No discussion of the
Saudi-US partnership can be considered complete without an
understanding of the energy security dimension -- a component that
undergirds relations between the countries. Recognizing the
importance of the energy issue SUSRIS frequently provides timely
articles and reports on developments in the field. Such is
the case today as we share with you the recent testimony of Robert
E. Ebel, Chairman of the Energy Program at the Center
for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in
Washington. He provided the context for understanding how US
energy needs fit into the global scheme in general and the Middle
East in particular. His
cogent appraisal of Saudi Arabia's role in US energy security,
indeed the global needs for energy, may be helpful to those who
have come to be misinformed in the gasoline shortage "blame
game" that periodically flares in some media circles:
Saudi
Arabia currently supplies about 8% of total US demand,
although by any measure it remains the most prolific,
reliable and secure source of oil for global consumers.
With the exception of the targeted oil embargo of 1973,
Saudi Arabia has been one of the very few highly reliable
producer/exporters of the past 30 years. Its performance
in providing the world with incremental supply in time of
need (eg, in the lead up to the 1991 Gulf War, during the
2002 Venezuelan strike, more recently in advance of the
2003 Gulf conflict and as prices spiked in the past two
years) is unsurpassed. |
Mr.
Ebel testified on October 20, 2005 before the Subcommittee
on Near Eastern and Asian Affairs of the US Senate Committee on
Foreign Relations. A report on his testimony was published
October 31, 2005 in the Middle East Economic Survey and is
reprinted here with permission.
Patrick W. Ryan
US
Foreign Policy, Petroleum And The Middle East
By
Robert E. Ebel
Mr.
Chairman, members of the subcommittee, I appreciate the
opportunity to appear before you today to discuss an extremely
timely, somewhat complex and often misunderstood topic dealing
with �US Foreign Policy, Petroleum and the Middle East.� In
your invitation to testify, Mr. Chairman, you identified three
principal areas of interest:
-
How
has US foreign policy been shaped by our need for affordable
oil?
-
What
effect would greater energy efficiency and alternative energy
sources have on US foreign policy?, and
-
The
interaction between the Departments of State and Energy with
respect to the handling of such issues.
As
the State and Energy Departments are most ably represented here
today, I will focus my remarks on the first two topics and also
provide some general impressions and thoughts that are most
relevant to this discussion.
Energy
And Foreign Policy
Borrowing
a characterization from Secretary Rumsfeld, let me begin a
discussion of the energy and foreign policy issue by listing what
I feel are some of the �known knowns� with respect to this
topic:
First,
as recognized by a wide range of officials ranging from President
Bush and Alan Greenspan to Prince 'Abd Allah and President Chavez
� energy is a strategic commodity. It is the lifeblood of our
economic wellbeing, fuels the troops that protect our homeland,
provides essential services in growing our crops, heating and
lighting our homes, transporting goods to market, moving local,
regional, national and international commerce, making information
transfer via the internet possible, and providing us with the
quality of life and mobility that we have come to enjoy and
expect.
This
is not a new phenomenon. But for the past 25 years or so, global
surplus conditions (relative to demand) � in the case of spare
oil producing capacity, global refining capacity, and in this
country, natural gas production and power generation � have
produced complacency and masked the critical role which energy
plays in our everyday lives. It is only now when we are faced with
conditions that threaten its reliability, security and
affordability that we begin to more fully appreciate its
importance.
As
a consequence, energy policy formulation in this and other
countries over the last quarter century has been, at best, a tepid
attempt at balancing conflicting or competing economic,
environmental, and foreign policy objectives � along with local
political concerns � rather than a serious attempt to secure
sustainable supplies on a forward looking basis. That era may now
be over.
Secondly,
globally speaking, the largest hydrocarbon reserve holders, at
least in terms of conventional fuels sources � and this is true
for both oil and natural gas � are found in the Middle East, and
also in Russia. This fact has several important implications:
1.
Until we achieve the technological breakthrough that might make
energy independence more than a political wish, we would do well
to adopt policies and strategies that encourage interdependency
and improve stability in various parts of the world; and
2.
As we move to increase our dependence on LNG supplies from abroad
as a means to satisfy our seemingly insatiable energy demand,
consider the risks inherent in making our electric grid as import
dependent as our transportation system.
For
the past several decades, US energy security policy, has been
based on four pillars � encouraging the development of a wide
variety of energy supplies at home and abroad; (periodically)
promoting improved efficiency, conservation and the development of
alternative energy sources; establishing the strategic petroleum
reserve and the international sharing arrangement provided by the
IEA (International Energy Agency); and relying on Saudi Arabia to
act responsibly as the swing producer to moderate price and supply
volatility. In addition, we have, at times, been moved to call on
America�s military to defend facilities, protect transit routes
and secure inhospitable areas.
In
combination, these policy tools have worked reasonably well over
the course of the past several decades. However, as the surplus
conditions I referred to earlier have eroded and global demand has
accelerated, energy markets and infrastructure have been greatly
strained. The recent hurricanes in the Gulf have made that
situation even more precarious.
Political
Instability In Context
Much
has been written about US import reliance and how �undue�
reliance on foreign oil imports from �unstable� parts of the
world has undermined US security. In point of fact, while it is
frequently overlooked, Canada is the number one supplier of oil
(crude and refined products) to America. And three of our top four
suppliers (Canada, Mexico and Venezuela) are in the western
hemisphere � and comprise over 48% of total US petroleum
imports.
Saudi
Arabia currently supplies about 8% of total US demand, although by
any measure it remains the most prolific, reliable and secure
source of oil for global consumers. With the exception of the
targeted oil embargo of 1973, Saudi Arabia has been one of the
very few highly reliable producer/exporters of the past 30 years.
Its performance in providing the world with incremental supply in
time of need (eg, in the lead up to the 1991 Gulf War, during the
2002 Venezuelan strike, more recently in advance of the 2003 Gulf
conflict and as prices spiked in the past two years) is
unsurpassed.
While
I recognize the focus of this hearing with respect to foreign
policy choices in the Middle East, I would be remiss if I did not
point out that the energy calculus is also in play with respect to
security, foreign and economic policy choices made in other parts
of the world and with global players as diverse as Canada, Mexico,
Venezuela, Russia, China, Iran, Iraq, Nigeria, Sudan, and the
Caspian.
One
final note on this topic before moving on � and that relates to
our definition of instability and conditions that affect
continuous supplies. For all the hoopla surrounding the various
centers of political unrest last year � and there were many �
from concern about supply continuity in Russia in the wake of
Yukos, the referendum in Venezuela, repeated sabotage in Iraq,
strikes in Norway and Nigeria, the threat of unrest in Saudi
Arabia � the single largest loss of global energy output in 2004
was the result of hurricane Ivan in the US Gulf of Mexico. And I
suspect that, barring any calamitous disaster occurring over the
next quarter, the largest loss of production for 2005 will again
be the result of hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico.
Wealth
Transfers From Oil Price Increases
The
IEA and EIA (US Energy Information Agency) have both projected
huge increases in oil export revenues for all of the major
producing/exporting nations. As collectively significant reserve
holders, producers and exporters, this is particularly true for
OPEC members and the GCC nations of the Middle East. Although it
should be noted that Venezuela, Nigeria, Norway, Canada and Russia
have also benefited greatly from higher energy export prices. EIA
estimates that the GCC countries as a group will realize in excess
of $300bn this year in oil export revenues. Over the course of
that past 10 years, export revenues for all OPEC members have at
least doubled, and in the case of Qatar, have tripled.
While
I cannot comment on how this revenue is used by the host
governments, I would only offer that given the enormous
population, demographic, and social challenges faced by many of
those countries in the coming years, one might well ask if this
increased wealth can be more of a stabilizing or destabilizing
factor. In short, would their plight and situations be improved if
they were poorer?
Opportunities
For Improved Efficiency And Use Of Alternative Energy Forms
I
have saved this last point until the end, because it represents
the one area on which I would hope that this panel would have the
most consensus. The question posed by the committee was whether
and to what effect would improvements in energy efficiency and the
development and use of alternative energy forms have on US foreign
policy.
As
the energy market is global in scope, with producers and consumers
engaging inter-regional trade, increases by one nation, even the
US as the largest energy consumer, might not be enough to tilt the
scale anytime soon. In fact, to the extent, the US opted for a
more costly energy form, freeing up lesser expensive conventional
supplies to competitor nations, we could well find ourselves at a
competitive disadvantage from an industrial point of view.
Alternatively,
however, the prospect of increasingly ramping up global production
to meet ever increasing demand and pitting strategic consumers
against one another, competing for available and secure supplies
is equally unappealing.
While
not a supporter of the current hype associated with the
increasingly pervasive �peak oil� theory, I recognize that as
a world we are consuming conventional energy resources at a rate
far in excess of replenishment. Therefore, we should welcome the
addition of supplemental sources of supply, encourage the adoption
of conservation and efficiency initiatives and promote the
deployment of promising technologies for a wide variety of
economic, environmental, health, trade, and security reasons.
The
Stone Age did not end because we ran out of rocks. The oil age
will likely be with us for decades to come. But we owe it to
ourselves, our children and our children�s children to do
better.
Source:
MEES
Reprinted with
permission.
-
The
Outlook for the World Oil Market by John Browne [more]
-
Foreign
Investment In Saudi Arabia's Energy Sector By Gawdat Bahgat [more]
-
Saudi
Arabian Oil Fields Brimming - Saudi Aramco's Dimensions [more]
-
Saudi
Arabia Ready to Boost Crude Oil Output
- SUSRIS NID [more]
-
Homemade
Oil Crisis
- By David Ignatius [more]
-
Novak:
Bandar, Bush and Plan of Attack - By Robert Novak [more]
-
Saudi
Arabia's Oil Reserves - By Dr. Sadad Al-Husseini [more]
-
Saudis
Out to Help the U.S., Not Push for Bush Re-election - By
Frank Richter [more]
-
U.S.-Saudi
Relations and Global Energy Security:
-
--
James Wolfensohn - President, The World Bank, with
introduction by Eric Peterson [more]
-
--
Ibrahim Al-Assaf - Minister of Finance, Kingdom of Saudi
Arabia, with introduction by Eric Peterson [more]
-
--
Rex W. Tillerson - President, Exxon Mobil Corporation, with
introduction by Dan Yergin [more]
-
--
Abdallah S. Jum'ah - President and CEO of Saudi Aramco, with
introduction by Dan Yergin [More]
-
--
Guy Caruso - Administrator, Energy Information Administration,
with introduction by Dan Yergin [More]
-
--
Kyle McSlarrow - Deputy Secretary of Energy, U.S. Energy
Department, with introduction by Brent Scowcroft [More]
-
--
Ali al-Naimi - Minister of Petroleum and Mineral
Resources, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, with introduction by Brent
Scowcroft [More]
-
International
Energy Outlook 2004 Highlights [more]
-
Future
of Global Oil Supply: Saudi Arabia - A Conference Hosted at
the Center for Strategic and International Studies on Feb. 24,
2004 [more]
-
Saudi Arabia -
Country Analysis Brief - Energy Information Administration -
US Dept of Energy [more]
|