Posted on 10/17/2001 11:00:54 PM PDT by MadIvan
If there is one thing demonstrated by yesterdays assassination of an Israeli minister it is that the Middle East is a madhouse. When lunatics take over the asylum whether they are religious fundamentalists, as in Afghanistan, Iran and Saudi Arabia, or secular megalomaniacs, as in Iraq there are two sensible ways for the rest of the world to respond.
The first is to restore some semblance of order and the rule of law, if not of reason. That is what America and its allies are now doing in Afghanistan, with every prospect of success in the short term. The second response is to try to protect the rest of the world from the consequences of future outbreaks of Middle East madness.
Much has been said about the military and diplomatic components of this second phase of the war against terror. But if the long-term objective is to offer permanent security for the people of America, Europe and Asia from the consequences of sharing a world with the Middle Eastern madhouse, then the most important element of the war against terror has not even been discussed. That element is a coherent, patient and relentless strategy to free the world from its addiction to Middle Eastern oil.
There are several clear links between terrorism and Middle Eastern oil. One such link is noted on this page by Gary Hart: American foreign policy has become a hostage to oil dependence. Energy dependence has tied the Wests hands in pursuing long-term diplomatic interests.
An even more direct link runs from oil money to terror. Oil money is the main source of financing for terrorism and religious fanaticism throughout the Islamic world.
Another link with terror runs through the debilitating economic effect of oil wealth on the producing countries themselves. Economically, oil has been more of a curse than a blessing for the Middle East. While it has produced fabulous riches for ruling families and their cronies, oil wealth has devalued education, protected medieval social structures and discouraged genuine wealth creation. The creativity and entrepreneurial drive that were once synonymous with Arab culture have been diverted into a corrupt, zero-sum game of squabbling over inert mineral wealth.
It has long been a maxim of development economics that the lucky countries are the ones with no resources. The economies that have developed fastest and have done best for their common people have been countries such as Korea, Taiwan, Malaysia and China, which have been forced to rely on education, technology and commerce, rather than living off natural resources in the style of such richer countries as Russia or Nigeria. Even in the Middle East, some of the most prosperous and stable countries, for example Jordan, Morocco and Bahrain, have been the ones with little or no oil.
But isnt reducing our dependence on Middle Eastern oil just a pipe-dream? After all, energy use will inevitably keep expanding as living standards grow around the world. And crude oil currently accounts for 49 per cent of global energy consumption. To make matters worse, the Middle Eastern members of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) are sitting on 53 per cent of the worlds proven oil reserves, and Saudi Arabia alone controls almost half this sea of oil.
All this is true, yet the quest for energy independence may not be as quixotic as suggested by many energy experts, who tend to have an interest in preserving the status quo. For a start, the figures on current oil production as opposed to the reserves which may or may not be pumped from the ground in future decades make the problem look rather less daunting. At present, Middle Eastern Opec members produce 26 per cent of the global supply of crude oil, equivalent to just under 13 per cent of the worlds total energy consumption. Saudi Arabia alone provides just 5 per cent of global energy supply. Iraq and Iran each account for around 1 per cent.
In any other business, the idea that the world could be held to ransom by a producer controlling just a few per cent of global output would be dismissed as absurd. What, then, is so different about oil? The answer consists of three parts, each of which relates to a different component of the strategy for energy independence that is urgently needed after the terrorist attacks.
First, it is widely assumed that nothing can be done to reduce energy consumption without hitting living standards and economic growth. This is utter nonsense. A simple shift in tax structures sharply increasing energy taxes and recycling the money back to consumers through other tax cuts could have a dramatic effect on energy demand.
Of course, President Bush has rejected any such policy, in part because he represented an oil state. And the British Government last year moved in the opposite direction Gordon Brown unforgivably cut petrol duties and eased industrial energy taxes in his capitulation to the fuel protesters. But if either the US or British Government are serious about their war against terrorism, these egregious policy errors can surely be reversed.
Secondly, the Opec cartel has amplified the power of individual Middle Eastern countries. Opec countries account for 40 per cent of world oil production and 19 per cent of total energy demand. The second step in disarming the oil weapon is therefore to try to break the cohesion of Opec and, above all, to accelerate the development of non-Opec oil sources. The most promising region for increasing non-Opec production is the former Soviet Union. If the West was willing to put extra investment into that region, new oil equivalent to half Saudi Arabias current production could be pumped within a few years.
The West could also work much more effectively to neutralise Opecs power by using strategic reserves owned by the US, European and Japanese Governments. These reserves should be built up to much larger volumes during periods of low demand (such as now) and then dumped on to the markets whenever Opec tries to squeeze supply.
The third reason for the Middle Easts excessive economic power is the assumption that oil must remain the worlds dominant energy source for at least the next 20 or 30 years. But there is nothing inevitable about the dominance of oil. Car engines that can run on liquified natural gas and fuel cells have already been developed by several motor manufacturers. Vast amounts of electricity can be generated from wind, nuclear, solar, biomass and other non-oil sources, all of which have the additional advantage of eliminating carbon dioxide and the greenhouse effect.
Why are these new technologies not already in use, or at least built into long-term energy planning, which still rests overwhelmingly on oil? The global energy and motor industries believe it is in their interests to delay for as long as possible the transition from oil. Oil companies and car makers know that alternative technologies, ranging from car fuel-cells for cars to wind turbines for electricity generation, will never become economic until they benefit from the rapid cost reductions that come from mass production. As long as these technologies are relegated to experimental and pilot programmes, they will always appear prohibitively expensive and premature. But mass production will remain impossible until there is mass demand and mass demand is out of the question until energy companies convert their distribution networks to offer alternative energy supplies.
This is a clear case for government intervention, through the tax system, through subsidies and through direct regulation for example, by requiring drastically lower fuel economy standards and instructing oil companies to make alternative fuels available at their filling stations during the next five years.
Sheikh Yamani, the former Saudi oil minister, once warned his countrymen against being too provocative in exploiting their market power during the golden age of oil. He noted that the Stone Age did not end because the cavemen ran out of stone. It is now time for the Western world to prove Sheikh Yamani right. For the oil age, September 11 must mark the beginning of the end.
Bump!
You don't have to imagine. There are already good examples called Afghanistan and Pakistan. The Mullahs who influence the thinking of both countries need a scapegoat to deflect from their own gross mismanagement of the economy.
MadIvan may have said it best when he posted that "Bin Laden is to Islam what Lenin was to socialism-- they took a bad idea and made it worse."
Does that mean we can drill in Anwar? of off the coast of California, or in the Gulf of Mexico? Or anywhere else we find oil? or how about making a synthetic oil?
I heard our Liberals geeks say this all the time "we need to reduce our dependence on foriegn oil", but whenever one of our Conservatives geeks says "we need to drill our own." The Liberals go on a Protest March.
Oil independence is necessary to our National Defense but where is the will?
Yep, just as I thought same old tired song from the Liberal Geeks who have no practical solutions to the problem except demonizing the oil companies and car makers.
If Trent Lott and the House Republicans who voted to go home instead staying in Congress where they belong, is any indication of that will, we are, in the words of our current President's father, "In deep do-do."
British engineering firm Mayflower has unveiled a novel car engine that it claims can cut fuel use by 40% and slash exhaust fumes by half.
The improved fuel economy has been produced by changing the way that pistons connect to the crankshaft in an engine.
Mayflower claims that its "intelligent" e3 engine could mean the advent of vehicles with adaptable engines that act like a nippy run-about in town, but become more saloon-like on the open road.
Mayflower said the engine could be in production within five years.
Flawed design
The e3 Variable Motion Engine is the fruit of 11 years of research by Mayflower scientist Dr Joe Ehrlich, who has spent his whole life working with internal combustion engines.
In conventional engines, the piston is connected directly to the crankshaft of a car with a linkage called a con-rod. The crankshaft converts the up-down motion of the pistons into rotational motion to turn the car's wheels.
The e3 engine puts a pivot between the crankshaft and con-rod. This change means combustion is more complete because the piston slows down just after the fuel is ignited. Better combustion means more power per piston stroke and fewer unburnt fuel emissions.
"I have always felt that the conventional crank and con-rod was flawed," said Dr Ehrlich. "It wastes too much energy and does not optimise combustion."
The changed angle of the connecting con-rod at combustion imparts more of a kick to the crankshaft, making the engine more energy efficient. In conventional engines, some of the energy generated during combustion is wasted because the con-rod is directly over the crankshaft.
The pivot sitting between crankshaft and con-rod is also the key to the e3's adaptability. By altering the angle of the pivot, the capacity, and therefore power, of the engine can be changed while it is running.
Mayflower claims that the engine could mean much greater fuel efficiency for a huge variety of vehicles. The engine of a truck could be changed to cope with a full load and then "downsized" as it returns empty to a depot or yard.
Because the e3 engine is based on existing engines, manufacturers should find it easy to work the design into their production lines, said Mayflower chief executive John Simpson.
Over 160 million combustion engines are made every year.
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Putting this into production quicker than 5 years would help a great deal. And really, no one would notice much of a difference in how they live, except needing less petrol, and finding that petrol cheaper.
Regards, Ivan
As it should be, science and mechanics are civilized man's greatest friends.
This was the argument in the '70s. Well, we have had our abundant, cheap oil for the past decade...and instead of "new energy resources" we have SUVs, people thinking nothing of hopping on a plane for a three hour flight for dinner, huge houses that must take the GNP of that country the US bombing to maintain, ridiculous commutes, etc.
What the whole world needs to do, NOW, is get those alternative sources to market. People will buy them, invest in them, invent them, produce them, if there is a real need and a profit can be made.
And forget ANWR...it's a quick fix. And forget globalism...a world with boundaries would be safer and give people identities in cultures they actually liked. There has to be a transition period as adjustments are made, and it would probably be better if it is a little unpleasant. It will shake governments, corporations, people, into real solutions.
1- slash taxes & regulations like crazy...
2- Drill for oil ( and develop all energy resources ) like crazy...
3- rebuild the military...
So far, the silence from them has been deafening!
Naturally, one of the most insane schemes ever hatched came from X-42... the cutting off of our biggest reserve of clean-burning coal:
-Four Years Later, Locals Still Decry Clinton Monument --
-Coalgate--that ugly Lippo-Klink-Redford connection to tyranny--
-Clinton's Utah deal not justified-WND story--
Energy and Mineral Resources, Grand Staircase - Escalante ...
Utah Geological Survey. ... A Preliminary Assessment of Energy and Mineral Resources
within the Grand Staircase - Escalante National Monument. ...
Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument: Conservation and ...
Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument: Conservation
and Controversy. Petrified Woody's ...
Description: "This million-plus acre area needs protection from uncontrolled development, but at what cost?...
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