petro-politics

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By John W. Warnock
Leader Post

In early April, the international price for WTI crude rose to $110 per barrel. The price of gasoline was $1.23 for a litre. Both have since risen even higher. Oil corporations are reporting record profits. Land sales for exploration and development rights for oil are at an all-time high in Saskatchewan.

What’s happening?

At a recent conference in Washington sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy, experts argued that the world production of conventional crude oil peaked in May 2005 at 74 million barrels a day. The gap to the current production level of 88 million barrels a day is now being filled by much more expensive and difficult to access non-conventional sources.

Of the remaining oil reserves, 77 per cent are controlled by producing countries with state-owned national oil companies (NOCs) where the privately owned international oil companies (IOCs) are excluded. Another 11 per cent of reserves are in countries with NOCs where the private companies have some access through production sharing agreements. Russia has six per cent of the remaining reserves and is re-establishing state-ownership and control.

Only seven per cent of the remaining world reserves of crude oil are in countries like Canada, where the IOCs have full access to the resource.

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New Report Calls for Canada to Set Up Strategic Petroleum Reserves

EDMONTON – ­Canada is currently the most vulnerable country in the industrial world to short-term oil supply crises, and we need to establish strategic petroleum reserves to remedy the problem. This is the key finding of a report released today by Alberta’s Parkland Institute in conjunction with the Polaris Institute.

Freezing in the Dark: Why Canada Needs Strategic Petroleum Reserves points out the precariousness of current global oil supplies, especially given current tensions in the Middle East, and fact that Canada imports close to 1 million barrels of oil per day to supply the needs of central and eastern provinces.

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By Faruukh Saleem

Daily Times (Pakistan)

October 3, 2007

America is hungry for Iraq’s oil. Burma is all about oil too. China and India are hungry for Burma’s oil. America loved the Iraqi dictator for as long as the dictator was in America’s economic interest. China and India love the Burmese military junta because the junta has promised them oil (and gas).

Imagine, the day that 20,000 maroon-robed monks marched the streets of Rangoon, the day that the Burmese military shot at the unarmed rally with live bullets was also the day that the Indian Oil Minister Murli Deora was in Rangoon. In Rangoon signing oil and gas exploration contracts between ONGC and the Burmese military junta. China’s interest in the survival of the military junta is two-fold: there’s oil, plus Burma is China’s gateway to the Indian Ocean.

FULL ARTICLE

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1. Iraq: Send in the Clown
by Emine Saner
The Guardian
May 17, 2007

“It is hard to imagine how Jo Wilding’s kidnappers reacted when she told them what she was doing in Iraq. They were in Fallujah, a city under siege in 2003 – and this British woman was claiming to be a clown, in a circus she had brought to a country in the middle of a war.”

http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/05/17/1274/

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