2011.  Approximately one-third of them predicted that the price would go even  higher, with 17% believing it would reach $131-$140 per barrel; 9%,  $141-$150 per barrel; and 6%, above the $150 mark.
       The price of coal, too, has soared in recent months, thanks to  mounting worldwide demand as supplies of energy from nuclear power and  hydroelectricity have contracted. Many countries have launched  significant efforts to spur the development of renewable energy, but  these are not advancing fast enough or on a large enough scale to  replace older technologies quickly. The only bright spot, experts say,  is the growing extraction of natural gas from shale rock in the United  States through the use of hydraulic fracturing (“hydro-fracking”).
       Proponents of shale gas claim it can provide a large share of  America’s energy needs in the years ahead, while actually reducing harm  to the environment when compared to coal and oil (as gas emits less  carbon dioxide per unit of energy released); however, an expanding chorus of opponents  are warning of the threat to municipal water supplies posed by the use  of toxic chemicals in the fracking process. These warnings have proven  convincing enough to lead lawmakers in a growing number of statesto  begin placing restrictions on the practice, throwing into doubt the  future contribution of shale gas to the nation’s energy supply. Also, on  May 12th, the French National Assembly (the powerful lower house of  parliament) voted 287 to 146 to ban hydro-fracking in France, becoming the first nation to do so.
       The environmental problems of shale gas are hardly unique. The  fact is that all of the strategies now being considered to extend the  life-spans of oil, coal, and natural gas involve severe economic and  environmental risks and costs—as, of course, does the very use of fossil  fuels of any sort at a moment when the first IEA numbers for 2010  indicate that it was an unexpectedly record-breaking year for humanity when it came to dumping greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
       With the easily accessible mammoth oil fields of Texas,  Venezuela, and the Middle East either used up or soon to be  significantly depleted, the future of oil rests on third-rate stuff like  tar sands, shale oil, and extra-heavy crude that require a lot of  energy to extract, processes that emit added greenhouse gases, and as with those tar sands, tend to play havoc with the environment.
       Shale gas is typical. Though plentiful, it can only be pried  loose from underground shale formations through the use of explosives  and highly pressurized water mixed with toxic chemicals. In addition, to  obtain the necessary quantities of shale oil, many tens of thousands of  wells will have to be sunk across the American landscape, any of one of  which could prove to be an environmental disaster.
       Likewise, the future of coal will rest on increasingly invasive and hazardous techniques, such as the explosive removal of mountaintops  and the dispersal of excess rock and toxic wastes in the valleys below.  Any increase in the use of coal will also enhance climate change, since  coal emits more carbon dioxide than do oil and natural gas.
       Here’s the bottom line: Any expectations that ever-increasing  supplies of energy will meet demand in the coming years are destined to  be disappointed. Instead, recurring shortages, rising prices, and  mounting discontent are likely to be the thematic drumbeat of the  globe’s energy future. 
       If we don’t abandon a belief that unrestricted growth is our  inalienable birthright and embrace the genuine promise of renewable  energy (with the necessary effort and investment that would make such a  commitment meaningful), the future is likely to prove grim indeed. Then,  the history of energy, as taught in some late twenty-first-century  university, will be labeled: How to Wreck the Planet 101. 
                Source: TomDispatch 
                Image by spaceamoeba, licensed under Creative Commons. 
      
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