By
Ismael Hossein-zadeh
The popular perception of the
recently skyrocketing oil price is that there is an oil shortage in global
energy markets. The perceived shortage is generally blamed on the Organization
of Petroleum Exporting countries (OPEC) for "insufficient" production, or on
countries like China and India for their increased demand for energy, or on
both.
This perception is
reinforced—indeed, largely shaped—by the Bush administration and its
neoconservative handlers who are eager to deflect attention away from war and
geopolitical turbulence as driving forces behind the skyrocketing energy prices.
Impressions of an oil shortage
are further bolstered by Wall Street and its financial giants that are taking
advantage of the insecurity created by war and geopolitical turmoil in oil
markets and are making fortunes through manipulative speculation in commodity
futures markets.
Perceptions of insufficient oil
supply are also heightened by the recently resuscitated theory of the so-called
Peak Oil, which maintains that world production of conventional oil will soon
reach—if it has not already reached—a maximum, or peak, and decline thereafter,
with grave socio-economic consequences.[1]
However, claims of an oil
shortage are not supported by facts. Evidence shows that, in reality, there is
no discrepancy between production and consumption of oil on a global level.
Citing statistical evidence of parity between production and consumption of oil,
OPEC President Chakib Khelil recently emphasized that there was no shortage of
oil: "As far as fundamentals are concerned I think we have equilibrium between
supply and demand. . . . In fact right now we have more supply than demand."[2]
Facts of abundant oil supplies
in global markets are now also being acknowledged and reported by mainstream
media. For example, Ed Wallace of Business Week recently reported that
"that worldwide production of oil has risen 2.5% in the first quarter, while
worldwide demand has grown by only 2%. Production is expected to increase by
3.3% in the second quarter, and by as much as 4.1% by the third quarter. The net
result is that the U.S. daily buffer for oil production against demand, which
was a paltry 1.5 million barrels as recently as 2005, is now up to 3 million
barrels in excess capacity today."
Wallace then asks, "So what is
going on here? Why would our Energy Secretary say there's a supply and demand
problem when none exists? Why would he say that speculators have little or
nothing to do with the incredibly high price of oil and gasoline, when it's
clear they do? President Bush—a former oilman—gives the ever-growing demand for
gasoline as the primary reason prices are so high, yet that notion can be
dispelled with one minute of research."[3]
So, if indeed there is no
imbalance between production and consumption of oil in global markets, how do we
then explain the skyrocketing oil prices?
The answer, in a nutshell, is:
war and geopolitical instability in oil markets. Contrary to the claims of the
champions of war and militarism, of the Wall Street speculators in energy
markets, and of the proponents of Peak Oil, the current oil price shocks are
caused largely by the destabilizing wars and political turbulences in the Middle
East. These include not only the raging wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, but also
the danger of a looming war against Iran that would threaten the flow of oil out
of Persian Gulf through the Strait of Hormuz.
Close scrutiny of the soaring
oil prices shows that anytime there is a renewed U.S. or Israeli military threat
against Iran, fuel prices move up several notches. For example, Agence
France-Press (AFP) recently reported, "Crude oil prices went on a record-setting
surge Friday as fears of a new Middle East conflict were fanned by comments from
a top Israeli official about Iran. New York's main oil futures contract…leapt
10.75 dollars a barrel—its biggest one-day jump ever."[4]
War and political chaos in the
Middle East tend to increase energy prices in a number of ways. For one thing,
as war plunges the U.S. deep into debt, it depreciates the dollar—thereby
appreciating, or inflating, the price of dollar-denominated commodities,
especially oil.
Depreciated dollar tends to
raise the price of oil (and other commodities) in two major ways. First, since
oil is priced in U.S. dollars, oil exporting countries would demand more of the
cheaper dollars for the same barrel of oil in order to maintain the purchasing
power of their oil. Second, when the dollar falls, oil prices rise because
investors are more likely to use their money to buy tangible assets or
commodities such as oil and gold that won't lose value.
According to a number of energy
experts, between 30- and 40-percent of the recent increases in the price of oil
can be attributed to dollar depreciation. One of the simplest ways to calculate
this is to compare the price per barrel of oil in dollars and euros over the
last five years. "The widening gap between the two [dollar price vs. euro price]
indicates that 35 percent of the increase in the price of oil could be
attributed to currency [dollar] devaluation."[5]
Stronger than the impact of
dollar depreciation on the price of oil has been the impact of manipulative
speculation: war and political instability have served as breeding grounds for
hoarding and speculation in energy futures markets. According to F. William
Engdahl, a top expert on energy and financial markets, "As much as 60% of
today's crude oil price is pure speculation driven by large trader banks and
hedge funds. It has nothing to do with the convenient myths of Peak Oil. It has
to do with control of oil and its price. . . . Since the advent of oil futures
trading and the two major London and New York oil futures contracts, control of
oil prices has left OPEC and gone to Wall Street. It is a classic case of the
tail that wags the dog."[6]
U.S. Representative Bart T.
Stupak, Democrat – Michigan, chairman of the subcommittee investigating
commodity market speculation, attributes even a higher percentage of the oil
price hike to market manipulation: "Speculations now account for about 70% of
all benchmark crude trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, up from 37% in
200."
Wall Street financial giants
that created the Third World debt crisis in the late 1970s and early 1980s, the
tech bubble in the 1990s, and the housing bubble in the 2000s are now hard at
work creating the oil bubble. By purchasing large numbers of futures contracts,
and thereby pushing up futures prices to even higher levels than current prices,
speculators have provided a financial incentive for giant futures traders to buy
even more oil and place it in storage.
Unrestrained by an appalling
lack of regulation, this has led to a steady rise in crude oil inventories over
the last two years, "resulting in US crude oil inventories that are now higher
than at any time in the previous eight years. The large influx of speculative
investment into oil futures has led to a situation where we have both high
supplies of crude oil and high crude oil prices. . . . In fact, during this
period global supplies have exceeded demand, according to the US Department of
Energy."[7]
The fact that the skyrocketing
oil prices of late have been accompanied by a surplus in global oil markets was
also brought to the attention of President George W. Bush by Saudi officials
when he asked them during a recent trip to the kingdom to increase production in
order to stem the rising prices. Saudi officials reminded the President that
"there is plenty of oil on the market. Iran has put some 30 million barrels of
oil that it can't sell into floating storage. 'If we produced more oil, it
wouldn't find buyers,' says the Saudi source. It wouldn't affect the price at
all."[8]
And why producing more oil
"wouldn't affect the price at all"? Well, because what is driving the soaring
oil prices is not shortage but speculation: "with so much investment money
sloshing around in the commodities markets, the Saudis calculate they have no
hope of controlling short-term price fluctuations. They blame the recent price
run-ups on speculation and fear of shortages [not real shortages], factors they
say are beyond their control."[9]
To sum up, manipulative
speculation and dollar depreciation account for most of the recent increases in
the price of oil—speculation accounts for nearly 60 percent, dollar depreciation
for almost 40 percent. This is no longer a secret. What remains largely a
secret, and needs to be exposed, however, is the relationship between
speculation and dollar depreciation, on the one hand, and war and geopolitical
instability, on the other.
While it is important to point
out the impacts of dollar depreciation and commodity speculation on the price of
oil, it is even more important to show that both of these factors are byproducts
of war and militarism. Not only has the war played a critical role in the
weakening of the dollar (through plunging the U.S. deep into debt), it has also
created favorable grounds for manipulative speculation in commodity markets,
especially energy markets.
Therefore, while efforts to
curb speculation in energy markets (through regulation of the largely
unregulated futures markets) or buttress the dollar from further declining may
sound comforting, such efforts will remain illusive and ineffectual unless the
devastating wars and military adventures in the oil-rich Middle East are
terminated; that is, unless the root causes of currency depreciation and
commodity speculation are exposed and cut out.
___________________________
References
[1] Robert L. Hirsch, Roger
Bezdek, and Robert Wendling, "Peaking
of World Oil Production: Impacts, Mitigation, and Risk Management,"
Testimony on Peak Oil before the House Subcommittee on Energy and Industry (7
December 2005),
[2] "No
oil shortage in markets," Reuters (24 June 2008).
[3] Ed Wallace, "There
Is No Gas Shortage," Business Week (1 April 2008).
[4] "Oil
Surges to New Heights after Israeli Warning on Iran," Agence France-Press (6
June 2008).
[5] "Record
oil prices tied to dollar depreciation," GeoTimes.org (15 April
2008),
[6] F. William Engdahl, "Perhaps
60% of Today's Oil Price Is Pure Speculation," financialsense.com (2
May 2008).
[7] Ibid.
[8] Stanley Reed, "Help
from the House of Saud: Why the leading oil producer wants to cool off the
market," Business Week (29 May 2008).
[9] Ibid.
... Payvand News - 07/11/08 ...
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