The Geopolitics of Natural Gas
by Michael T. Klare
The Nation magazine, January 23,
2006
In the high-stakes arena 01 energy geopolitics,
natural gas is rapidly emerging as the next big prize. What oil
was to the twentieth century, natural gas will be to the twenty-first.
Consider these recent developments:
* Item. As we went to press, Russia was
restoring the flow of natural gas to Western and Central Europe
after state-controlled Gazprom curtailed deliveries on January
1 in a bid to force Ukraine to pay the market price for gas previously
supplied at subsidized rates. Although emphasizing the price issue,
Russian officials apparently intended to constrict Ukraine's energy
supplies as a way of punishing that country's pro-Western president,
Viktor Yushchenko, architect of the Orange Revolution, for his
overtures to NATO and the EU. Gazprom's pipelines to Western Europe
(which buys a quarter of its gas from Russia) pass through Ukraine
so it could siphon off some of the diminished supply, leaving
very little for other customers and provoking fears of an energy
crisis at the onset of winter.
* Item. A dispute between China and Japan
Owl over the ownership of an undersea gas field in an area of
the East China Sea claimed by both countries has grown increasingly
inflammatory, with China sending warships into the area and Japan
threatening "bold action" if the Chinese begin pumping
gas from the field. The conflict has soured relations between
Beijing and Tokyo and provoked a strong nationalistic response
from the populations of both countries. The huge anti-Japanese
demonstrations in Shanghai and other Chinese cities last April
were prompted, in part, by Tokyo's announcement that it would
permit drilling in the area by Japanese firms. A peaceful resolution
of the dispute does not appear imminent.
* Item. Ever since India announced plans
more than a year ago to build a natural gas pipeline from fields
in Iran to its own territory via Pakistan, the Bush Administration
has been applying pressure on New Delhi to cancel the project,
claiming it will undermine US attempts to isolate Tehran and curb
its nuclear efforts. "We have communicated to the Indian
government our concerns about the gas pipeline cooperation between
Iran and India," Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice announced
after meeting with Indian Foreign Minister Natwar Singh on March
16. But the Indians have continued talks with Islamabad and Tehran
over the pipeline plan.
The United States is becoming increasingly
dependent on natural gas. This country now relies on natural gas
for approximately one-fourth of its total energy supply, more
than from any source except oil. As a result, the economy has
become more and more vulnerable to fluctuations in gas supply
and pricing-a vulnerability that should be especially evident
this winter as gas prices hit record levels, with painful effects
on the poor. Natural gas provides approximately 14 percent of
the energy used to generate electricity in this country, 45 percent
of home heating fuel and 31 percent of the energy and petrochemicals
consumed by agriculture and industry. Gas is also used as a feedstock
for the manufacture of hydrogen, a promising new entrant in the
race to develop alternative fuels.
The United States currently relies on
North American supplies for most of its gas, but with those reserves
being depleted at a rapid pace and few untapped fields available
for exploitation, need for gas from other regions is growing and
energy plants seek more gas from foreign suppliers like Qatar,
Nigeria and Russia. As with oil, America could become heavily
dependent on foreign suppliers for essential energy needs, a situation
fraught with danger for national security. Many of America's key
allies, including the NATO powers and Japan, are dependent on
imports.
As the global output of petroleum begins
to contract in the decades ahead, industrialized nations will
increasingly rely on natural gas. According to the Energy Department,
the world's known gas reserves stood at 6,076 trillion cubic feet
in 2004. In terms of energy output, this is equivalent to approximately
1,094 billion barrels of oil, or approximately 92 percent of known
petroleum reserves. But because the world is consuming a smaller
proportion each year of the remaining gas supply than it is of
the remaining oil supply (1.5 percent as compared with 2.5 percent),
gas should remain relatively abundant even after the supply of
petroleum begins to contract. Considerable untouched gas is also
believed to reside in remote "stranded" fields that
could someday be added to the tally of proven reserves, further
enhancing the fuel's role in the global energy equation.
Because natural gas is more environmentally
friendly than oil or coal (it releases half as much carbon dioxide
as coal for equal energy output, and a third less than petroleum),
it is attractive to countries seeking to reduce their greenhouse
gas emissions in accordance with the Kyoto treaty. In Europe gas's
share of all fuels used in generating electricity is projected
to rise from 18 percent in 2002 to 29 percent in 2030. A similar
trend can be expected in the United States, if Congress or some
future administration moves to reduce the nation's emissions of
C02-
Developing nations like China, India and
South Korea, increasingly aware of the environmental consequences
of their excessive reliance on oil and coal, are also turning
to natural gas. According to the Energy Department, gas consumption
in China will grow by an estimated 7 percent per year between
2001 and 2025, five times the rate for the United States and the
largest for any major industrial power; India and South Korea
are also among the fastest-growing gas consumers. These projections
help explain the aggressive steps being taken by these countries
to secure additional supplies of gas.
The rising worldwide demand for gas is
also influencing relations between the major consuming nations
and their principal suppliers. A key factor in the geopolitics
of natural gas is the heavy concentration of reserves in a relatively
small number of producing countries. All told, the top ten gas
producers harbor 76 percent of the world's proven reserves, while
the top five-Russia, Iran, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United
Arab Emirates-hold nearly 67 percent. This means, of course, that
these countries are in a very strong position to control the global
flow of gas and to influence market forces.
Russia, which owns 26.7 percent of the
world's proven gas supplies (compared with 2.9 percent for the
United States), will play a dominant role in the energy field
for many decades to come. Although the United States and Russia
produced similar amounts of gas in 2004-05 (543 billion and 589
billion cubic meters, respectively), America's output was about
10 percent of its total reserves while Russia's output was only
1 percent.
Russia already supplies a large share
of Europe's natural gas, and when new pipelines are constructed,
it will be capable of supplying vast amounts to China, Korea and
Japan-even the United States, eventually. Until now, the Russians
have been very careful to avoid giving the impression that they
intend to exploit their dominant position in Europe for political
advantage. Nevertheless, Moscow has been accused of engaging in
such practices in the past: In December 2000, for example, it
temporarily suspended gas deliveries to Georgia in a move perceived
by many Georgians as punishment for the failure of its leaders,
notably then-President Eduard Shevardnadze, to defer to Russia
on key regional issues. The current blockage of gas to Ukraine
can be seen as another instance of the same tactic.
Officials of the European Union are worried
about the growing role of Gazprom in the delivery of natural gas
to Europe. At present, Gazprom supplies approximately 40 percent
of Europe's natural gas, and its share is likely to grow as gas
fields in the North Sea are exhausted. Fearing that Moscow may
someday exploit its role as Europe's major gas supplier to wring
political concessions from its customers, EU officials have called
for greater diversity in the procurement of energy-so far, to
little avail.
Iran is also a major producer of natural
gas. Under increasing diplomatic pressure from the Bush Administration
to halt its suspected pursuit of nuclear weapons, Tehran has been
eager to establish joint production and export projects with friendly
nations in Europe and Asia. In the past two years alone, it has
signed several multibillion-dollar deals with companies from France,
Italy, Norway, Turkey, Japan and India for joint development of
offshore gas fields in the Persian Gulf and the construction of
new pipelines to Europe and Asia. Capping this drive was the signing
in October 2004 of a $100 billion, twenty-five-year contract with
the China National Petrochemical Corporation (Sinopec) for the
joint production and export of liquefied natural gas (LNG), much
of which will ultimately go to China. While all this makes perfect
commercial sense, given Iran's need for foreign partners in the
management of these ambitious projects, it is safe to assume Tehran
is also seeking to increase the number of allies it can turn to
in case of a showdown with the United States.
Qatar has tacked the opposite way, using
its huge gas reserves to establish close ties with Washington
and to insinuate itself beneath the US defense umbrella. Under
a $10 billion, twenty-five-year agreement signed in 2003, ExxonMobil
will build the world's largest LNG shipping facility in Qatar.
Much of the resulting liquid will go to the United States to be
converted back into gas. This will entail the construction of
new LNG terminals at ports on the US Gulf Coast, a major undertaking.
Like Qatar's, many of the world's largest
deposits of natural gas are located far from the areas where demand
is greatest. The most efficient and economical way to transport
gas to distant markets is by pipeline. As a result, vast natural
gas pipeline networks have been built in North America, Europe
and the former Soviet Union, and many more such conduits are under
construction. These networks are easiest to construct on land
or in relatively shallow, enclosed bodies of water like the Mediterranean
and the Black Sea, both of which are now traversed by gas pipelines.
At present, however, it is impractical
to build gas pipelines beneath a large ocean like the Atlantic
or Pacific, so gas traveling from the Middle East or Africa to
the United States or Japan must go by ship. Unlike crude petroleum,
which can be pumped directly from the ground onto waiting ships,
gas must first be converted to a liquid by cooling it to extremely
low temperatures (around -160° centigrade, or -260° Fahrenheit),
transported on mammoth refrigerated vessels and then converted
back to a gas by raising its temperature, at giant regassification
plants in the receiving country. This is very expensive and energy
draining, making seaborne transport a far less attractive proposition
than pipeline delivery. Still, in their hunger for ever-increasing
supplies of energy, more and more countries are building LNG terminals
in their harbors and negotiating with major gas suppliers like
Iran, Qatar and Nigeria for long-term contracts.
Whether natural gas is transported by
pipeline or ship, the growing commerce in it is likely to nurture
new forms of international cooperation, like that between longtime
rivals India and Pakistan, both desperate to boost their energy
supplies in order to sustain strong economic growth. In June energy
ministers from the two countries set up a joint working group
to plan construction of a $4 billion, 1,700-mile gas pipeline
from Iran, and ground breaking is projected for sometime later
this year-unless, of course, the Bush Administration succeeds
in arm-twisting one or the other into canceling the plan.
India is also looking eastward for additional
supplies of natural gas. In January its officials met with their
counterparts from Burma and Bangladesh to discuss the construction
of a gas pipeline from Burma to India via Bangladesh. Such an
arrangement would frustrate US efforts to isolate Burma for its
egregious human rights behavior.
Increased cooperation in the transport
of natural gas is developing too among Russia, China, Japan and
the two Koreas. At the center of these efforts are the vast reservoirs
of natural gas lying off Sakhalin Island in Russia's far east.
To move this gas to international markets giant energy firms,
including ExxonMobil and Royal Dutch/Shell, will build a huge
LNG facility on Sakhalin's southern tip and at least one major
pipeline. One pipeline is expected to extend from Sakhalin to
northern China, while another might go to Japan; some visionaries
have also proposed a branch line extending to South Korea via
North Korea (a project that, if undertaken, would go a long way
toward cementing the increasingly warm relations between the two).
The LNG, meanwhile, will travel by ship to terminals in Japan
and possibly the United States, if new LNG regassification plants
are constructed along America's Pacific coast and/or in Baja California.
If the United States is to boost its imports
of natural gas significantly, it will need many more LNG terminals
in US harbors (there are only four now operating), and this prospect
has already aroused considerable opposition from local authorities
and environmentalists, who worry about the risk of explosions
and other calamities. In a move little noticed by the American
press or the public, Congress voted in July (as part of the new
energy bill) to give the government the power to override local
governments in the placement of future LNG terminals, a step that
could lead to the construction of many more such facilities on
the Atlantic and Pacific coasts and a sharp growth in US reliance
on imported gas.
Although demand for natural gas has engendered
cooperation between once-estranged nations, rival claims to oil
and gas fields have frequently caused friction, even armed conflict.
This has most often occurred in cases involving disputed offshore
territories, notably in portions of the South China Sea, the East
China Sea and the Strait of Korea. All these areas are believed
to harbor substantial reserves of hydrocarbons in one form or
another-oil and gas combined, gas alone or, as in the Korea Strait,
gas hydrates (a crystal-like substance made up of methane and
ice that can be converted into natural gas)-and all have been
the site of violent or threatening confrontations between forces
of the rival claimants involved. In each case, moreover, the United
States is allied with one or more of the contending parties.
The most intense and prolonged of these
conflicts has occurred in the South China Sea, a relatively shallow
body of water believed to harbor substantial reserves of oil and
gas. All of the countries with shorelines on the South China Sea-Brunei,
China, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam-have laid
claim to a 200-mile offshore Exclusive Economic Zone in the area,
many of them overlapping with one another, and all have laid claims
to some or all of the small islands and reefs that dot the region.
China, the dominant power in the area, claims all the islands
and has been particularly aggressive in asserting its sovereignty
over them-on several occasions using military force to drive away
ships belonging to Vietnam and the Philippines. Several attempts
have been made by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to
resolve the dispute peacefully, but China has not renounced its
claim to the islands and continues to expand its small garrisons
on some of the larger islets.
Japan is a party to two maritime boundary
disputes in the region-the one with China discussed earlier and
another with South Korea over a cluster of small islands in the
Strait of Korea located roughly midway between the two nations.
Here, too, the conflict revolves around the boundary between two
overlapping Exclusive Economic Zones and the ownership of energy
supplies that are thought to lie in the disputed territory-in
this case, gas hydrates that could be mined and converted into
natural gas. Efforts to resolve the conflict peacefully have so
far come to naught, and warships and planes from both sides patrol
the disputed area and occasionally approach each other in a threatening
manner, risking an armed confrontation.
Whether the benefits of cooperation in
procuring natural gas will come to be seen as more appealing than
the rewards from unilateral action remains to be seen. One thing
is certain: The world's growing demand for natural gas will play
an ever more significant role in shaping the relations between
major supplying and consuming nations. The need for energy will
increasingly set the agenda of the major powers, and natural gas-long
in the shadow of petroleum-is about to claim center stage.
Michael T Klare, The Nation's defense
correspondent, is a professor of peace and world security studies
at Hampshire College. He is the author, most recently, of Blood
and Oil (Owl).
Oil watch
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