1 / 29

Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

Oil Consumption and Geopolitics. Dr. Manish Kr. Semwal. Historical and Projected Global Population & Energy Consumption. The relationships between oil supply and demand. A spatial differentiation of supply and demand. This can only be overcome by oil transportation.

wan
Télécharger la présentation

Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Oil Consumption and Geopolitics Dr. Manish Kr. Semwal Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  2. Historical and Projected Global Population & Energy Consumption Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  3. The relationships between oil supply and demand • A spatial differentiation of supply and demand. • This can only be overcome by oil transportation. • 42% of the oil production was controlled by OPEC in 1997. • Countries not being OPEC members contributed to 58% of the production. • A spatial differentiation of oil reserves is also observed, the bulk of them, 64%, are located in the Middle East • Estimates in reserves range from 50 to 100 years Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  4. Changes in Global Energy Consumption by Region Energy consumption in Asia and Latin America is projected to more than double in the next 20 years! Energy consumption in Africa and the Middle East should not lag far behind Even technologically advanced nations are expected to increase energy consumption by up to 40% in the next 2 decades Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  5. World Energy Consumption Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  6. World Crude Oil Production, 1980-1998 (in 1,000 barrels per day)

  7. Global CO2 Emissions Projections suggest rapid rise in CO2 emissions from Developing Nations, surpassing the emissions from Developed Nations by 2020. CO2 emissions from oil are projected to dominate the anthropogenic contributions over the next 20 years Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  8. Global Energy Consumption by Region Industrialized Nations: Energy consumption will continue to rise over the next 20 years Developing Nations: Nearly exponential growth in energy consumption over next 20 years Developing and Industrialized nations projected to have similar energy consumption by ~ 2020 EE = Eastern Europe FSU = Former Soviet Union Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  9. World Crude Oil Reserves, 1999 Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  10. Major Crude oil reservoirs Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  11. Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  12. Economic Importance of Oil • Costs of oil dependency • Wealth istransferred from oil consumers to producers. • The economy’s overall ability to produce is reduced by oil’s greater economic scarcity. • When price movements are sudden anddrastic, inflation and unemployment cause additional losses of output. • Creates instability. Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  13. The Oil Countershock • A changing scene • At the end of the 1980s and at the beginning of the 1990s, OPEC countries lost their price-fixing power. • Internal problems (economic and geopolitical conflicts between its members). • New producers such as Russia, Mexico, Norway, England and Colombia. • Not constrained by OPEC policies and were free to fix their own prices. • Mexico surpassed Saudi Arabia in 1997 to become the second largest oil exporter to the United States, after Venezuela. • Latin American countries such as Columbia and Brazil are trying to boost their oil production. Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  14. The Oil Countershock • Vietnam is exploring offshore fields, as are other Southeast Asian countries, hopeful that there are major reserves under the South China Sea. • Divergences • Since 1982, divergences occurred within OPEC members to fix quotas and prices as competition increased. • The share of OPEC dropped from 55% of all the petroleum exported in the 1970s to 41% in 1992. • All-time low of 30% in 1985. • That year Saudi Arabia lowered the price of its oil to increase its market share. • Oil counter-shock that lowered the price of the barrel under 20 dollars, even reaching a record of 15 dollars in 1988. • The oil market was again a market controlled by the demand. Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  15. The Oil Countershock • The Gulf War • Respecting production quotas became a major issue among OPEC members. • Countries such as Kuwait producing well above quota. • This event was a motivation for the invasion of Kuwait by Iraq in 1990, which saw the price of petroleum jump to 41$. • 7.8% of the world’s oil production was removed (Iraq and Kuwait). • Other petroleum-producing countries were quick to expand their production to replace Iraq's and Kuwait's shortfalls. • The increase in oil price was short-lived. Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  16. The Oil Counter shock • Aftermath of the Gulf War • The price of oil fell to 25 dollars per barrel by the mid 1990s. • By 1998, the price of petroleum went under 10 dollars per barrel. • Rendering several producing regions temporarily unprofitable. • OPEC countries only control about 42% of the global oil production and are so in a weak position to fix prices. • Reemergence • At the end of the 1990s, the price of petroleum increased. • Oil reserves are in the Middle East. • Share of OPEC expected to climb to 48% in 2005 and 52% in 2010. Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  17. Economic & Social Consequences of Oil Dependency • Financial indebtedness and possible insolvency of oil consuming countries. • Dependence on oil as the main revenue in oil producing countries, at the expense of other infrastructure development efforts. • Adverse impacts on the environment, indigenous peoples livelihoods and social structure. • Creating monopolies that nurture corruption in the oil producing as well as the oil consuming countries • Militarization of energy security policies leading to conflicts with high economic and human costs. Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  18. Oil & Wars • 1980-88, President Reagan, during the Iran-Iraq war supported Iraq’s Saddam Hussein, reflagged Kuwaiti tankers with American flags, and provided them with US Navy escorts. • George H.W. Bush in 1991 relied on the Carter Doctrine to implicitly justify US intervention in the invasion of Kuwait by Saddam Hussein. • In 1997, President Clinton engineered building a US military base in Kyrgyzstan side by side a Russian military base. The bidding games between the two powers to maintain these bases, are still going on. Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  19. Oil & Wars (continued) • President George W. Bush formally adopted the National Energy Policy Group’s (NEP) report in 2001 to: “make energy security a priority of our trade and foreign policy.” • Then it proceeded to invade Iraq in 2003, when Saddam Hussein agreed to give oil exploration rights to Chinese, Russian, French, and other nations excluding the US and British multinational companies. Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  20. Oil and the Iraq War • In 2003 the US invaded Iraq, with President George W. Bush citing various reasons. However, the real reason is expressed in a quote by a prominent US government individual: “I am saddened that it is politically inconvenient to acknowledge what everyone knows: The Iraq war is largely about oil.” Alan Greenspan, Chairman Federal Reserve Board 1987-2006 Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  21. Central Asia Oil & Gas Pipeline Projects Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  22. Energy & Oil Security Strategies The energy hungry big powers have and continue to employ the various strategies of offering energy producing countries: • Economic development incentives • Industrial development incentives • Armament sales • Military alliances and bases Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  23. Perils of Energy Security Militarization • Encouraging the creation of repressive autocratic regimes for ‘assuring’ energy security. • Inducing ethnic violence within states, • Invoking violent regional instabilities, resulting in territorial conflicts between states, • Leading to military conflicts between big powers, and/or their client states. • Breeding Terrorism Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  24. Iran - Khuzestan Oil Fields Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  25. US Military Bases in the Middle East Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  26. A Perpetual Crisis: What We Could Do • Incentivize and enforce conservation policies. • Demilitarize energy security strategies. War has never been a zero-sum game. • Work on breaking up oil monopolies and cartels leading to price manipulations, by encouraging free trade. • Use cooperative strategies of economic and industrial. development between energy producers and consumers. • Encourage international cooperation in renewable energy research and technologies. • Adopt international standards that assure human and environmental safety. Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  27. Alternatives Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  28. Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

  29. Thank You Oil Consumption and Geopolitics

More Related