This is simply a quote of a Stratfor report. I would note that the copyright allows for reposting as long as Stratfor is attributed. It’s worth reading if one has an interest in how politics and the economy are intertwined in current events. If only I could write with such insight. Check out Stratfor at: www.stratfor.com
Strategic Forecasting, Inc.
—————————THE GEOPOLITICS OF $130 OIL
By George Friedman
Oil prices have risen dramatically over the past year. When they passed $100 a barrel, they hit new heights, expressed in dollars adjusted for inflation. As they passed $120 a barrel, they clearly began to have global impact. Recently, we have seen startling rises in the price of food, particularly grains. Apart from higher prices, there have been disruptions in the availability of food as governments limit food exports and as hoarding increases in anticipation of even higher prices.
Oil and food differ from other commodities in that they are indispensable for the functioning of society. Food obviously is the more immediately essential. Food shortages can trigger social and political instability with startling swiftness. It does not take long to starve to death. Oil has a less-immediate — but perhaps broader — impact. Everything, including growing and marketing food, depends on energy; and oil is the world’s primary source of energy, particularly in transportation. Oil and grains — where the shortages hit hardest — are not merely strategic commodities. They are geopolitical commodities. All nations require them, and a shift in the price or availability of either triggers shifts in relationships within and among nations.
It is not altogether clear to us why oil and grains have behaved as they have. The question for us is what impact this generalized rise in commodity prices — particularly energy and food — will have on the international system. We understand that it is possible that the price of both will plunge. There is certainly a speculative element in both. Nevertheless, based on the realities of supply conditions, we do not expect the price of either to fall to levels that existed in 2003. We will proceed in this analysis on the assumption that these prices will fluctuate, but that they will remain dramatically higher than prices were from the 1980s to the mid-2000s.
If that assumption is true and we continue to see elevated commodity prices, perhaps rising substantially higher than they are now, then it seems to us that we have entered a new geopolitical era. Since the end of World War II, we have lived in three geopolitical regimes, broadly understood:
The Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union, in which the focus was on the military balance between those two countries, particularly on the nuclear balance. During this period, all countries, in some way or another, defined their behavior in terms of the U.S.-Soviet competition.
The period from the fall of the Berlin Wall until 9/11, when the primary focus of the world was on economic development. This was the period in which former communist countries redefined themselves, East and Southeast Asian economies surged and collapsed, and China grew dramatically. It was a period in which politico-military power was secondary and economic power primary.
The period from 9/11 until today that has been defined in terms of the increasing complexity of the U.S.-jihadist war — a reality that supplanted the second phase and redefined the international system dramatically.With the U.S.-jihadist war in either a stalemate or a long-term evolution, its impact on the international system is diminishing. First, it has lost its dynamism. The conflict is no longer drawing other countries into it. Second, it is becoming an endemic reality rather than an urgent crisis. The international system has accommodated itself to the conflict, and its claims on that system are lessening.
The surge in commodity prices — particularly oil — has superseded the U.S.-jihadist war, much as the war superseded the period in which economic issues dominated the global system. This does not mean that the U.S.-jihadist war will not continue to rage, any more than 9/11 abolished economic issues. Rather, it means that a new dynamic has inserted itself into the international system and is in the process of transforming it.
It is a cliche that money and power are linked. It is nevertheless true. Economic power creates political and military power, just as political and military power can create economic power. The rise in the price of oil is triggering shifts in economic power that are in turn creating changes in the international order. This was not apparent until now because of three reasons. First, oil prices had not risen to the level where they had geopolitical impact. The system was ignoring higher prices. Second, they had not been joined in crisis condition by grain prices. Third, the permanence of higher prices had not been clear. When $70-a-barrel oil seemed impermanent, and likely to fall below $50, oil was viewed very differently than it was at $130, where a decline to $100 would be dramatic and a fall to $70 beyond the calculation of most. As oil passed $120 a barrel, the international system, in our view, started to reshape itself in what will be a long-term process.
Obviously, the winners in this game are those who export oil, and the losers are those who import it. The victory is not only economic but political as well. The ability to control where exports go and where they don’t go transforms into political power. The ability to export in a seller’s market not only increases wealth but also increases the ability to coerce, if that is desired.
The game is somewhat more complex than this. The real winners are countries that can export and generate cash in excess of what they need domestically. So countries such as Venezuela, Indonesia and Nigeria might benefit from higher prices, but they absorb all the wealth that is transferred to them. Countries such as Saudi Arabia do not need to use so much of their wealth for domestic needs. They control huge and increasing pools of cash that they can use for everything from achieving domestic political stability to influencing regional governments and the global economic system. Indeed, the entire Arabian Peninsula is in this position.
The big losers are countries that not only have to import oil but also are heavily industrialized relative to their economy. Countries in which service makes up a larger sector than manufacturing obviously use less oil for critical economic functions than do countries that are heavily manufacturing-oriented. Certainly, consumers in countries such as the United States are hurt by rising prices. And these countries’ economies might slow. But higher oil prices simply do not have the same impact that they do on countries that both are primarily manufacturing-oriented and have a consumer base driving cars.
East Asia has been most affected by the combination of sustained high oil prices and disruptions in the food supply. Japan, which imports all of its oil and remains heavily industrialized (along with South Korea), is obviously affected. But the most immediately affected is China, where shortages of diesel fuel have been reported. China’s miracle — rapid industrialization — has now met its Achilles’ heel: high energy prices.
China is facing higher energy prices at a time when the U.S. economy is weak and the ability to raise prices is limited. As oil prices increase costs, the Chinese continue to export and, with some exceptions, are holding prices. The reason is simple. The Chinese are aware that slowing exports could cause some businesses to fail. That would lead to unemployment, which in turn will lead to instability. The Chinese have their hands full between natural disasters, Tibet, terrorism and the Olympics. They do not need a wave of business failures.
Therefore, they are continuing to cap the domestic price of gasoline. This has caused tension between the government and Chinese oil companies, which have refused to distribute at capped prices. Behind this power struggle is this reality: The Chinese government can afford to subsidize oil prices to maintain social stability, but given the need to export, they are effectively squeezing profits out of exports. Between subsidies and no-profit exports, China’s reserves could shrink with remarkable speed, leaving their financial system — already overloaded with nonperforming loans — vulnerable. If they take the cap off, they face potential domestic unrest.
The Chinese dilemma is present throughout Asia. But just as Asia is the big loser because of long-term high oil prices coupled with food disruptions, Russia is the big winner. Russia is an exporter of natural gas and oil. It also could be a massive exporter of grains if prices were attractive enough and if it had the infrastructure (crop failures in Russia are a thing of the past). Russia has been very careful, under Vladimir Putin, not to assume that energy prices will remain high and has taken advantage of high prices to accumulate substantial foreign currency reserves. That puts them in a doubly-strong position. Economically, they are becoming major players in global acquisitions. Politically, countries that have become dependent on Russian energy exports — and this includes a good part of Europe — are vulnerable, precisely because the Russians are in a surplus-cash position. They could tweak energy availability, hurting the Europeans badly, if they chose. They will not
need to. The Europeans, aware of what could happen, will tread lightly in order to ensure that it doesn’t happen.As we have already said, the biggest winners are the countries of the Arabian Peninsula. Although somewhat strained, these countries never really suffered during the period of low oil prices. They have now more than rebalanced their financial system and are making the most of it. This is a time when they absolutely do not want anything disrupting the flow of oil from their region. Closing the Strait of Hormuz, for example, would be disastrous to them. We therefore see the Saudis, in particular, taking steps to stabilize the region. This includes supporting Israeli-Syrian peace talks, using influence with Sunnis in Iraq to confront al Qaeda, making certain that Shiites in Saudi Arabia profit from the boom. (Other Gulf countries are doing the same with their Shiites. This is designed to remove one of Iran’s levers in the region: a rising of Shiites in the Arabian Peninsula.) In addition, the Saudis are using their economic power to re-establish the relationship they had with th
e United States before 9/11. With the financial institutions in the United States in disarray, the Arabian Peninsula can be very helpful.China is in an increasingly insular and defensive position. The tension is palpable, particularly in Central Asia, which Russia has traditionally dominated and where China is becoming increasingly active in making energy investments. The Russians are becoming more assertive, using their economic position to improve their geopolitical position in the region. The Saudis are using their money to try to stabilize the region. With oil above $120 a barrel, the last thing they need is a war disrupting their ability to sell. They do not want to see the Iranians mining the Strait of Hormuz or the Americans trying to blockade Iran.
The Iranians themselves are facing problems. Despite being the world’s fifth-largest oil exporter, Iran also is the world’s second-largest gasoline importer, taking in roughly 40 percent of its annual demand. Because of the type of oil they have, and because they have neglected their oil industry over the last 30 years, their ability to participate in the bonanza is severely limited. It is obvious that there is now internal political tension between the president and the religious leadership over the status of the economy. Put differently, Iranians are asking how they got into this situation.
Suddenly, the regional dynamics have changed. The Saudi royal family is secure against any threats. They can buy peace on the Peninsula. The high price of oil makes even Iraqis think that it might be time to pump more oil rather than fight. Certainly the Iranians, Saudis and Kuwaitis are thinking of ways of getting into the action, and all have the means and geography to benefit from an Iraqi oil renaissance. The war in Iraq did not begin over oil — a point we have made many times — but it might well be brought under control because of oil.
For the United States, the situation is largely a push. The United States is an oil importer, but its relative vulnerability to high energy prices is nothing like it was in 1973, during the Arab oil embargo. De-industrialization has clearly had its upside. At the same time, the United States is a food exporter, along with Canada, Australia, Argentina and others. Higher grain prices help the United States. The shifts will not change the status of the United States, but they might create a new dynamic in the Gulf region that could change the framework of the Iraqi war.
This is far from an exhaustive examination of the global shifts caused by rising oil and grain prices. Our point is this: High oil prices can increase as well as decrease stability. In Iraq — but not in Afghanistan — the war has already been regionally overshadowed by high oil prices. Oil-exporting countries are in a moneymaking mode, and even the Iranians are trying to figure out how to get into the action; it’s hard to see how they can without the participation of the Western oil majors — and this requires burying the hatchet with the United States. Groups such as al Qaeda and Hezbollah are decidedly secondary to these considerations.
We are very early in this process, and these are just our opening thoughts. But in our view, a wire has been tripped, and the world is refocusing on high commodity prices. As always in geopolitics, issues from the last generation linger, but they are no longer the focus. Last week there was talk of Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) talks between the United States and Russia — a fossil from the Cold War. These things never go away. But history moves on. It seems to us that history is moving.
This article can be forwarded or reposted but must be attributed to Stratfor.
Copyright 2008 Strategic Forecasting, Inc.
Interesting article, though I’m afraid global economics have always been some what over my head. Though the analysis on Iran is particularly interesting. Crazy that they export so much oil while still importing so much gasoline.
All in all, more reason to both find alternative energy and drill more here in the states. Shame we don’t seem to be having any luck with either. I know there have been recent and failed pushes to drill in Alaska, is there local opposition to the drilling?
There is little to no opposition locally. The native corporations are the first to jump on mining and industry contracts, especially due to their 8(a) (no competition) status.
However, my sincere hope is that the increased price of oil will spur innovation and research in alternative power. Since there is a lot of money to be made in alternatives with an oil-expensive/scarce environment, perhaps this is the impetus for serious research.
As for the article, it was interesting to learn about the imports of gas in Iran. I also thought the analysis concerning China interesting. Has any one else noticed a steep drop in Olympic protest coverage after the earth quake in China?
I think the reason why Iran exports its crude vs. processing it itself is that they can make more $$ doing that than building the plants and transportation infrastructure to produce gasoline.
There’s plenty of countries that can process it just fine, and since those countries also tend to be huge consumers of it, they’ll buy the crude at whatever price it’s selling at.
Wheat farmers can make more $$ selling the wheat immediately vs. having to sink in $$ to building their own mills and selling the flour independently.
If I’m not mistaken, Iran doesn’t really consume that much in the form of gasoline compared to how much oil they produce. So until their in-house consumption makes it cheaper to keep the oil in-house for refining, they probably won’t do that.
I’m also unsurprised at the shift in China coverage. What’s going to grab people’s interest more? A bunch of people shouting at someone running around with a torch, or the instant crushing of a generation in a town where all the schools collapsed (with an opportunity to point out how even more tragic it’s made by the one child policy)? One is more academic/philosophical (“human rights”/rumors of something happening in a province where there’s a media blackout) vs. the visceral (pictures of crushed children, hundreds of people covered in mud and living in tents, ect.). In my observation, the visceral wins out almost every time. Look at how quickly Myanmar has fallen away as well, except for a little burp now and then. One has pictures, one is tightly controlled with very little in the way of visceral imagery.
I think unless someone sets off a bomb or something else destructive happens probably the Olympic controversy as well as the Tibetan crackdown will not resurface in a serious way. But maybe I’m just jaded?
China suspended the one-child policy in earthquake areas:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/china/2032924/China-earthquake-China-to-drop-one-child-police-for-earthquake-parents.html
Also from the Stratfor article I wanted to highlight:
“The Iranians themselves are facing problems. Despite being the world’s fifth-largest oil exporter, Iran also is the world’s second-largest gasoline importer, taking in roughly 40 percent of its annual demand. Because of the type of oil they have, and because they have neglected their oil industry over the last 30 years, their ability to participate in the bonanza is severely limited. It is obvious that there is now internal political tension between the president and the religious leadership over the status of the economy. Put differently, Iranians are asking how they got into this situation.”
It sounds like while they may not use alot of gas locally, they could be cashing in more on the high prices right now if they had developed the infrastructure earlier.
As for Myanamar, those of us over at ZS are running a fundraiser for that, you can find the details at:
http://zombiehunters.org/myanmar-china.php
Yes, they suspended it…now (it’s not like the one child policy was uniform throughout China in the first place, but…). It still doesn’t negate the suffering by people who had their middle schoolers crushed, and who may be out of time to ’start over’. Not to mention whether or not residency/travel permits will be issued to people so they can leave the area legally to find work (vs. becoming illegal immigrants in the cities with no rights, no access to education or health care, and whose children are often prime targets for human trafficking).
And I know there are social action groups that are organizing for Myanamar as well, I’m a contributor to several–but there’s frankly a big stumbling block in the way, namely the government.
However, media coverage is a different beastie. There are always some in-depth journalists who will come out with some hard-hitting reporting (I’d say that we’ll probably be due for another round of that with the cyclone aftermath in a few weeks to a few months, and by the time the olympics start and afterwards there are enough real journalists in China that I think there will be some pretty interesting coverage if you know where to look). But if you’re looking for substantial coverage…I just do not think that’s going to happen from typical broadcast media. Not necessarily because of the “public attention span” but because it’s expensive to thumb your nose at the rules, and for-profit media is not going to want to piss off China and have their sponsorship/access/visas/whathaveyou revoked.
And on Iran….I’d be curious about the breakdown of who uses that gasoline. Military? Power generation? Private citizens? Subsidized transport of food/goods? Just because you import a lot of something doesn’t mean you’re not stockpiling or using it for purposes that easily get rolled into another budget category and thus aren’t tracked as easily (say, the military). You may not see the effects of it in the general populace as quickly as, say, here…where our entire society and structure is pretty dependent upon car transport for the average person, not even taking into account built in transport of food/goods/ect. But for all I know Iran could be set up the same way, it’s a pretty big country with spread out population centers, and I’m pretty sure that the average person has some degree of freedom of mobility.
Iran’s government is really interesting. I’m not really sure how much the two main factions (civilian vs. military) actually communicate much with each other. When you’re able to inadvertantly disguse your consumption patterns and shove it off on the ‘other guy’ to maintain/upgrade your infrastructure, bad things can happen.
Though on the surface, it seems to me that there’s not really many places in the world that have done a good job with maintaining/upgrading their oil producing/refining equipment. We certainly haven’t. China doesn’t. Maybe some of the scandinavian folks but I’ve heard complaints from people over there too.
I don’t really worry about the USA any more than the authors do though. We’re an extremely wasteful country. Yet that’s frankly one of the easiest things to fix. So when it comes to things like food production and even oil “need” if we had to we could turn that around relatively quickly. When you’ve got countries closer to the edge, that’s a harder thing to do. I guess in the event of a global energy crisis, it’s better to be the tubby spoiled brat than the starving pauper. For the immediate future we can afford a lot more mistakes than other nations, because we’ve got more padding.
New article on China earthquake today:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/csm/20080602/wl_csm/opostquake;_ylt=Amdw.dnhNjYJ7XngnEq6Zrys0NUE
“Meanwhile, with the process of registering refugees still haphazard, the authorities are in no position to provide proper protection for children, especially those who have lost their parents.
“Some places are well organized but others are still in chaos, with young girls and small kids wandering around,” frets one foreign expert in children’s issues who asked not to be identified. “They are a very easy target for different kinds of abuse, including trafficking.”
There have been several reports of such trafficking in recent days. “
Also, a good archive of Tibetan protest photos is at Wikileaks:
WARNING! If you can’t deal with dead people and parts of dead people, don’t go looking. This isn’t your average sissy American riot “suppression”.
http://www.wikileaks.org/wiki/Wikileaks_releases_over_150_censored_videos_and_photos_of_the_Tibet_uprising
Re: the child trafficking…
Sadly, as I know you know, that is almost par for the course after a major disaster in developing countries. While I would not say that China necessarily fits into “developing” status, I think children in particular get lost in the shuffle.
I wonder if the burmese kids are ’safer’ from trafficking given the tight control on foreign nationals. OTOH, most of it comes from people selling ‘their own’, and the bottlenecking means that pretty much the kids who might be at risk of trafficking are probably going to die.
Back on topic though, there’s already a huge problem with human trafficking in China, both internally and externally. I don’t think a major disaster ever, ever improves things in that regard.
And yeah, Americans have absolutely NO concept whatsoever of what state suppression is. Sure, individuals may get a taste of brutality now and then. But by and large the police and national guard probably couldn’t be pushed to the point where they would mow down dozens or even hundreds of their fellow citizens with intentionally lethal force, and it’s illegal for the military-military to be used in that manner. Well, so far anyway.
I don’t think it’s a bad idea for Americans in particular to be reminded how high on the hog virtually everyone is here. OTOH, those reminders can be used for good or evil, in my opinion. Good, if they remind people to be compassionate and to fight to maintain our rights. Bad, if they’re used in the context of “what are you complaining about? If it’s not that bad, shut up already.”
Chant– I got pretty fed up with televised (and most mainstream internet news) awhile ago, but it wasn’t until we got rid of our TV a few years ago that I discovered that it seems like radio broadcast news is way way way more balanced in it’s coverage of certain events.
I listen mostly to BBC Worldservice because I like the arts coverage, but the streaming online programs like World Today are really excellent. They don’t have to conform their news to whatever they have good visuals for, so you get info on Myanmar and the other places where they might not have cameras. It’s kinda funny because now I have the opposite ‘problem’–when everyone was talking about Natalie Holoway, I had absolutely no idea who she was b/c her story was barely covered by the BBC at all, as the BBC was a little more preoccupied with like, ACTUAL news. I also know very little about the current weekly election ‘controversies’ surrounding who’s pastor is a whackadoo or whatever the hell the rest of the country apparently cares about.
Nati-who? I like the BBC radio coverage as well. I also have some investment in amateur radio gear, it’s interesting to hear some of the shortwave and weird broadcasts from all over the world. Crazy preachers and confusing Spanish stations not withstanding.
Chant: You’re absolutely right, it should be a reminder that we don’t want to let it ever get that bad. It also helps to put our problems in perspective when compared to what other’s deal with. That is not to say “stop whining” but rather “have some appreciation for how good you do have it.” Good times are not an excuse for laziness though, one must be ready to keep those good times else one day you may wake up in a world you thought was someone else’s problem.
I like BBC radio too, mostly for the international news. Unfortuantely my main source is our local NPR station, which doesn’t start broadcasting it until it’s filler time at 1 AM. Which these days I’m crashed out long before then, unless I’ve been suckered into some long instance with a bunch of geeks.
I love shortwave radio.
While I never got super into ham radio (aside from a basic FCC license), I had a bunch of friends who were and it was a lot of fun. I actually enjoy the crazy preachers too.
I’ve never really been in to TV coverage. It’s pretty funny, I have a few friends who are absolutely addicted to CNN/FOX News/ect. They actually get edgy without it on as background noise (I like to tease them about whether or not they’re imaginging a ticker line underneath me as we’re talking). Yet a lot of times they don’t seem to know as much worldwide or local news as me (though granted they work and I don’t so I have more time to read my daily net news lineup, ect, and I listen to the local news show on the NPR affiliate.). I mean, surely these thigns are COVERED on the TV news, what else could they possibly be putting on the headliners? Maybe it’s too much information overload to hear it AND see it AND read it. I know that I tend to process/retain stuff far better when I hear it by itself or read it, than if I’m getting bombarded from more than one direction.
Kir, I’m curious, have you fired up your equipment up there? Do solar flares or the northern lights *really* affect broadcasting? I remember hearing about that ages ago, but was skeptical.
As a rule, I rather dislike TV news. I try turning it on once in a while only to become frustrated and want to argue with the commentators after a few minutes. Perhaps I need a lesson in active listening? It is strange that as a raging conservative I can stand CNN longer than I can stand Fox, but ultimately both get turned off in the end.
Shortwave radio is a part of my emergency kit and I turn it on just for kicks every once in a while to make sure the radio is still in operational order.
As for amateur radio, the biggest problem I have had is with sunspot activity. However, this was a problem for me even when I lived way back in upstate NY (about 10 years ago).
Sites like the following can give you an idea how much the solar weather is going to alter your ability to bounce a signal off the ionosphere. It goes in cycles.
http://prop.hfradio.org/
http://dx.qsl.net/propagation/
Radio is pretty important up here as for some places it is the only way to communicate with the outside world.