The
New 'Golden Age of Oil' That Wasn't
Forecasts
of Abundance Collide with Planetary Realities
Michael
C Klare
5
October, 2012
Last
winter, fossil-fuel enthusiasts began trumpeting the dawn of a new
“golden age of oil” that would kick-start the American economy,
generate millions of new jobs, and free this country from its
dependence on imported petroleum. Ed Morse, head commodities
analyst at Citibank, was typical. In the Wall
Street Journal he crowed,
“The United States has become the fastest-growing oil and gas
producer in the world, and is likely to remain so for the rest of
this decade and into the 2020s.”
Once
this surge in U.S. energy production was linked to a predicted boom
in energy from Canada’s tar sands reserves, the results seemed
obvious and uncontestable. “North America,” he announced,
“is becoming the new Middle East.” Many other analysts have
elaborated similarly on this rosy scenario, which now provides the
foundation for Mitt Romney’s plan to achieve “energy
independence”
by 2020.
By
employing impressive new technologies -- notably deepwater drilling
and hydraulic fracturing (or hydro-fracking) -- energy companies were
said to be on the verge of unlocking vast new stores of oil in
Alaska, the Gulf of Mexico, and shale formations across the United
States. “A ‘Great Revival’ in U.S. oil production is
taking shape -- a major break from the near 40-year trend of falling
output,” James Burkhard of IHS Cambridge Energy Research Associates
(CERA) told
the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources in January 2012.
Increased
output was also predicted elsewhere in the Western Hemisphere,
especially Canada and Brazil. “The outline of a new world oil
map is emerging, and it is centered not on the Middle East but on the
Western Hemisphere,” Daniel Yergin, chairman of CERA, wrote in
the Washington
Post.
“The new energy axis runs from Alberta, Canada, down through North
Dakota and South Texas... to huge offshore oil deposits found near
Brazil.”
Extreme
Oil
It
turns out, however, that the future may prove far more recalcitrant
than these prophets of an American energy cornucopia imagine.
To reach their ambitious targets, energy firms will have to overcome
severe geological and environmental barriers -- and recent
developments suggest that they are going to have a tough time doing
so.
Consider
this: while many analysts and pundits joined in the premature
celebration of the new “golden age,” few emphasized that it would
rest almost entirely on the exploitation of “unconventional”
petroleum resources -- shale oil, oil shale, Arctic oil, deep
offshore oil, and tar sands (bitumen). As for conventional oil
(petroleum substances that emerge from the ground in liquid form and
can be extracted using familiar, standardized technology), no one
doubts that it will continue its historic decline in North America.
The
“unconventional” oil that is to liberate the U.S. and its
neighbors from the unreliable producers of the Middle East involves
substances too hard or viscous to be extracted using standard
technology or embedded in forbidding locations that require highly
specialized equipment for extraction. Think of it as “tough
oil.”
Shale
oil, for instance, is oil trapped in shale rock. It can only be
liberated through the application of concentrated force in a process
known as hydraulic
fracturing that
requires millions of gallons of chemically laced water per “frack,”
plus the subsequent disposal of vast quantities of toxic wastewater
once the fracking has been completed. Oil
shale,
or kerogen, is a primitive form of petroleum that must be melted to
be useful, a process that itself consumes vast amounts of energy. Tar
sands (or
“oil sands,” as the industry prefers to call them) must be gouged
from the earth using open-pit mining technology or pumped up after
first being melted in place by underground steam jets, then treated
with various chemicals. Only then can the material be
transported to refineries via, for example, the highly controversial
Keystone
XL pipeline.
Similarly, deepwater and Arctic drilling requires the deployment of
specialized multimillion-dollar rigs along with enormously costly
backup safety systems under the most dangerous of conditions.
All
these processes have at least one thing in common: each pushes the
envelope of what is technically possible in extracting oil (or
natural gas) from geologically and geographically forbidding
environments. They are all, that is, versions of “extreme
energy.”
To produce them, energy companies will have to drill in extreme
temperatures or extreme weather, or use extreme pressures, or operate
under extreme danger -- or some combination of all of these. In
each, accidents, mishaps, and setbacks are guaranteed to be more
frequent and their consequences more serious than in conventional
drilling operations. The apocalyptic poster child for these
processes already played out in 2010 with BP’s Deepwater
Horizondisaster
in the Gulf of Mexico, and this summer we saw intimations of how it
will happen again as a range of major unconventional drilling
initiatives -- all promising that “golden age” -- ran into
serious trouble.
Perhaps
the most notable example of this was Shell Oil’s costly failure to
commence test drilling in the Alaskan Arctic.
After investing $4.5
billion and years of preparation, Shell was poised to drill five test
wells this summer in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas off Alaska’s
northern and northwestern coasts. However, on September 17th, a
series of accidents and mishaps forced the company to announce that
it would suspend operations until next summer -- the only time when
those waters are largely free of pack ice and so it is safer to
drill.
Shell’s
problems began early and picked up pace as the summer wore on.
On September 10th, its Noble
Discoverer drill
ship was forced to abandon
operations at
the Burger Prospect, about 70 miles offshore in the Chukchi Sea, when
floating sea ice threatened the safety of the ship. A more
serious setback occurred later in the month when a containment dome
designed to cover any leak that developed at an undersea well
malfunctioned during tests in Puget Sound in Washington State.
As Clifford Krauss noted in
the New
York Times,
“Shell’s inability to control its containment equipment in calm
waters under predictable test conditions suggested that the company
would not be able to effectively stop a sudden leak in treacherous
Arctic waters, where powerful ice floes and gusty winds would
complicate any spill response.”
Shell’s
effort was also impeded by persistent
opposition from
environmentalists and native groups. They have repeatedly
brought suit to block its operations on the grounds that Arctic
drilling will threaten the survival of marine life essential to
native livelihoods and culture. Only after promising to take
immensely costly protective measures and winning the support of
the Obama administration -- fearful of appearing to block “job
creation” or “energy independence” during a presidential
campaign -- did the company obtain the necessary permits to proceed.
But some lawsuits remain in play and, with this latest delay, Shell’s
opponents will have added time and ammunition.
Officials
from Shell insist that the company will overcome all these hurdles
and be ready to drill next summer. But many observers view its
experience as a deterrent to future drilling in the Arctic. “As
long as Shell has not been able to show that they can get the permits
and start to drill, we’re a bit skeptical about moving
forward,” said Tim
Dodson of Norway’s Statoil. That company also owns licenses
for drilling in the Chukchi Sea, but has now decided to postpone
operations until 2015 at the earliest.
Extreme
Water
Another
unexpected impediment to the arrival of energy’s next “golden
age” in North America emerged even more unexpectedly from this
summer’s record-breaking drought, which still has 80% of
U.S. agricultural land in its grip. The energy angle on all
this was, however, a surprise.
Any
increase in U.S. hydrocarbon output will require greater extraction
of oil and gas from shale rock, which can only be accomplished via
hydro-fracking. More fracking, in turn, means more water
consumption. With the planet warming thanks to climate change,
such intensive droughts are expected tointensify in
many regions, which means rising agricultural demand for less water,
including potentially in prime fracking locations like the Bakken
formation of North Dakota, the Eagle Ford area of West Texas, and the
Marcellus formation in Pennsylvania.
The
drought’s impact on hydro-fracking became strikingly evident when,
in June and July, wells and streams started drying up in many
drought-stricken areas and drillers suddenly found
themselvescompeting with
hard-pressed food-producers for whatever water was available.
“The amount of water needed for drilling is a double whammy,”
Chris Faulkner, the president and chief executive officer of Breitling
Oil & Gas,
told Oil
& Gas Journal in
July.
“We’re
getting pushback from farmers, and my fear is that it’s going to
get worse.” In July, in fact, the situation became so dire in
Pennsylvania that the Susquehanna River Basin Commission suspended
permits for
water withdrawals from the Susquehanna River and its tributaries,
forcing some drillers to suspend operations.
If
this year’s “endless
summer”
of unrelenting drought were just a fluke, and we could expect
abundant water in the future, the golden age scenario might still be
viable. But most climate scientists suggest that severe drought
is likely to become the “new
normal”
in many parts of the United States, putting the fracking boom very
much into question. “Bakken and Eagle Ford are our big keys
to energy independence,” Faulkner noted. “Without water,
drilling shale gas and oil wells is not possible. A continuing
drought could cause our domestic production to decline and derail our
road to energy independence in a hurry.”
And
then there are those Canadian tar sands. Turning them into
“oil” also requires vast amounts of water, and
climate-change-related shortages of that vital commodity are also
likely in Alberta, Canada, their heartland. In addition, tar
sands production releases far more greenhouse gas emissions than
conventional oil production, which has sparked its own fiercely
determined opposition in Canada, the United States, and Europe.
In
the U.S., opposition to tar sands has until now largely focused on
the construction of the Keystone
XL pipeline,
a $7 billion, 2,000-mile conduit that would carry diluted tar sands
oil from Hardisty, Alberta, to refineries on the U.S. Gulf Coast,
thousands of miles away. Parts of the Keystone system are
already in place. If completed, the pipeline is designed to
carry 1.1 million barrels a day of unrefined liquid across the United
States.
Keystone
XL opponents charge that
the project will contribute to the acceleration of climate change.
It also exposes crucial underground water supplies in the Midwest to
severe risk of contamination by the highly corrosive tar-sands fluid
(and pipeline leaks are commonplace). Citing the closeness of
its proposed route to the critical Ogallala
Aquifer,
President Obama denied
permission for
its construction last January. (Because it will cross an
international boundary, the president gets to make the call.)
He is, however, expected to grant post-election approval to a new,
less aquifer-threatening route; Mitt Romney has vowed to give it his
approval on his first day in office.
Even
if Keystone XL were in place, the golden age of Canada’s tar sands
won’t be in sight -- not without yet more pipelines as the bitumen
producers face mounting opposition to their extreme operations.
As a result of fierce resistance to Keystone XL, led in large part by
TomDispatch contributor Bill
McKibben,
-- the public has become far more aware of the perils of tar sands
production. Resistance to it, for example, could stymie plans
to deliver tar sands oil to Portland, Maine (for transshipment by
ship to refineries elsewhere), via an existing pipeline that runs
from Montreal through Vermont and New Hampshire to the Maine coast.
Environmentalists in New England are already gearing
up to
oppose the plan.
If
the U.S. proves too tough a nut to crack, Alberta has a backup plan:
construction of the Northern Gateway, a proposed pipeline through
British Columbia for the export of tar sands oil to Asia.
However, it, too, is running into trouble. Environmentalists
and native communities in that province are implacably opposed and
have threatened civil
disobedience to
prevent its construction (with major protests already set for October
22nd outside the Parliament Building in Victoria).
Sending
tar sands oil across the Atlantic is likely to have its own set of
problems. The European Union is considering adopting
rules that would label it a dirtier form of energy, subjecting it to
various penalties when imported into the European Union. All of
this is, in turn, has forced Albertan authorities to considertough
new environmental regulations that
would make it more difficult and costly to extract bitumen,
potentially dampening the enthusiasm of investors and so diminishing
the future output of tar sands.
Extreme
Planet
In
a sense, while the dreams of the boosters of these new forms of
energy may thrill journalists and pundits, their reality could be
expressed this way: extreme energy = extreme methods = extreme
disasters = extreme opposition.
There
are already many indications that the new “golden age” of North
American oil is unlikely to materialize as publicized, including an
unusually rapid
decline in
oil output at existing shale oil drilling operations in Montana.
(Although Montana is not a major producer, the decline there is
significant because it is occurring in part of the Bakken field,
widely considered a major source of new oil.) As for the rest
of the Western Hemisphere, there is little room for optimism there
either when it comes to the “promise” of extreme energy.
Typically, for instance, a Brazilian court has ordered Chevron
to cease production at its multibillion-dollar Frade
field in
the Campos basin of Brazil’s deep and dangerous Atlantic waters
because of repeated oil leaks. Doubts have
meanwhile arisen over the ability of Petrobras, Brazil’s
state-controlled oil company, to develop the immensely challenging
Atlantic “pre-salt” fields on its own.
While
output from unconventional oil operations in the U.S. and Canada is
likely to show some growth in the years ahead, there is no “golden
age” on the horizon, only various kinds of potentially disastrous
scenarios. Those like Mitt Romney who claim that the United
States can achieve energy “independence” by 2020 or any other
near-term date are only fooling themselves, and perhaps some elements
of the American public. They may indeed employ such claims to
gain support for the rollback of what environmental protections exist
against the exploitation of extreme energy, but the United States
will remain dependent on Middle Eastern and African oil for the
foreseeable future.
Of
course, were such a publicized golden age to come about, we would be
burning vast quantities of the dirtiest energy on the planet with
truly disastrous consequences. The truth is this: there is just
one possible golden age for U.S. (or any other kind of) energy and it
would be based on a major push to produce breakthroughs in
climate-friendly renewables, especially wind, solar, geothermal,
wave, and tidal power.
Otherwise
the only “golden” sight around is likely to be the sun on an ever
hotter, ever dirtier, ever more extreme planet.
Michael
T. Klare is a professor of peace and world security studies at
Hampshire College, a TomDispatch
regular,
and the author, most recently, of The
Race for What’s Left.
A movie based on one of his earlier books, Blood
and Oil,
can be ordered at http://www.bloodandoilmovie.com.
Klare’s other books and articles are described at his website.
You can follow Klare’s work on Facebook.

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