Categorized | General

But if they want to preserve their appeal they shouldn’t pander to journalists

But if they want to preserve their appeal, they shouldn’t pander to journalists. They should keep their views to themselves, and we’ll love them all the better for it.. Early this spring, in an oleaginously expensive West End restaurant, a Texan oilman who is close to George Bush set out to sell me a line. The company and the setting were unfamiliar enough – the pitch, from such a source, even more so.

The Oil Age, that has so dominated our lives, shaped our world – and still underpins our prosperity – is about to come to an end, he said. Not, as doom-mongering environmentalists have falsely predicted, because the black gold is about to run out. But, much more subtly, because world production will start falling in the next few years, demand will outrun supply and prices will shoot up. Over lunch Matthew Simmons, chairman of one of the world’s largest oil investment companies and an adviser to the US president, predicted that the price would reach $100 a barrel within three years, more than three times as high as just a few years ago This month it topped $70.

That was, of course, in the immediate wake of Hurricane Katrina which knocked out a tenth of US refining capacity, sending prices in garage forecourts soaring. Some of the refineries are coming back on steam and pump prices are beginning to ease. But this is likely to be only short-lived relief.

The world’s thirst for oil grows ever greater, particularly in the United States and China. In the US – where, until recently, oil cost less than bottled water – demand is booming as the Bush administration scorns any suggestion that the nation should save fuel for environmental reasons. China has just overtaken Japan as the world’s second largest oil consumer, and its economic expansion is only just beginning.This was sending prices soaring before the hurricane struck.

But it is nothing compared to what will happen if, as Simmons predicts, the rapid 145-year-old growth of oil soon turns into a decline.There is, of course, only so much oil in the world, so one day we will reach a peak by pumping out more than we have ever done before, or will ever be able to do again. On that day – dubbed “peak oil” – ever-expanding, generally cheap, supplies of the stuff will turn into shrinking, increasingly costly, ones. If it comes before we are properly prepared, the world economy will slump and conflict increase as nations fight over what is left.The orthodox oil industry view is that there is plenty of time: peak oil will not occur until the 2030s. But Simmons and a growing number of analysts believe it may be only a couple of years away.The world has been burning more oil than it has found every year for the past quarter of a century. And, despite vast investment in prospecting, the discovery of new fields is at a record low.US production peaked in 1971, our own in 1999. The British-based Association for the Study of Peak Oil estimates that the Middle East’s peak is just five years away; Simmons believes it may already have passed.Even if he and his colleagues are wrong, prices are likely to go on rising.

There is a shortage of refineries (which is why Sir Richard Branson announced yesterday that he was going to build one of his own), oil rigs and tankers. Worse, a terrorist attack on a major oil refinery, or a radical takeover in a key state such as Saudi Arabia, would cause a major crisis, disrupting the world economy.As we report today, Bill Clinton believes that rising oil prices are a good thing That is true, up to a point. He wasn’t ‘team’ – he was ‘local’.”UN defenders cite Unicef as the model for reform, and point to the extraordinary work of James Grant, who was responsible for the immunisation of 25 million children in the 1980s. Unicef is reputedly more efficient because it must appeal directly to governments for its annual budget. However, an American consultant who works with Unicef, warns, “They are great at PR. “They could have asked any kid on the road for advice, but didn’t” he said.An American consultant who often works with the UN despairs of their colonialism: “They paid me $6,000 a month, while our local manager got $400. The UN people wouldn’t let the local translator ride in our Jeep so we waited hours for him to arrive by bus.

Comments are closed.

Advert

Next Article

 

May 2012
M T W T F S S
« Dec    
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031