Energy Wars of Attrition The Irony of Oil Abundance By Michael T. Klare
Energy Wars of Attrition
The Irony of Oil Abundance
By Michael T. Klare
Three and a half years ago, the International Energy Agency (IEA) triggered headlines
around the world by predicting that the United States would overtake
Saudi Arabia to become the world’s leading oil producer by 2020 and,
together with Canada, would become a net exporter of oil around 2030.
Overnight, a new strain of American energy triumphalism appeared and
experts began speaking of “Saudi America,”
a reinvigorated U.S.A. animated by copious streams of oil and natural
gas, much of it obtained through the then-pioneering technique of
hydro-fracking. “This is a real energy revolution,” the Wall Street Journal crowed in an editorial heralding the IEA pronouncement.
The most immediate effect of this “revolution,” its boosters proclaimed, would be to banish any likelihood of a “peak”
in world oil production and subsequent petroleum scarcity. The peak oil
theorists, who flourished in the early years of the twenty-first
century, warned that global output was likely to reach its maximum
attainable level in the near future, possibly as early as 2012, and then
commence an irreversible decline as the major reserves of energy were
tapped dry. The proponents of this outlook did not, however, foresee the
coming of hydro-fracking and the exploitation of previously
inaccessible reserves of oil and natural gas in underground shale
formations.
Click here to read more of this dispatch.
http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/176112/tomgram%3A_michael_klare%2C_a_take-no-prisoners_world_of_oil/#more
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