Breaking News Stories
These are news stories breaking after the publishing of this Word
from.– Oil Crisis...is
the world about to be shocked
End of oil era in sight, Rifkin warns
By Andrew Rettman - EUOBSERVER
Controversial US thinker Jeremy Rifkin told the EU on Monday (12
September) that the world will witness the end of the oil era in the
present generation's lifetime, as MEPs launched a new initiative to
promote hydrogen fuel.
The chief of the Washington-based NGO Foundation on Economic Trends
indicated that the world will have used up over half its oil reserves by
2027 at the latest or between 2010 and 2020 at the earliest.
"Let's hope and pray that we don't peak in the next two to three years,
or we are going to be in trouble like we have never been before in human
history", he said.
Mr Rifkin urged world leaders to focus research and investment on
developing renewable energy over the next 25 years in order to usher in
a third industrial revolution after steam and oil power.
He predicted that oil might soon cost over $90 dollars a barrel, blaming
hurricane Katrina on global warming and the consumption of fossil fuels
and contrasted the positive response of European politicians to relative
inertia at the highest levels of the US government.
"I truly believe Europe will lead the way to a new energy era", he
added.
Eurobonds might fund research
MEPs from the conservative, socialist and liberal groups who launched a
new EU hydrogen manifesto on Monday echoed Mr Rifkin's arguments.
Under the scheme, the European Parliament hopes to raise money for
hydrogen research by selling eurobonds to European investors, as well as
pushing through energy-saving directives on higher car taxation, public
transport use and home insulation.
MEPs also aim to produce a roadmap for investments in late October under
the EU's long-term scientific research fund, called the Seventh
Framework Programme and to hold an energy conference with progressive
Californian authorities in the next few months.
"We hope this report will be picked up by those in the EU with the power
of action", European Parliament president Josep Borrell stated.
Meanwhile, Greek environment commissioner Stavros Dimas said Brussels
"should do more" to alter energy consumption and supply patterns.
He added that Nordic countries, including Iceland, which are already
leaders in hydroelectric power have so far shown the most interest in EU
energy reform.
Industry not as worried
Industry experts painted a less alarming picture however, saying that
proven world oil resources continue to increase as technology improves
in terms of deep water drilling and conversion of non-oil hydrocarbons
such as tar sands into oil-type products.
Yields from the Middle East, Canada, Venezuela, Nigeria, Angola and the
former Soviet republics are set to ramp up in the next five to ten years
even as resources dwindle in the North Sea.
Proven world oil reserves currently stand at some 1.18 trillion barrels,
compared to 761 billion 20 years ago, and are not expected to run dry
until 2045 at the earliest, British Petroleum (BP) said.
"Based on BP's work and statistics, the world is not facing a shortage
of hydrocarbon resources", a spokesman said.
International Energy Association (IEA) chief economist Fatih Birol told
EUosberver that world oil resources will not reach the half way mark
until 2030 if investments are made quickly in the Middle East, adding
that today's high oil prices are helping industry fund research into
maximising yields.
No room for complacency
But Dr Birol added that hydrogen fuel cells could become financially
viable in the next few decades and that world leaders should not become
complacent over oil.
"Even if Mr Rifkin's figures are wrong, it is true that one day we will
run out of oil", he said. "We must leave oil before it leaves us".
IEA oil markets analyst Lawrence Eagles also warned that things could
get worse before they get better.
"We are still at the beginning of the hurricane season", he pointed out,
adding that European consumers are beginning to slow spending in other
areas, as high petrol prices bite.
Renewable hydrogen fuel works by using wind or solar-generated
electricity to split water into hydrogen and oxygen, and then generating
fresh electricity by recombining them within a fuel cell.
|