Since
these sanctions would cripple our own economy, since economy, stupid,
determines outcome of our elections, since our rulers would swiftly
loose these elections if they attempted to do such a stupid sanctions
thing.
"Domestic oil and gas production in
the U.S. boomed in recent years. But the country and its allies remain
reluctant to impose sanctions on Russian energy that would damage their
economies.
HOUSTON — It may be time to pluck
that old cardigan out of the closet.
President Jimmy Carter wore one as
he delivered a televised address in February 1977 when he told Americans the
country had reason to be worried about its habitual reliance on foreign oil —
and maybe they should turn down the heat. In April, he warned that with its
resources shrinking the country faced “a problem that is unprecedented in our
history. With the exception of preventing war, this is the great challenge our
country will face during our lifetime.”
Today another American president
faces rising fuel prices, spurred by a challenge mostly out of his control, an
invasion of Ukraine by Russia, a top oil and gas producer intent to use its
energy supplies as a weapon when necessary.
Americans realized 45 years ago that
the United States had an energy dependence problem, and the nation’s long
pursuit of “energy independence” did lead to a boom in domestic production and
some conservation measures. It may have seemed that the country solved its
dependence issues. It didn’t, and energy and geopolitics are connected today as
much as ever. Americans are paying more than $3.50 a gallon for gas, roughly a
dollar more than a year ago, and Russian tanks only just began to roll.
“The great challenge” stubbornly
remains with us as a problem that is managed, but never quite solved. As
Russian troops fan out across Ukraine, the United States and its allies are
reluctant to impose sanctions on Russian energy so not to hurt their own economies.
Alternatively Russia could turn off the taps to pressure the West. Either way
everyone is hurt.
That kind of challenge is more
complex than ever when the world needs to manage its energy security
simultaneously as it promotes a transition to cleaner energy to control climate
change. Producing more oil and gas beyond Russia solves one problem, only to
worsen another.
Much has changed since Jimmy
Carter’s time. The top-rated television shows like “Happy Days” and “Laverne
& Shirley” kept American spirits up, and universal viewership of news
provided by three mainstream networks shaped far less divisive views of the
world. No one was live-tweeting war, not to mention disinformation.
But gas prices and energy in general
were a big concern then, as they are today. The five-month 1973-1974 Arab oil
embargo that aimed to undercut Western support for Israel produced long gas
lines and fanned inflation. Over the next three years the Iranian revolution
and the Iraq-Iran war slashed global supplies of oil and sent energy prices
soaring. The Carter administration tried a slew of policies to promote
conservation and lift production of various sources of energy, some clean, some
dirty, from solar power to oil shale and liquid fuels made of coal.
Some Carter policies laid the
groundwork to a more secure energy picture decades later, and global politics
have changed since the end of the Cold War, even if Russia and China remain
rivals. Most of the Persian Gulf oil producers are now allies and even have
growing business relations with Israel. Nuclear negotiations are moving forward
with Iran that could relieve sanctions and reopen spigots of Iranian oil
exports.
Still, tensions with Russia and
possible future sanctions against the Kremlin threaten oil petroleum supplies,
pushing gasoline prices to their highest level since 2014 while domestic
natural gas prices have doubled over the last year.
“There is no true energy independence,” said
David L. Goldwyn, who was the leading State Department energy diplomat in the
first Obama administration. “With globally priced commodities like oil and gas
and now critical minerals there is no protection from price disruption even if
you have adequate physical supply.”
Global oil prices breached $100 a
barrel this week, and analysts say they could climb a further $20 or more.
Inflation, already at multiyear highs, could gain steam with unpredictable
political consequences. That is why the United States and its allies are
reluctant to wield sanctions against Russia’s energy sector, even though that
is the heart of the country’s economy.
“Our sanctions are not designed to
cause any disruption to the current flow of energy from Russia to the world,”
Daleep Singh, a deputy national security adviser, told reporters Thursday.
Since Russia produces one out of
every 10 barrels of oil the world consumes and up to a third of Europe’s
natural gas supplies, the petroleum card gives it strategic leverage well
beyond its nuclear arsenal. That is the same card that members of the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries once played.
The actors are different, but the
cudgel is essentially the same. On top of the old challenges are new energy
threats that are only just emerging as world leaders try to wean their nations
off fossil fuels.
President Vladimir V. Putin of
Russia has been keen, along with China, to acquire strategic materials found
around the world necessary for the adoption of renewable energy and electric
vehicles.
He got on the phone at least two
times recently with the president of Bolivia, pressing for a lithium mining
contract while promising to send Covid vaccines.
“Policymakers are right to be
worried that the world may be swapping a dependency on oil and gas for a
dependency on critical minerals, whose current production and processing are
actually significantly more concentrated in fewer countries than either oil or
gas,” said Meghan L. O’Sullivan, a former deputy national security adviser in
the George W. Bush administration and currently a professor at Harvard.
As recently as 2008, the United
States imported 60 percent of its oil and was running so low on natural gas
that billions of dollars of investment was going toward building giant import
terminals. Energy scarcity and dependence were on the rise again, with old oil
fields in Texas, Oklahoma and Alaska depleting year after year.
But new exploration techniques,
especially hydraulic fracturing to break through hard shales, led to a frenzy
of oil and gas production across the country over the next decade. Desperation
in the oil patch turned to euphoria, as Texas, New Mexico and North Dakota
shale fields produced record flows.
Energy prices dropped, and today the
country is a net exporter of both oil and gas, leading to a general sense that
the country had kicked its energy dependence. In 2014, the United States began
exporting large amounts of oil for the first time in decades. Two years later
the country started to export liquefied natural gas, better known as L.N.G.,
from terminals once designed for import. That gas helped replace some coal
burning in Asia and relieved some of Europe’s dependence on Russian gas, and
several new American export terminals are being built with more planned along
the coast of the Gulf of Mexico.
Nevertheless, with vital trading
partners like Western Europe and Japan dependent on imported oil and gas, the
United States stands to lose exports of manufactured goods if their economies
slow as energy prices rise.
In recent years some energy experts
have argued that the United States had become the new swing oil producer,
replacing or at least joining OPEC, in its ability to manage energy prices by
raising or lowering output to balance markets and keep prices from going too
high or too low.
That estimation turned out to be
premature. While the United States is now the world’s biggest producer of oil
and natural gas, energy prices and supplies still move up and down based on
events outside the control of Washington or the American oil industry. Even
before the Ukraine crisis, political instability in countries such as Venezuela
and Libya curtailed global oil supplies.
While OPEC has increased production
to accommodate a growing global thirst for energy as the Covid pandemic
recedes, Saudi Arabia has dismissed pleadings by the Biden administration to
ramp up output further. Even as demand for fossil fuels continues to rise,
investments by major Western oil companies in oil and gas exploration and
production have lagged in recent years owing to the pandemic’s economic
downturn and pressure by investors to divest from fossil fuels and return
profits to shareholders.
Beyond what sanctions on Russian oil
and gas would do to prices, there is also the fear of retaliatory cyberattacks.
One such attack from a Russian criminal group crippled the critical Colonial
oil pipeline just last year, producing new gasoline lines and panic-buying
across much of the Southeast.
“A kind of amnesia about energy
security developed,” said Daniel Yergin, the energy historian and vice chairman
of IHS Markit, a research company. “That amnesia is dissipating now.” But he
was optimistic that expansion of American oil and gas production had put Washington
in a far stronger position for confrontation with Russia. “Europe would have
basically caved,” he said, were it not for the U.S. supply of liquid natural
gas.
All that gas is hardly a security
blanket for Europe, however. Local gas prices quadrupled this winter, in part
because Russia reduced shipments. It would have been worse if U.S. gas exports
to Europe had not nearly doubled between last November and January, but those
same exports helped drive gas prices in the United States higher as domestic inventories
dropped.
More gas exports are a strong
foreign policy tool, but fossil fuels are intrinsically connected to the growing problem of climate change.
“If you drill and pillage America
first to have more fossil fuels domestically, you’re still burning them and the
carbon ends up in the atmosphere,” said Daniel F. Becker, the director of the
Safe Climate Transport Campaign at the Center for Biological Diversity. “The
more we drill, the more wildfires, the more droughts and severe hurricanes we
exacerbate because global warming is a direct result of burning fossil fuels.”
Electrification of transportation
could help, but electric vehicles need batteries containing critical minerals
like lithium, cobalt, copper, nickel and rare earths often found in unstable
countries. China has a dominant position in refining many of those minerals,
and could easily be the prime energy rival of the future.
Jason Bordoff, head of Columbia
University’s Center on Global Energy Policy, said the world needed to press on
with cleaner energy to deal with climate change, but that shift is no guarantee
of a more peaceful world. “The old politics of oil and gas,” he said, “are
going to be with us and acute and layered on top of the politics of clean
energy.”"
Komentarų nėra:
Rašyti komentarą