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  • Energy Agency warns that oil has peaked

    From Jeremy Legget in The Guardian

    Another year passes, another climate change summit arrives, the 14th in the annual series. The community of nations have been talking for more than 18 years now about how to stop humanity’s remorseless effort to cook its own home. These gabfests have largely been action-free zones. I have attended too many of them, but this year it was time to risk my blood-pressure on another.

    I took the train to Poland, a prospect that sounds like a recipe for slow-travel hell, but in fact was both easy and productive. You take the afternoon Eurostar to Brussels, the evening express to Cologne, the night train to Poland, disembark after eight hours sleep just in time for breakfast, with a massive reading backlog dismantled along the way. Much less carbon emitted than would have been the case flying, and Ryanair’s boss – Michael O’Leary – deprived of his thin margin. All in all, a good day’s work.

    At the talks, little had changed since my visit to the Montreal summit of 2005. Thousands of delegates throng in cavernous halls, trying to find out what is going on behind the closed doors of the intergovernmental side meetings where most of the serious stalling is done. The “Fossil of the Day” award – a statue given each day by environmental groups to the worst foot-dragger among the 100-plus national governments and dozens of industry lobby groups – is still being dished out. The star renegades in the first week of this summit were Poland and Japan. Candidates are never in short supply. During my stay they included Chancellor Merkel, who is angling for massive exclusions for German heavy industry in carbon permitting, and Kuwait and Qatar, who are claiming they should qualify for the putative fund compensating victims of climate change because sea-level rise may damage their offshore oil rigs.

    One of my missions was an effort to raise the peak oil issue. I suspect that most of the 9,000-plus attendees – diplomats, lobbyists and journalists – may have little idea how strong the evidence is that a global energy crisis lurks just a few years in the future, and that it will have massive implications for climate change policymaking.

    Some of that evidence was aired by the International Energy Agency at an open meeting on its recently-completed World Energy Outlook 2008. Between the lines of the IEA’s latest weighty annual lies an early warning of a premature peak in global oil production. I say “between the lines”, because the IEA is a somewhat inconsistent organisation. Set up by developed governments essentially to promote fossil fuels, it has to wrestle with considerable internal tensions when warning both of fossil fuel depletion and the environmental impacts of fossil fuel burning. These tensions are often discernible in the wording of the agency’s committee-written reports, and in public presentations by its officials.

    This year, for the first time, the IEA has conducted an oilfield-by-oilfield study of the world’s existing oil reserves. It shows that the fields currently in production are running out alarmingly fast. The average depletion rate of 580 of the world’s largest fields, all past their peak of production, is fully 6.7% per annum.

    IEA executive director Nobuo Tanaka showed a slide illustrating the situation. It is, he said, his most important diagram. It shows crude oil production from all the world’s existing fields climbing unevenly from just below 60 million barrels a day (mbd) in 1990 to a peak – more exactly a brief plateau – of just over 70 mbd between 2005 and 2008. In 2009, however, crude production begins a steep descent, falling steadily all the way below 30 million barrels a day by 2030. The depletion factor charted by his team, as I see it, could better be called a fast-emptying factor.

    This is indeed alarming, Tanaka said. The more so because, even with demand for oil being destroyed fast by recession in the west, the rate of demand growth – led by China, and India – is such that the world will need to be producing at least 103 million barrels a day by 2030.

    Can that be done? Yes, he said, but only if massive investment is thrown at the challenge, especially by the Opec nations. Global production today totals 82.3 mbd if we subtract biofuels and add to existing crude production the 1.6 mbd of “unconventional” oil squeezed from the tar sands and 10.5 mbd of oil produced during gas-field operations. To reach production of 103 mbd, therefore, would require oil-from-gas to expand almost to 20 mbd, unconventional production to expand almost 9 mbd, and on top of that more than 45 million barrels a day of crude oil capacity yet to be developed and yet to be found. All this adds up to 64 mbd of totally new production capacity needed onstream within 22 years. That, said Tanaka, pausing for effect, is fully six times the production of Saudi Arabia today.

    I imagined I could detect a desire in Tanaka to say more about his thoughts on the likelihood of this. But of course, in his position, he can’t.

    Here is the bottom line. At oil prices below around $70 a barrel, producing oil becomes uneconomic in many settings today. With the oil price where it currently languishes, at less than $50 a barrel – in a market where pricing has become completely disconnected from “fundamentals” by the volume of paper trading – oil development and exploration projects are being cancelled around the world on a daily basis. How on earth is the industry going to bring on six new Saudi Arabia’s from this kind of dead-in-the water start?

    That is before you even consider the shrinking rate of large-field discovery, the state of the industry’s rusting infrastructure, its ageing workforce, its long history of under-investment, the consistent delays in bringing oilfields onstream once discovered, and other problems.

    Tanaka closed by saying that the world needs a “clean energy new deal”, as the IEA is calling it. Insurance must be taken out, via clean energy, in case the oil industry fails to meet projected demand. The perils of climate change require such a course of action anyway. So too does the rebuilding of economies made necessary by the financial crisis. It all makes sense in a win-win-win sort of way.

    The IEA, in Poznan, thereby added its name to the growing list of institutions calling for what is now widely referred to as a green new deal. I asked Tanaka whether he knew of the recent study by a group of eight UK companies, the UK Industry Taskforce on Peak Oil and Energy Security.These companies, including my own, have conducted a business-risk assessment of the likelihood of the “six Saudi Arabias”.

    Our conclusion is that it is unlikely that the oil industry will close the widening gap between depletion and demand within a few years. Peak oil, we fear, is going to hit the oil-dependent world hard. Many oil-importing countries risk experiencing peak oil not as an energy crisis, but an energy famine, as producers cut off their exports for use at home. Peak oil might, if we are smart and lucky, galvanise a proactive mass mobilisation of the alternatives that can abate both the energy-security and climate threats, and so soften the landing in the global energy crisis. On the other hand, if many governments choose to forget about climate change in their scramble for alternatives, it could also mobilise technologies like tar sands and liquids-from-coal on a scale that would drown any effort to deal with global warming.

    “There is a risk, as you say, of a constraint on the supply side,” Tanaka replied cautiously. We hope the climate-change issue will drive the world to take proactive action, he said. “It’s a choice: peak oil or you yourself (meaning the community of nations) will drive energy efficiency and alternatives.” Tanaka hadn’t mentioned the words “peak oil” once in his presentation. Only now, in discussion, did the seemingly taboo term emerge.

    Afterwards, an IEA official came up to me to offer words of encouragement. “There’s a real risk that this thing could collapse,” he said. He meant the operating model for the world’s energy markets. Where financial markets can go today, in other words, so can energy markets tomorrow.

    Perhaps 100 of the 9,000 delegates in Poznan attended Nobuo Tanaka’s presentation. The next day, I give a talk of my own, on the UK taskforce report. Around a dozen people attended that.

    And so to the train journey home. Somehow it seemed to take longer than the journey out.

  • Don’t fool with the rules of the pool

    More lanes for locals will be available in the swimming pools of the Tweed this week as banana benders head back across the border to swim in their own back yard. They have been down here, using up our water, because the Gold Coast Council closed 23 pools last month as a result of stray electrical currents.

    As everyone knows, electricity and water do not mix, well they do mix, but not safely. The discovery that a number of pools exhibited quite strong electrical currents had council safety officers scratching their heads, caluthumpians convinced that aliens had finally arrived, pool managers tearing out their hair, and swimming clubs renting lanes from local high schools, gymnasiums and people with very big back yards. The scare is now officially over. Gold Coast Council will bring the pools back on line over the week (weather permitting) as the repairs to deteriorating electrics that affect all pools eventually are tested and approved. Conspiracy theorists know this is a cover up proving that aliens have taken over Ron Clarke’s mind.

    The municipal pool has been iconic since the Melbourne Olympics in 1956. That spectacular event kick-started a national campaign to get a pool in every community. Some communities, like Mullumbimby on the Brunswick River, raised the money themselves, selling scones and doileys to each other, with local men digging the hole. The Mullumbimby men did it twice, digging up the original pool to go Olympic for local legend Petria Thomas.

    Against this background, Mur’bah celebrated the return of the local pool, now officially known as TRAC(IM). “’Owju find Wayne, Darleen?” “Oi tracked ‘im down at TRAC(IM).” The Tweed River Aquatic Centre (In Murwillumbah) features the standard Olympic Pool, toddler pool, hill slide and that’s all outside. Inside, there is a 25m pool, diving pool, hydrotherapy pool and learn to swim pool. That’s really more pools than you can poke a stick at, and the Mullumbimby men have given up keeping up. If we dug that many holes in Mullumbimby the place would look like a Swiss cheese, or Darwin after Baz Luhrman.

    Amidst the crowds of swimmers enjoying a free gawp at the TRACIM celebrations, there were a few cautionary notes. Some families balked at the $14 family ticket, which is cheaper than buying four tickets at $4.50 but more expensive than getting every one to take turns lying in the bath. Others had a little grumble at the length of the lines at the water slide, but the ticket prices will soon take care of that. In fact you could say that one problem will solve the other.

    The deepest fears come from those with bitter experience. A number of parents in the tragic position of having buried a child are concerned about the lack of safety fences around the toddler pool. Ironically, in the same issue of the Tweed Daily News that celebrated the pool opening another story ran under the heading, Third child drowns in horror week. Safety fences are a legal requirement to prevent tragedies, which often happen in neighbour’s pools. No-one, least of all me, Dear Reader, likes over regulation but most suburban pools do have fences around the toddler zone. It allows a parent with more than one child, or a less able grandparent, to glance at a magazine once every fifteen minutes and let the child off the leash for five minutes every hour. For the sake of those people, I encourage our councillors and pool managers to fence the toddlers in. Besides, it’s so much fun taunting them with ice-creams from outside the fence.

     

  • Greens and farmers unite against trees

    The Summerland Highway between Lismore and Grafton wends its way through plantations of pinus radiata and eucalyptus maculata, grandis and pilularis. These plantations have been predominantly owned and managed by State Forests but recently, a number of government incentives have made planting trees on private land commercially attractive. The latest is a tax break offered to plantation owners based on the carbon sequestered in the trees they grow.

    Last week, the Nationals and the Greens moved in the Senate to overturn the tax rort that will see hundreds of thousands of acres on the northern rivers taken out of agricultural use and converted into tree farms. The scheme was originally proposed as a way to reforest marginal country that was denuded of red gums a century or more ago. A range of amendments have made it more attractive for large companies, especially heavy polluters, to buy fertile land and plant fast growing trees.

    The Nationals are fighting on behalf of both graziers and irrigators who see valuable land and water being commandeered for trees. The Greens are also concerned that the whole scheme is a smoke screen to allow coal mines and aluminium smelters to continue polluting on the basis that the trees will clean up after them.

    The ironies of the Greens voting against tree planting and the Greens and the Nationals voting together was not lost on the Liberal and Labor parties who joined forces to protect the commercial interests of the miners, energy companies and their financiers.

    The Greens and the Nationals are finding they have significant common ground. Despite wide differences over social policy, both parties have strong grass roots and represent constituencies concerned about the long term future of the land and community and suspicious of the international financial sector that seems to have run the Lib Lab agenda for the last two decades.

    Last week, Nationals and Greens joined forces to protest at the closure of the Tweed Heads hospital. Similar scenes were played out across the state as parliamentary representatives from both parties stood with their constituents to defend community projects against the cuts of a state government in its death throes.

    Every time the Labor and Liberal parties join forces to protect the big end of town from the common people, they drive the Nationals and the Greens closer together. The long term implications for Australian politics may be enormous.

  • Investors move into agriculture

    “Demand for agricultural commodities tends to be less elastic, less responsive to economic factors, more responsive to population,” said Lawrence Eagles, a commodities analyst at J.P. Morgan.

    However, lower agriculture prices and scarce and expensive credit may cause farmers to struggle to finance production.

    The recent drop in commodity prices has been a disincentive for farmers to reinvest in production.

    The agricultural markets may yet fall further, before staging a recovery due to the demise of some of the world’s largest banks, which has caused a lack of confidence in capital markets.

    Mr Eagles says there’s great potential for agricultural commodities to lead the way in a commodity market rebound.

    “Prices are not going to be dictated by funds and fund flows next year,” he says.

    “It’s going to be about the availability of trade finance and demand and supply.”

  • Canberra takes control of the Murray

    “The Basin Plan will also include water quality and salinity management targets, an environmental watering plan and rules about trading water rights.

    “The Basin Plan will be developed and administered by the Murray-Darling Basin Authority, an independent expert body, with the Commonwealth Minister having sign-off,” she said.

    Senator Wong said while there is more work to do to fix the problems in the Murray-Darling Basin, the reforms are a crucial step towards securing a viable future for the Basin’s communities, farmers and rivers.

    “With the support of South Australia, Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria and the Australian Capital Territory, we will work to meet the challenges faced by the Basin including over-allocation, drought and climate change.

    “The approval of these reforms is the result of States and the Commonwealth working together to show leadership in the national interest, and I thank all Ministers and officials involved.”

    Actions the Government is already taking to address the critical situation in the Basin include:

    • Committing $3.9 billion towards priority water efficiency and irrigation infrastructure projects in the basin.

    • Undertaking the first-ever purchase of water by a Federal Government to return it to basin rivers and wetlands – out of a $3.1 billion commitment for this purpose.

    • A program to work with state governments to purchase appropriately-sited properties with large water entitlements where environmental benefits and value-for-money exist, such as the recently-purchased Toorale station.

    • Inviting groups of irrigators wishing to leave the industry, to submit proposals to sell their water entitlements together in ways that provide benefits for farmers and rivers.

    • A small block irrigators exit grant package program.

  • Irrigators welcome passage of Water Bill

    “The Basin Plan is where the detail affecting irrigators and the communities that rely on them will be contained.

    “Each day of delay in the passage of this legislation was a day less that we have for preparation of the Basin Plan.

    “The council has reiterated its message about stakeholder engagement in preparing the plan.

    “The plan must be broad reaching – environmental sustainability is vitally important, but social and economic factors must have equal consideration.

    “Irrigators, basin communities and Australians in general must have the opportunity to weigh these interests to decide the future that we want for ourselves and our export partners.”

    Mr Gregson, in acknowledging that the bill is imperfect, said council has raised three issues in particular, which are:

    • The definition of critical human need is far too wide.
    • There should be an annual extraction limit placed on the South Australian carryover.
    • Climate change should not be precluded from being new knowledge.

    “Despite these imperfections, timely passage of the Bill was more important for us,” he said.

    “Council acknowledged the efforts of Nationals Senators to correct these imperfections.

    “Council also noted the alignment of rural peak bodies through the course of this matter.

    “The council has worked closely with the NSW Irrigators Council and the NFF to ensure progress of this Bill.

    “We also acknowledge the efforts of the VFF in their state.”