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Y376 IPE: Oil Politics February 20, 2012. World Energy Consumption, 1965-2005, in Terawatts (TW)

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Presentation on theme: "Y376 IPE: Oil Politics February 20, 2012. World Energy Consumption, 1965-2005, in Terawatts (TW)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Y376 IPE: Oil Politics February 20, 2012

2 World Energy Consumption, 1965-2005, in Terawatts (TW)

3 Projected Future Energy Use

4 Top Consuming Countries, 1960- 2005, in Million Barrels per Day

5 Addiction to Oil

6 Figure 9-5. World Consumption of Petroleum, 1960-2005, in Millions of Barrels per Day Source: U.S. Department of Energy, Energy Information Agency, International Energy Annual (various years).

7 OPEC Headquarters, Vienna Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani

8 Table 9-1. Members of OPEC CountryMembership Algeria1969 Angola2007 Ecuador1973-92, Rejoined 2008 Indonesia1962, quit 2009 Iran1960 Iraq1960 Kuwait1960 Libya1962 Nigeria1971 Qatar1961 Saudi Arabia1960 United Arab Emirates1967 Venezuela1960

9 OPEC OPEC Organization of Oil Exporting Countries Organization of Oil Exporting Countries Organization of Oil Exporting Countries Organization of Oil Exporting Countries

10 Major Crude Oil Reserves, 2006 Source: Jean-Paul Rodrigue, Dept. of Economics & Geography, Hofstra University

11 Figure 9-4. Production of Crude Petroleum by OPEC Countries, 1970-2007, in Millions of Barrels per Day Source: U.S. Department of Energy, Energy Information Agency, International Energy Annual (various years).

12 Figure 9-7. OPEC and Non-OPEC Oil Production, 1970-2007, in Millions of Barrels per Day Source: Department of Energy, Energy Information Agency, International Energy Annual (various years).

13 Non-OPEC Oil Production, 1900- 2003

14 Middle East North America Latin America Africa Western Europe Former Soviet Union Pacific Asia Major Oil Routes & Chokepoints, 2000 15 10 3 1 Million barrels per day Hormuz Malacca Bab el-Mandab Suez Bosphorus Panama Source: Jean-Paul Rodrigue, Dept. of Economics & Geography, Hofstra University

15 Price of Oil, Nominal and Real 1861-2006, $ per Barrel Source: Wikipedia.

16 Oil Prices, 1987-2011

17 Figure 9-14. U.S. Gasoline Prices in Current and Constant 2007 Prices, 1919-2007, in Cents per Gallon Source: Department of Energy, Energy Information Agency, Short Term Energy Outlook, August 2008.

18 Gasoline Prices in Pennies per Gallon, 1973-2010

19 Non-OPEC Supply and Oil Prices

20 Real Price of Oil and Major Disruptions in World Oil Supply

21 Figure 9-8. U.S. Production, Consumption, and Imports of Crude Petroleum, 1949-2007, in Millions of Barrels per Day Source: Department of Energy, Energy Information Agency, International Energy Annual (various years).

22 Challenges to the Seven Sisters and the rise of the cartel (OPEC) “Oligopsony = An oligopsony is a market form in which the number of buyers are small while the number of sellers in theory could be large.” “Oligopsony = An oligopsony is a market form in which the number of buyers are small while the number of sellers in theory could be large.”market formmarket form The Seven Sisters were also an oligopsony! The Seven Sisters were also an oligopsony! “A cartel is a group of formally independent producers whose goal it is to fix prices, to limit supply and to limit competition.” “A cartel is a group of formally independent producers whose goal it is to fix prices, to limit supply and to limit competition.”fix pricessupplycompetitionfix pricessupplycompetition OPEC was formed in 1960, but its effects were most dramatic in 1974. OPEC was formed in 1960, but its effects were most dramatic in 1974. OPEC sought to counterbalance the Seven Sisters. OPEC sought to counterbalance the Seven Sisters. Definitions from Wikipedia

23 Seven Sisters: Old and New OldNew British PetroleumChina National Petroleum (China) GulfGazprom (Russia) Royal Dutch ShellNational Iranian Oil Company Standard Oil of California (Socal/Chevron)Petrobras (Brazil) Standard Oil of New Jersey (Esso/Exxon)PDVSA (Venezuela) Standard Oil of New York (Mobil)Petronas (Malaysia) TexacoSaudi Aramco (Saudi Arabia) Chevron acquired Gulf in 1985 and Texaco in 2001 Exxon acquired Mobil in 1999 The old Seven Sisters became the four “Supermajors”

24 Conservation Measures Taken after the Oil Price Shocks of the 1970s Higher taxes on gasoline and fuel oil in Western Europe Higher taxes on gasoline and fuel oil in Western Europe Fuel efficiency standards for motor vehicles in the US Fuel efficiency standards for motor vehicles in the US Accelerated adoption of energy-efficient heating for homes, offices, and factories Accelerated adoption of energy-efficient heating for homes, offices, and factories General substitution of energy-conserving technologies for energy-intensive technologies General substitution of energy-conserving technologies for energy-intensive technologies

25 Oil Prices have less impact on US Economy This doesn’t mean the US is consuming less oil, just that it is more efficient at utilizing oil to produce

26 What Role Did Energy Politics Play in September 11? In… Afghanistan Afghanistan Central Asia Central Asia The Middle East The Middle East The Rest of the World The Rest of the World

27 Afghanistan Afghanistan itself has few exportable energy resources. Its main value from an energy standpoint stems from the fact that it offers a route for Caspian energy to the sea via Pakistan.

28 There are large deposits of oil and natural gas in the Caspian Sea region. The main problem is getting these resources to markets. Pipelines are required to service the large markets in North America, Europe, and E. Asia.

29 Two Pipelines in Greater Detail Main participants in these two pipelines: Tengiz to Novorossiysk Russian Federation 24% Repub. Of Kazakhstan 19% Sultanate of Oman 7% Chevron 15% LUKARCO 12.5% Rosneft/Shell 7.5% Mobil 7.5% Agip 2% Turkmenistan to Pakistan: Unocal, Gazprom, Hyundai, Itochu, Delta Oil (Saudi Arabia)

30 What is the Role of Saudi Arabia within OPEC? It is the largest single supplier of oil. It is the largest single supplier of oil. The small Saudi population permits them the luxury of varying the amount of oil that they sell (thereby controlling prices): The small Saudi population permits them the luxury of varying the amount of oil that they sell (thereby controlling prices): When they want the price to increase they sell less When they want the price to increase they sell less When they want the price to decrease they sell more When they want the price to decrease they sell more

31 Figure 9-10. Saudi Export Revenues and Foreign Currency Reserves, 1960-2005, in Billions of Current Dollars Source: World Development Indicators 2007; and Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency, Annual Report, Monetary and Banking Statistics.

32 What Role Did Energy Politics Play in September 11? In… Afghanistan Afghanistan Central Asia Central Asia The Middle East The Middle East The Rest of the World The Rest of the World

33 Afghanistan Afghanistan itself has few exportable energy resources. Its main value from an energy standpoint stems from the fact that it offers a route for Caspian energy to the sea via Pakistan.

34 There are large deposits of oil and natural gas in the Caspian Sea region. The main problem is getting these resources to markets. Pipelines are required to service the large markets in North America, Europe, and E. Asia.

35 Two Pipelines in Greater Detail Main participants in these two pipelines: Tengiz to Novorossiysk Russian Federation 24% Repub. Of Kazakhstan 19% Sultanate of Oman 7% Chevron 15% LUKARCO 12.5% Rosneft/Shell 7.5% Mobil 7.5% Agip 2% Turkmenistan to Pakistan: Unocal, Gazprom, Hyundai, Itochu, Delta Oil (Saudi Arabia)

36 What is the Role of Saudi Arabia within OPEC? It is the largest single supplier of oil. It is the largest single supplier of oil. The small Saudi population permits them the luxury of varying the amount of oil that they sell (thereby controlling prices): The small Saudi population permits them the luxury of varying the amount of oil that they sell (thereby controlling prices): When they want the price to increase they sell less When they want the price to increase they sell less When they want the price to decrease they sell more When they want the price to decrease they sell more

37 Figure 9-10. Saudi Export Revenues and Foreign Currency Reserves, 1960-2005, in Billions of Current Dollars Source: World Development Indicators 2007; and Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency, Annual Report, Monetary and Banking Statistics.

38 This Puts the United States in a Strange Position The U.S. wants the price of oil to be low, and it views the Saudis as a moderates within OPEC. The U.S. wants the price of oil to be low, and it views the Saudis as a moderates within OPEC. Saudi Arabian donors funded the Mujaheddin in Afghanistan and many of the Islamic schools that were the recruiting grounds for both Taliban and Al Qaeda fighters. Saudi Arabian donors funded the Mujaheddin in Afghanistan and many of the Islamic schools that were the recruiting grounds for both Taliban and Al Qaeda fighters.

39 The Three Periods PeriodDatesType of Governance Bretton Woods1945-1971Hegemonic Interdependence1971-1989Collective Globalization1989-presentGlobal

40 Evolution of Subsystems SubsystemsBretton Woods InterdependenceGlobalization North- North Creation of US-dominated regimes Floating replaces fixed exchange- rates; Major challenges to US hegemony EU expansion and the creation of Euro; the US reemerges as hegemonic North- South Bipolar competition NIEO, OPEC, increasing gaps w/in the South Rise of Asian NICs and the Washington Consensus

41 What Happens to Specific Regimes? RegimesBretton Woods InterdependenceGlobalization Monetary Fixed but adjustable rates Dirty FloatDirty Float; greater concerns about crises Trade GATTGATT challenged (even by US) WTO; rise of the anti-globalization movement Investment Few rules other than retaliation Period of nationalizations TRIMs within the WTO; but MAI fails; rise of BITs


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