Stories tagged with "middle east"
Sadad al-Husseini on Middle East OPEC oil fields
Posted by Euan Mearns on October 16, 2009 - 10:36am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Geology/Exploration
Tags: iea, middle east, opec, sadad al-husseini [list all tags]
Bread and Oil: Rising Food Prices and the Middle East
Posted by Stuart Staniford on March 3, 2008 - 11:00am
Topic: Sociology/Psychology
Tags: biofuel, egypt, middle east, morocco, peak oil [list all tags]
Abstract
The use of food crops for biofuels is one of the key factors driving a dramatic increase in the global price of cereals. As Stuart Staniford demonstrated here in the past few weeks, this trend is set to intensify. This article will look at the potential implications of rising wheat prices for countries in the Middle East, taking Egypt and Morocco as examples. Government food subsidies in both countries have so far protected the poor urban population from much of the global hike in cereal prices. However, as food prices continue to spiral, subsidies will demand a growing share of national budgets. Subsidies cuts seem inevitable, leading to riots and political instability.The further development of biofuels could make food too costly for millions of poor in the Middle East, and destabilise the region which supplies most of the world’s oil exports.
Lies, damned lies and BP statistics
Posted by Euan Mearns on June 18, 2007 - 11:16am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Policy/Politics
Tags: bp, chris skrebowski, colin campbell, lies, middle east, oil reserves, opec, saudi arabia [list all tags]
I almost choked on my whisky when I heard on the UK national television news (13/06/07), a story about peak oil and questions asked about oil reserves figures quoted in the newly published BP Statistical Review of World Energy.
The news item was referring to a story in Thursday’s Independent (14/06/07) (a national UK newspaper) by Daniel Howden titled “Scientists challenge major review of global reserves and warn that supplies will start to run out in four years’ time.” Howden refers to the work of Chris Skrebowski (Oil Depletion Analysis Centre or ODAC) and Colin Campbell (Association for Peak Oil or ASPO). Kudos to Chris and to Colin for getting this news onto the front page.
There’s more…..
Note that the Indepent's server has been very slow on occasions. A pdf of Howden's article may be downloaded from the TOD server here
The Round-Up: November 6th 2006
Posted by Stoneleigh on November 6, 2006 - 3:49pm in The Oil Drum: Canada
Topic: Site news
Tags: demand-side management, grain shortage, green revolution, income trusts, middle east, oil patch [list all tags]
Talk of sweeping consolidation, foreign takeovers and the loss of small exploration and production companies is rampant after the change trusts had feared most took place with a bombshell from the Canadian government.
Heinberg: Middle East at a Crossroads
Posted by Prof. Goose on August 4, 2006 - 7:07pm
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: ghawar, hezbollah, iran, iraq, israel, middle east, saudi arabia [list all tags]
The [Middle East] situation clearly requires comment [and integration], as it has enormous implications both for the world as a whole and for the small but growing community of people involved in preparations for Peak Oil. Mainstream reporting seems to miss much of the context of events and, when discussing the Middle East, the geopolitical struggle for control of energy resources nearly always forms much of that context.
[...]
At the ASPO conference a well-connected industry insider who wishes not to be directly quoted told me that his own sources inside Saudi Arabia insist that production from Ghawar is now down to less than three million barrels per day, and that the Saudis are maintaining total production at only slowly dwindling levels by producing other fields at maximum rates. This, if true, would be a bombshell: most estimates give production from Ghawar at 5.5 Mb/d.



k Nation (Jim Kunstler)






GAIA Host Collective