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Danger Waters

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Posted on Jan 12, 2012
jlehti (CC-BY)

By Michael T. Klare, TomDispatch

(Page 4)

Russia, long the dominant power in the region, is pursuing control over the transportation routes by which Caspian oil and gas will reach markets.  It is upgrading Soviet-era pipelines that link the former SSRs to Russia or building new ones and, to achieve a near monopoly over the marketing of all this energy, bringing traditional diplomacy, strong-arm tactics, and outright bribery to bear on regional leaders (many of whom once served in the Soviet bureaucracy) to ship their energy via Russia.  As recounted in my book Rising Powers, Shrinking Planet, Washington sought to thwart these efforts by sponsoring the construction of alternative pipelines that avoid Russian territory, crossing Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey to the Mediterranean (notably the BTC, or Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline), while Beijing is building its own pipelines linking the Caspian area to western China.

All of these pipelines cross through areas of ethnic unrest and pass near various contested regions like rebellious Chechnya and breakaway South Ossetia.  As a result, both China and the U.S. have wedded their pipeline operations to military assistance for countries along the routes.  Fearful of an American presence, military or otherwise, in the former territories of the Soviet Union, Russia has responded with military moves of its own, including its brief August 2008 war with Georgia, which took place along the BTC route.

Given the magnitude of the Caspian’s oil and gas reserves, many energy firms are planning new production operations in the region, along with the pipelines needed to bring the oil and gas to market.  The European Union, for example, hopes to build a new natural gas pipeline called Nabucco from Azerbaijan through Turkey to Austria.  Russia has proposed a competing conduit called South Stream.  All of these efforts involve the geopolitical interests of major powers, ensuring that the Caspian region will remain a potential source of international crisis and conflict.

In the new Geo-Energy Era, the Strait of Hormuz, the South China Sea, and the Caspian Basin hardly stand alone as potential energy flashpoints. The East China Sea, where China and Japan are contending for a contested undersea natural gas field, is another, as are the waters surrounding the Falkland Islands, where both Britain and Argentina hold claims to undersea oil reserves, as will be the globally warming Arctic whose resources are claimed by many countries.  One thing is certain: wherever the sparks may fly, there’s oil in the water and danger at hand in 2012.

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Michael T. Klare is a professor of peace and world security studies at Hampshire College, a TomDispatch regular and the author, most recently, of Rising Powers, Shrinking Planet. His newest book, The Race for What’s Left: The Global Scramble for the World’s Last Resources, will be published in March. To listen to Timothy MacBain’s latest Tomcast audio interview in which Klare discusses the crisis in the Strait of Hormuz, click here, or download it to your iPod here.

Copyright 2012 Michael T. Klare


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LocalHero's avatar

By LocalHero, January 15, 2012 at 1:05 am Link to this comment

What tripe.

In hundreds of small shops around the world, inventors and tinkerers are already using, for want of a better term, “Zero Point Energy” and over-unity devices that return far more energy than they use. This has been going on for decades and will soon come to the attention of the world. When it does, the conventional oil, gas & nuclear industries will utterly collapse as will all of its support systems like the military.

Of course, the PTB will continue to try to contain and snuff out the truth but, mark my words, it cannot be stopped.

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By Mark Goldes, January 14, 2012 at 9:14 pm Link to this comment

An unrecognized mortal threat from a probable solar storm can cause meltdowns at hundreds of nuclear plants worldwide.

See http://www.aesopinstitute.org for an overview of the problem and some actions that can prevent the worst.

They include 24/7 validation and production of decentralized renewable energy.

See Cheap Green and Moving Beyond Oil on the Aesop website for a few examples.

A wise mobilization, to prevent loss of many millions of lives, also has the potential to open paths to ending our dependency on oil and all fossil fuels - far more rapidly than might be imagined.

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By prosefights, January 13, 2012 at 1:56 pm Link to this comment

Surging prices for oil and natural gas shales, in at least one case rising tenfold in five weeks, are raising concerns of a bubble as valuations of drilling acreage approach the peak that was set before the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.

Chinese, French and Japanese energy explorers committed more than $8 billion in the past two weeks to shale-rock formations from Pennsylvania to Texas after 2011 set records for international average crude prices and U.S. demand for natural gas.

http://www.tulsaworld.com/site/printerfriendlystory.aspx?articleid=20120110_49_E1_CUTLIN155265

Cramer stated on Mad Money Thursday January 12, 2012 that the Obama administration may limit fracking.

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By gerard, January 12, 2012 at 12:21 pm Link to this comment

Sadly—and ridiculously—the psychology showing up throughout this article appears, sooner or later, in the sharpening rivalries between capitalist or communist economic “systems.”  Short-sighted, mean-spirited—and totally inadequate to the needs of a rapidly unifying world!
  Planning together in advance to avoid ruinous competition, sharing based on agreements made in advance based on mutually shared needs, is never allowed to rise to the surface in advance discussion.
(Even articles like this one purporting to be “information” offer no indication of better possibilities than deadly competition!)
  Obviously, ordinary people everywhere will need to get together and demand that leaders of all nation-states move toward agreements that habituate fair sharing of the world’s resources. It can be done, but raw capitalism probably has no such leadership. It will take a longer and less competitive view to turn the present worldwide systemic corner.

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