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from.– Oil Crisis...is
the world about to be shocked
Oil crisis: It's only just
begun
By Paul Salopek - Chicago Tribune
Last summer, a gasoline station opened in South Elgin, Ill., an old
farming village that's now being swallowed by the westward sprawl of
Chicago.
As service stations go, it's an alpha establishment. A $3 million
Marathon outlet with 24 digital pumps, a computerized car wash and a
convenience store lit up like an operating room, it sells everything
from ultra-low-sulfur diesel to an herbal "memory enhancer" to Krispy
Kreme doughnuts.
Howard Dunbar's Tanker Truck 6 rolled into the station one night last
September and proceeded to unload 7,723 gallons of gasoline and diesel
into underground tanks.
This bonanza would be sucked dry by customers in 24 hours, a small,
stark example of the nation's awesome petroleum appetite at a time the
planet appears to be lurching into an energy crunch of historic
proportions.
By now, most Americans realize that something is profoundly awry in the
global oil patch.
For most motorists, like the "swipe and go" customers at the South Elgin
Marathon, the evidence is painfully obvious: record-high fuel costs that
have surpassed last year's infamous price spikes after Hurricane
Katrina. Prices are expected to go even higher, especially in the
Pacific Northwest and California, after the shutdown of an oil pipeline
on Alaska's northern slope.
Yet to fully grasp the scope of the crisis looming before them,
Americans must trace their seemingly ordinary tankful of gasoline back
to its shadowy sources. This is, in effect, a journey into the heart of
America's vast and troubled oil dependency.
"I truly think we're at one of those turning points where the future's
looking so ugly nobody wants to face it," said Matthew Simmons, a
Houston energy investment banker who has advised the Bush administration
on oil policy. "We're not talking some temporary Arab embargo anymore.
We're not talking your father's energy crisis."
What Simmons and many other experts are talking about is a bleak new
collision between geology and geopolitics.
Below ground, the biggest worry is "peak oil" — the notion that the
world's total petroleum endowment is approaching the half-empty mark, a
geological tipping point beyond which no amount of extra pumping will
revive fading oil fields.
Peak-oil theory is controversial. Many think it alarmist. Yet even Big
Oil is starting to gird itself for possible fuel shortages: Chevron, the
nation's second-largest oil company, has bluntly declared that "the era
of easy oil is over" and is warning energy-hungry Americans that "the
world consumes two barrels of oil for every barrel discovered."
Aboveground, things look little better. Most petro states, aware that
crude supplies are growing increasingly valuable, have limited drilling
rights to their own oil companies.
Meanwhile, thirst for petroleum continues to run wild. Producing nations
are pumping at maximum capacity. Yet the competing energy demands of
America and rapidly industrializing China and India now threaten to
outstrip global oil output. Chinese oil imports are projected to double
to 14 million barrels a day over 20 years. Many credible analysts
foresee a new "energy cold war" as the United States and China square
off over the planet's last reserves.
The new Marathon station in South Elgin turned out to be an ideal
laboratory to parse these sobering issues. Exclusive access to industry
refining data made it possible, for the first time, to track oil
consumed by this one gas station back to the dusty war zones,
belligerent autocracies and tottering nation-states from where it came.
For years, oil companies have insisted that this could never be done.
Conventional wisdom holds that America's colossal oil flows are mixed,
swapped among companies and rebranded too many times to pinpoint the
actual source of your $40 purchase of unleaded.
Yet, with a little research and proprietary data supplied by Marathon
Petroleum, the Chicago Tribune could trace with unparalleled clarity
virtually every bucketful of trucker Howard Dunbar's shipment to its
distant origins.
On the hydrocarbon menu that September night, in round figures:
• Gulf of Mexico crudes: 31 percent
• Texas crudes: 28 percent
• Nigerian crudes: 17 percent
• Arab light from Saudi Arabia: 10 percent
• Louisiana sweet: 8 percent
• Illinois Basin light: 4 percent
• Cabinda crude from Angola: 3 percent
• N'Kossa crude from the Republic of Congo: .01 percent
Thus, $73.81 worth of unleaded pumped one Saturday by a Little League
mom was traced not simply back to Africa, but to a particular set of
Nigerian offshore fields through which Ibibio villagers canoed home to
children dying of curable diseases.
Every day, the jaded tanker drivers brought human stories echoing in
their trucks. They plunked their long wooden measuring sticks into the
Marathon station's 40,000-gallon underground tanks, and the resulting
subterranean gong evoked — depending on the changing oil vintage — an
Iraqi ex-colonel's cavernous loneliness. Or the laments of a West
African fisherman named Sunday, afloat on a fishless stretch of the
Atlantic. Or the songs of Marxist Indians reveling in their newfound oil
wealth atop a dusty South American plateau.
The voices of Chinese oil prospectors gurgled inside all of the fuel
shipments. And diluted in the gas came a warning that many Americans
seem unprepared to hear: Our nation's energy-intensive joy ride, powered
by 150 years of cheap petroleum, may be coming to an end.
Journey to the pump
It was September. Hurricanes Katrina and Rita had delivered their
one-two punch to the energy-rich Gulf Coast, swamping New Orleans and
disabling the offshore wells and pipelines that yield one-third of
America's domestic energy production. In South Elgin, population 20,000,
gas prices at the Marathon had broken the $3-a-gallon barrier, and
people were stealing Michelle Vargo's gasoline.
"You'd think it would only be the crummy cars, but people in nice cars
are doing it, too," the frazzled station manager exclaimed. "I never
seen anything like it."
Vargo, 36, is too young to recall that this had happened during the Arab
oil embargo of 1973 and the Iranian hostage crisis of 1979.
In typically murky industry fashion, the station is branded and supplied
by Marathon but actually owned by an independent fuel retailer — in this
case, Prairie State Enterprises of Barrington, Ill. Freelance shippers
called "jobbers" haul the gas. And even though much of the station's
petroleum does in fact bubble from Marathon's oil patches, the company
as often purchases its oil from Exxon Mobil, Iraq's Southern Oil Co. or
Venezuela's PDVSA, a swaggering national oil company with its own
patriotic song.
A single mom with a hard-edged life, Vargo is one part in a ruthless
business that earns a pittance from gasoline sales (oil companies and
refiners snatch the bulk of the fuel's profits). Her station's income
comes from the incidentals of frantic modern life: cigarettes, energy
drinks, stay-awake pills, the Lotto, and sweet and salty snacks.
The clerks are a motley group. Many are the working poor. Some can't pay
their bills. Several live with their parents.
Vargo drives to work in a car she can't afford — a white Chevrolet
Suburban that churns out a ruinous 10 miles a gallon and rides so high
that she has to boost herself into the driver's seat as if jumping into
a saddle. Her two-hour daily commute, about 40 miles each way from
Lockport, is roughly double the national average.
"I don't feel safe in small cars," Vargo said defensively.
The only perk for the station employees is free coffee. There are no
discounts on gas.
From the ocean's floor
In 1940, the United States was the Saudi Arabia of the world. It
produced 63 percent of the planet's oil. Today, it generates 8 percent.
About one-third of Vargo's fill-up on a recent day came from the last
major pool of crude remaining in oil-starved America: the basement of
the Gulf of Mexico. Trace it from seabed to suburbia, and you X-ray
America's aging industrial innards.
It started 9,000 feet inside Earth's crust, in Miocene Epoch rocks that
have the consistency of oil-soaked beach sand. The rocks simmer near the
boiling point of water. This is known in the business as the "pay zone."
From that hellish place, the crude was sucked up into a 4-inch drill
pipe that punctured the Atlantic floor near a submerged hillock called
Viosca Knoll 786. It shot up 1,750 feet of pipe to an offshore
production rig and was shunted ashore to a huge tank farm in St. James,
La. There it began its long journey to the Midwest in a pipeline big
enough for a person to walk in, albeit hunched over — a 632-mile-long
artifact of our oil dependency that will doubtless astound future
archeologists.
Arriving at the Robinson refinery in southern Illinois, it was cooked
and cooled for five days inside 23-story towers. Then it gushed through
16- and 12-inch fuel pipelines for three days until it reached a
40-year-old tank farm near O'Hare International Airport. Finally, it
traveled its last 12 miles to the South Elgin Marathon inside Howard
Dunbar's truck.
"Takes a bit of power to bring it up," hollered Ferrell Martin, 52, a
senior mechanic aboard Petronius, a drilling platform that juts above
the gulf's waves near Viosca Knoll. "Our generators could electrify a
small town."
The platform, co-owned by Chevron and Marathon, came on line in 2000. It
cost more than $500 million to build, nearly what the United States
shells out every 24 hours to buy imported crude. A masterpiece of high
technology, it pumps the energy equivalent of 60,000 barrels of oil and
natural gas a day — a gusher that matches Pakistan's national output and
is only slightly behind Italy's.
More than 100 such gargantuan structures dot the gulf. As do an
estimated 6,500 other oil-related features such as wells, pumping
stations and helipads, not to mention some 30,000 miles of submerged
pipelines tangled like spaghetti across the gulf floor.
"A whole new game"
One man who keeps Michelle Vargo's gas-guzzling Suburban rolling doesn't
have an oil worker's rough hands. He sits in a red granite skyscraper in
Houston.
"No question, we're facing a whole new game," said Jeff Rutledge, a
sandy-haired New Orleans native and the senior geophysicist for
Marathon. "Sure, there's a lot of resources still out there, but they're
getting riskier to invest in, much harder to find and more expensive to
reach."
At Marathon's technology and exploration department, desks are piled
with what look like old eight-track tapes: computer drives that contain
volumes of exploration data that beggar belief. Seismic surveys, the
industry's main tool for locating oil, involve setting off small shock
waves at Earth's surface and recording millions of "echoes" from the
rock below.
Progress reports from 10 to 20 of these fantastically pricey, high-tech
quests from Africa, Russia and the North Atlantic land on Rutledge's
desk every day.
According to industry optimists, such Herculean efforts to squeeze out
Earth's last high-quality oil are the best retort to doomsayers who
worry the world is running on empty.
In the gulf, for instance, Petronius' 19 wells do things engineers
couldn't dream of a quarter-century ago. They snake downward through
almost 1,800 feet of seawater, bore vertically through a mile and a half
of rock, then veer off laterally under the stony seabed for distances of
up to five miles.
Such whiz-bang technology has encouraged the U.S. Minerals Management
Service to boost the Gulf of Mexico's potential oil reserves by 15
percent, to 86 billion barrels. That's enough, in theory, to meet U.S.
demand for another decade. Much of that, however, lies in deep,
environmentally sensitive waters near the Florida coast and is
prohibitively expensive to extract using current technology.
Many oil executives say environmental restrictions and stingy foreign
governments keep valuable reserves locked up.
The United States gulps one-quarter of the crude pumped on the planet,
industry critics point out, yet it sits atop just 3 percent of the
globe's reserves.
"You can drill in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, on every
continental shelf and atop every hill in America for that matter, and
you still won't reverse the fact that our oil production is in permanent
decline," said Rep. Roscoe Bartlett, R-Md., a senior member of the House
Science Committee. "We're just sopping up what's left, digging ourselves
into a deeper hole."
Bartlett belongs to a small but suddenly influential band of pessimists
who are ringing alarm bells over peak oil.
The perilous "peak"
The theory of peak oil is based on the studies of M. King Hubbert, a
pioneering U.S. geologist who correctly predicted in the 1950s that
America's huge crude output would "peak," or hit a ceiling, in 1970.
Nobody disputes that oil will peak; the debate is over when. The output
of all reservoirs begins to decline after about half of their oil is
extracted. Today, peakists cite anemic oil discoveries since the 1980s,
plus ominous drop-offs in production in major fields in Kuwait, China
and Mexico, among other places, as evidence that the world, too, is
reaching its fateful peak.
Estimates of when we will hit this milestone vary from "we've passed it
already" to the U.S. Geological Survey's latest calculation of 2044 —
hardly a reassuring date, given that rocketing oil prices and their
attendant social chaos would stagger the industrial world well before
that reckoning.
Using available technology, Rutledge said, Petronius' bounty likely will
shrivel in 12 to 15 years.
"Just sinking away"
Ferrell Martin's ancestors had fished and trapped the watery maze of
Bayou Terrebonne, a fabled swamp about 60 miles southwest of New
Orleans, for more than 200 years. But today, Louisiana's lush wetlands,
the richest in America, are dying, crumbling into the sea.
Home from his usual two-week shift aboard Petronius, Martin knelt at the
bow of a bass boat steered by one of his numberless bayou relatives,
trying, again and again, to get the boat unstuck from hidden bars of
mud.
"I can't even find the same fishing holes anymore," Martin said, fanning
away mosquitoes. "The whole place is just sinking away."
The U.S. Geological Survey thinks land in and around Bayou Terrebonne is
starting to sag like a deflating wineskin as fossil fuels are pumped out
in massive quantities. In some places, it has settled 11 inches. For a
landscape that is in many cases only a few feet above sea level, the
implications are ominous. Erosion and subsidence have eaten away at
least two miles of coastline near Ferrell Martin's modest house in
Montegut, La.
He recognized the irony: Oil has yanked thousands of once-impoverished
Cajuns into the middle class, but it is now helping swallow their
ancestral homes.
"Everything's a trade-off, I guess," Martin said.
This, too, gets burned up by the cars in South Elgin: a clod of southern
Louisiana.
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