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Authors: Peter Maass

Tags: #General, #Social Science

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BOOK: Crude World
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There was an oasis amid this anarchy. American soldiers had piled sandbags around the Ministry of Oil and were patrolling its perimeter, their .50-caliber machine guns establishing havoc’s demarcation line. The ministry was being spared desecration by mob. This stood out, because American forces protected little else. In the weeks and months ahead, as chaos continued elsewhere in Baghdad and in the country at large, the cordon around the nine-story, sand-colored ministry was unstinting. At the time, the reason for its careful preservation seemed obvious.
Roland Barthes described photographs as violent because they “fill the sight by force,” pushing out other views. This process occurred in Baghdad, where many of us fixated on the diametrical fates of the Oil Ministry and the National Museum; they seemed to tell us everything we needed to know about war and oil and the priorities of an invader that appreciated cheap gasoline. But there was far, far more to learn about the black magic shaping our crude world.

For a man warning of a coming apocalypse, Matthew Simmons was surprisingly cheerful.

Simmons is the prosperous founder of a niche investment firm that specializes in mergers and acquisitions in the energy sector. A graduate of Harvard Business School, a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, a frequent flier on corporate jets, an adviser to George W. Bush during his first presidential campaign, and a best-selling author, Simmons would be a card-carrying multimillionaire member of the global oil
nomenklatura
, if cards were issued for such things. But his wonderful life has a cloud, which consists of his belief that the American dream and the world as we know it are on the verge of falling apart.

“If it turns out I am wrong, I will be the happiest guy in the world,” Simmons told me. Despite his dire prediction, he retained a mischievous demeanor. We met during a trip he made to Manhattan to talk to a group of oil-shipping executives. The impression he gave was of an enthusiastic inventor sharing a discovery (the coming apocalypse) that had taken him by surprise. He had a wide-eyed wonder in his regard, as if a bit of mystery could be found in everything that caught his eye. Whether he was saying the sky was blue or that it was falling, he emitted a happy wink.

His journey into the apocalypse began innocently enough. In 2003, Simmons visited Saudi Arabia on a government-sponsored tour for business executives. The group was presented with the usual dog and
pony show, but instead of being impressed with the size and expertise of the kingdom’s oil industry, Simmons became perplexed. A senior manager at Saudi Aramco, the state-owned oil company, told the visitors that “fuzzy logic” was used to estimate the oil that could be recovered from the country’s reservoirs. Simmons wondered what could be fuzzy about the contents of an oil reservoir. He realized that Aramco, despite its assurances of bottomless supplies, might not know how much oil remained.

He returned home with an intellectual itch. Saudi Arabia was one of the charter members of OPEC, an organization founded in 1960 to coordinate the policies of the major oil producers. Like every OPEC member, Saudi Arabia provides only general numbers about its output and reserves. It does not release details of how much oil is extracted from each reservoir or what methods are used to extract that oil or how much water emerges with the oil, and it does not permit outside audits or inspections. The condition of Saudi fields—like the condition of almost all OPEC fields—is a closely guarded secret. That’s partly because the cartel’s production quotas, which keep oil off the market to
avoid gluts that drive down prices, are based on each country’s reserves. The larger an OPEC member’s reserves, the higher its quota. Most, if not all, OPEC members have exaggerated the size of their reserves to have the largest possible quota and thus the largest possible revenues.

In the Shaybah oil field in Saudi Arabia

During the decades of low prices and overabundant supplies, oilmen like Simmons did not care about OPEC’s fudged numbers. Whether or not OPEC reserves were hyped, whether or not the cartel’s fields were nearing a midlife crisis, plenty of crude was coming out of the ground. Only a boycott or a war could squeeze supplies, it seemed, and only for a short time. But while visiting Saudi Arabia in 2003, when the price of a barrel was around $30 and rising, thanks in part to China’s emergence as a voracious importer, Simmons asked himself whether something might be amiss. Perhaps the world didn’t have as much oil as was thought.

As a teenager, Simmons had been on a high school debate team that reached the state championships, and from that experience he’d learned the importance of possessing information, of knowing his subject. He has never been a fan of fuzzy logic or fuzzy anything; he likes hard data. He wanted to know, to
truly
know, what was happening in Saudi fields—how many wells were drilled into them, how much oil each well produced, which recovery methods were used and the trend line of output since the wells had been opened.

It was a mystery crafted for his curious mind. After returning home and immersing himself in the minutiae of oil geology, Simmons realized that uncollated data might be found in the neglected research of the Society of Petroleum Engineers. Oil engineers, like most professionals, have regular conferences at which they present obscure papers that delve into the work they do. Technical and detailed, the papers are debated at the conferences, published by the SPE in a little-read journal, and then forgotten.

Simmons realized that the answers were hiding in plain sight. He found more than two hundred papers that no one had pulled together into a meta-analysis. Though they covered only portions of the kingdom’s wells and some of them were several decades old, they contained useful data about the condition of the fields. Two months before we
met in New York City, Simmons had shocked the oil world by publishing a book,
Twilight in the Desert
, in which he said:

The geological phenomena and natural driving forces that created the Saudi oil miracle are conspiring now in normal and predictable ways to bring it to its conclusion, in a time frame potentially far shorter than officialdom would have us believe. … Saudi Arabia clearly seems to be nearing or at its peak output and cannot materially grow its oil production.

The denunciations arrived by the supertanker. Saudi officials described Simmons as deluded. Daniel Yergin, the closest thing the oil world has to a guru, treated Simmons as a naïve, overcaffeinated student jumping out of his seat to insist that the professor is wrong; the professor patted the student on the shoulder and kindly asked him to sit back down.

Between Simmons’s trip to Saudi Arabia and the publication of his book two years later, in 2005, the price of oil had nearly doubled. When we met at that time, Simmons had a look of mischief on his face, even though he was saying the world might be heading toward disaster.

At times of economic expansion, why does oil cost so much? Before the onset of the global economic crisis in the fall of 2008, a barrel fetched $147. The price is expected to return to triple digits when the recession ends. Just how high will it go? That leads to the essential question of how much oil is left in the world.

If you listen to Ali al-Naimi, the Saudi oil minister, you will hear about infrastructure. He tells audiences there are not enough wells, pipelines, or refineries to extract and distribute the quantities of oil the United States, China and the European Union require in boom times. He says that when there’s a price spike, we should cut back on driving or buy a smaller car and wait a few years, and soon the world will again have enough petroleum. Yergin likes to emphasize political problems—if the output of Venezuela, Iraq, Iran and Nigeria were not reduced by instability at times of high prices, Americans would hardly feel a pinch
when they filled up their tanks. Yergin and Naimi bemoaned the speculators who traded oil futures not to actually take delivery of the stuff one day but to profit from rising prices. There is an echo of truth in what Yergin and Naimi said—particularly on the role of speculators, who indeed poured money into oil markets and thereby accentuated the rise in prices—but most of it is willful or wishful deception.

Simmons reintroduced the world to a phenomenon known as “peak oil.” Its statistical foundation was discovered long ago by M. King Hubbert, a Shell geologist who predicted in 1956 that America’s oil output (not including Alaska) would peak by 1970. Hubbert’s prediction, derided when he made it, turned out in broad terms to be accurate. His forecast was based on the production trends of reservoirs he studied. He noticed a bell curve in which output rose until the reservoir was half empty, and then output dropped as quickly (or slowly) as it had risen. At the halfway point, reservoirs continued to yield oil, but the amounts slipped year by year because the fields had lost what was, in essence, their geological vigor. Think of an oil field as a runner reaching top speed. Just as the runner cannot increase her pace beyond a certain point, and must slow down after reaching top speed, so does the output of an oil field reach its peak and then decline.

Simmons caused a sensation with his assertion that Saudi fields were peaking. And he went further. Because most of the world’s “supergiant” fields were discovered more than three decades ago (some more than seven decades ago), Simmons noted, they were all losing vigor. Burgan, in Kuwait, was declining; Cantarell, in Mexico, was collapsing; Alaska’s Prudhoe Bay was limping; Norway and Britain’s mother lode in the North Sea was gasping. If you look at those depleting fields, it is no surprise that oil becomes triple-digit expensive when the global economy expands and requires greater amounts of petroleum. Our requirements, in times of expansion, are too vast to be sated by younger but smaller fields. Nor can we squeeze large amounts from new sources of “unconventional” crude, such as tar sands in Canada and heavy oil in Venezuela; these forms of protocrude are difficult to convert into consumable oil and inflict extraordinary damage on the environment.

The pinch of $147-a-barrel oil in 2008 was just a foretaste of what awaits us. To understand why this is true, it is necessary to follow the oil to Saudi Arabia.

The largest oil terminal in the world, Ras Tanura, is located on the eastern coast of Saudi Arabia, along the Persian Gulf. From Ras Tanura’s control tower, I saw the classic totems of oil’s dominion: supertankers coming and going on an emerald sea, row upon row of storage tanks, and miles and miles of pipes twisting around and between refinery stacks. The industrial panorama was part M. C. Escher, part Rube Goldberg drawing. Ras Tanura is the funnel through which nearly 10 percent of the world’s supply of petroleum flows, and its command center had the feel of mission control at NASA—banks of touch-screen monitors, a quiet hum of high-tech efficiency. Standing in the control tower, I was surrounded by more than 50 million barrels of ready-for-export oil, yet not a drop could be seen.

The oil was there, of course. In a technological sleight of hand, oil can be extracted from the deserts of Arabia, processed to eliminate
water and natural gas, sent through pipelines to a terminal on the gulf, loaded onto a supertanker and shipped to a port thousands of miles away, then run through a refinery and poured into a tanker truck that delivers it to a suburban gas station, where it is pumped into an SUV—all without anyone actually glimpsing the stuff. And so long as there is enough oil to fuel the global economy, it is not only out of sight but out of mind, at least for most consumers.

BOOK: Crude World
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