Monday, October 19, 2009

Saudis terrified we might actually reduce oil dependence
(World Streets launches campaign for compassionate aid)

Thanks to environmental writer and columnist Jay Bookman for this heads-up, and right behind him the New York Times, World Streets now has a new thing that keeps us up at night. Any reduction on our part of oil consumption, say through some of the projects and measures being pushed by World Streets and others, is (do we have this right?) a form of theft. Fair is fair we would say, so let's get together and work this one out. Get out your checkbooks. Compassionate capitalism.


From the New York Times of 14 October:

Saudis Seek Payments for Any Drop in Oil Revenues

- by Jad Mouawad and Andrew C. Revkin

Saudi Arabia is trying to enlist other oil-producing countries to support a provocative idea: if wealthy countries reduce their oil consumption to combat global warming, they should pay compensation to oil producers.

The oil-rich kingdom has pushed this position for years in earlier climate-treaty negotiations. While it has not succeeded, its efforts have sometimes delayed or disrupted discussions. The kingdom is once again gearing up to take a hard line on the issue at international negotiations scheduled for Copenhagen in December.

The chief Saudi negotiator, Mohammad al-Sabban, described the position as a “make or break” provision for the Saudis, as nations stake out their stance before the global climate summit scheduled for the end of the year.

“Assisting us as oil-exporting countries in achieving economic diversification is very crucial for us through foreign direct investments, technology transfer, insurance and funding,” Mr. Sabban said in an e-mail message.

This Saudi position has emerged periodically as a source of dispute since the earliest global climate talks, in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. It is surfacing again as Saudi Arabia tries to build a coalition of producers to extract concessions in Copenhagen.

Petroleum exporters have long used delaying tactics during climate talks. They view any attempt to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by developed countries as a menace to their economies.

The original treaty meant to combat global warming, the 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, contains provisions that in Saudi Arabia’s view require such compensation.

Mr. Sabban outlined his stance at climate talks in Bangkok this month.
Environmental advocates denounced the idea, saying the Saudi stance hampered progress to assist poor nations that are already suffering from the effect of climate change, and that genuinely need financial assistance.

“It is like the tobacco industry asking for compensation for lost revenues as a part of a settlement to address the health risks of smoking,” said Jake Schmidt, the international climate policy director at the Natural Resources Defense Council. “The worst of this racket is that they have held up progress on supporting adaptation funding for the most vulnerable for years because of this demand.”

Saudi Arabia is highly dependent on oil exports, which account for most of the government’s budget. Last year, when prices peaked, the kingdom’s oil revenue swelled by 37 percent, to $281 billion, according to Jadwa Investment, a Saudi bank. That was more than four times the 2002 level. At one point in 2008, the average gasoline price in the United States surpassed $4 a gallon.

Saudi exports are expected to drop to $115 billion this year, after oil prices fell. American gasoline prices are hovering around $2.50 a gallon.

The one-year swing in the kingdom’s revenues shows that oil prices are likely to be a bigger factor in Saudi Arabia’s future that any restrictions on greenhouse gases, said David G. Victor, an energy expert at the University of California, San Diego.

Mr. Victor dismissed the Saudi stance as a stunt, saying that the real threat for petroleum exporters came from improvements in fuel economy and rising mandates for alternative fuels in the transportation sector, both of which would reduce the need for petroleum products. “Oil exporters have always, in my view, far overblown the near-term effects of carbon limits on demand for their products,” Mr. Victor said. “For the Saudis this may be a deal-breaker, but the Saudis are not essential players. In some sense, one sign that a climate agreement is effective is that big hydrocarbon exporters hate it.”

A recent study by the International Energy Agency, which advises industrialized nations, found that the cumulative revenue of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries would drop by 16 percent from 2008 to 2030 if the world agreed to slash emissions, as opposed to the projection if there were no treaty.

But with oil projected to average $100 a barrel, the energy agency estimated that OPEC members would still earn $23 trillion over that period.

Mr. Sabban, however, cited an older study by Charles River, a consulting firm, which found that the losses in revenue for Saudi Arabia alone would be $19 billion a year starting in 2012.

The Copenhagen talks were a major point on the agenda of the last OPEC conference.

But not every oil-exporting country is falling in line with the Saudi position. Some have been trying a different approach that has earned the backing of environmental groups. For example, Ecuador, OPEC’s newest member, said last year that it was willing to freeze oil exploration in the Amazon forest if it got some financial rewards for doing so.

The Saudi negotiator said that the compensation mechanism was an integral part of the global climate regime that has been in place since the 1990s and that was not up for renegotiation.

“It is a very serious trend that we need to follow and influence if we want to minimize its adverse impacts on our economies and our people,” Mr. Sabban said in an e-mail message to other OPEC officials. “That does not mean we would like to obstruct any progress or that we do not want to join any international agreement. We will do that if the deal is fair and equitable and does not transfer the burden to us.”

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Thanks to Jay Bookman for his good heads-up on this important news. He maintains a very interesting blog specializing in foreign relations and environmental and technology-related issues. which you can check out at http://blogs.ajc.com/jay-bookman-blog\

And here you have our editor, overcome with emotion as he tries to figure out how World Streets is ever going to find the wherewithall to compensate for our actions leading to all those big number reductions in oil imports. (He really should have thought of that first.)

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3 comments:

  1. Almost nobody was crying, when saddlemakers, blacksmiths forging horseshoes and armourers went to the past. Water-carriers have been replaced by the water pipe networks, and gentlemen emptying cesspits gave up their work on favour of sewage systems. They have had their dreams too... ;-)
    The great South-American cities, those vanished in the past, once earned their wealth due to growing plantations of India rubber, replaced by petrochemic product -- butyl.

    Let the World say to the oil-drilling nations the same, as once Maggie Thatcher (not my favourite poitician at all!) said to the British miners: "Do something else. You don't have to doing this".

    And -- maybe -- the World should add: "We WILL develop electric cars, we WILL promote non-motorised means of transport, we WANT to have our skies clear and streets safe. And you have had enough time and money (earned from us) to learn to do something useful. And please stop fiddling with this silly belt, otherwise you'll may hurt yourself!".

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  2. This is the silliest demand I've ever heard. Why would anyone give it any serious consideration? Who would pay for something they're not using? If they want economic diversification, they have plenty of our money to make it happen on their own. Saudi Arabia doesn't need our help.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Martin Strid, SwedenTuesday, 20 October, 2009

    From Scandanavia:

    We have plans to dam the Baltic Sea at the Sound Straight, in a joint venture between the cityies of Copenhagen and Malmö. It will produce as much electricity as ten or twelve german nuclear plants, to be exported.

    Our mayors are lobbying the swedish and danish guvernments to give the go-ahead signal, but first they want to survey the willingness of other Baltic Sea countrys (Germany, Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Russia and Finland) to pay for the project not to be executed. It is especially hoped that the city council of St Petersburg (very close to sea level) will exert pressure on Putin to make him grant the two Sound cities a future oil supply guarantee.

    It is also feared, however, that the project, with a baltic sea damned water level of about +3 meters ASL, might brake all bad languidge barriers.

    Martin Strid, Sweden

    ReplyDelete

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