If
that is Australia the sitution will be the same (or worse) with New
Zealand, the main difference that it would not be reported here until
the shit actually hits the fan.
Do you see the situation going away in 43 days?
Australia
could run out of fuel in just 43 DAYS as escalating conflict in Syria
threatens to cripple supply channels, experts warn
- Australia is at risk of running out of fuel within weeks due to conflict in Syria
- The danger stems from low oil reserves and over-dependence on imports
- Experts have warned 'it is very serious', as it would also put our economy at risk
16
April, 2018
Australia
could completely run out of fuel by the end of next month, experts
say, as the escalating conflict in Syria threatens to cripple supply
channels from overseas.
A
precarious combination of low oil reserves and over-dependence on
international imports puts Australia at particular risk of running
dry.
While
the International Energy Agency mandates that countries hold a stock
in reserve 'equivalent to 90 days of net imports', Australia only has
43 days worth of supply, the Australian reports.
And
that could be cut down even further if a global crisis threatens
supply channels from places like the Middle East.
Defence
Strategy and Capability at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute
senior analyst Dr Malcolm Davis says Australia's fuel reserves would
last '20 days at best' if supplies were cut off, News.com.au reports.
'It
would be a Mad Max world. Our society and our economy would begin to
fall apart very quickly... [because] everything depends on fuel to
make an economy run.
'It
is very serious.'
The
rather ominous forecast comes in the wake of major US strikes on the
Assad regime, as tensions escalate and threaten to compromise
international trade.
This
could prove dire for a nation that outsources its oil refining to
such international locations as Singapore.
'Instead
of investing in refinement facilities here for refining fuel, the
government has decided it's cheaper to do it overseas,' said Dr
Davis.
'The
price they pay for that in a crisis is that China can interrupt flow
to Australia [from Singapore] relatively easy and our economy falls
apart.'
Liberal
Senator and former major general in the Australian Army Jim Molan
agrees that 'we stand in real trouble.'
Speaking
to 2GB on Monday Morning, Mr Nolan criticised the government's
passive approach to issues of fuel supply and energy security,
calling it 'a single point of failure for Australia.
'The
way that we seem to get around this is that we buy credits overseas
which ignores the entire problem,' he said.
'Those
credits say that if things go wrong we can buy from overseas, but
hang on: our supply lines of communication by ship are likely to be
either threatened, or because of insurers nothing will come to us at
all.'
Moreover,
a chronic shortage of petrol, diesel and aviation fuel could render
the Australian military immobile.
According
to Mr Molan, Australia is one of the few places in the world that
doesn’t have a government-mandated strategic reserve of fuel.
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