EXTERNAL SECURITY PROVISION IS STILL
PROVIDED BY THE WEST, WHILE ECONOMIC PULL HAS SHIFTED TO THE EAST.
Source: Oilprice By Matthew Hulbert
‘Stick
or twist’ sums up the changes of political power in AMERICA and CHINA in November 2012.
President Obama won another four year term in Washington, while Xi Jinping assumed
stewardship of CHINA. This intricate ‘CHIMERICAN’ relationship is fundamental
to the global outlook anywhere you care to look, and nowhere more so than the MIDDLE
EAST. External security provision is still provided by the West, while economic
pull has shifted to the East. Sounds a simple division of labour, but the
‘roles’ actually become very mixed up once you take a closer look. Squaring
this awkward ‘CHIMERICAN’ circle is going to be a tough task for GULF STATES to
get right, but it’s absolutely critical to their geo-economic and geopolitical
future to do so over the next four years.
MIDDLE EAST: IS IT REALLY ALL ABOUT OIL
AND GAS?
From
the U.S. perspective, the old mantra has always been that a threat to MIDDLE
EAST oil supplies correlated to a direct threat to AMERICAN national security.
This was explicitly spelt out in the 1980 Carter Doctrine that’s been the cornerstone
of Washington’s role in the GULF ever since. But times are now rapidly
changing, and doing so, precisely because the U.S. has seen enormous
hydrocarbon production growth on home soil. The initial energy ‘revolution’ was
in natural gas, making AMERICA the world’s largest single (651bcm) producer,
and is now shifting towards liquids. U.S. oil production growth has been
500,000b/d over the past four years, with total liquids output expected to hit
11.4mb/d next year and onto 13-15mb/d towards 2020. That will make AMERICA the
largest single liquids player in the world, surpassing even SAUDI production
numbers, with the obvious upshot that Washington no longer sees MENA oil as the
valued prize it once was. Whether you’re like the International Energy Agency and
fully signed up to the ‘U.S. energy independence’ narrative or not doesn’t
really matter: The Obama Administration believes it has sufficient
‘hydrocarbon’ space to pick and choose what it does or doesn’t decide to do to
underwrite global energy supplies in future. That’s exactly what it’s going to
do over the next four years.
Background Information: THE SECRET WAR BETWEEN CHINA
AND THE US FOR AFRICA'S OIL RICHES
http://geopoliticsrst.blogspot.com.ar/2012/12/usa-china-and-africa.html
LIBYA
was the first warning shot where the U.S. took a back seat in ousting Colonel
Ghaddafi in 2011, while in IRAN, AMERICA has deemed on-going nuclear
containment as a higher political priority than oil market stability. Extreme SYRIAN
instability sits uncomfortably somewhere in between. In a new age of AMERICAN
priorities, securing global oil supplies no longer axiomatically tops of the
list, in what’s been coined the ‘KUWAIT Question’
THE CORE THREAT TO GULF STATE STABILITY IN THE COMING YEARS
IS THE PROSPECT OF FALLING OIL PRICES
AMERICA
steps in to shore up a major oil producer in the region if things go wrong? The
answer is not just highly uncertain, but extremely pertinent when we consider
the core threat to GULF STATE stability in the coming years is the prospect of
falling oil prices. And you’ve guessed it; the
main ‘supply side shock’ traditional producers face, comes directly from AMERICAN
liquids supply growth creating downwards pressures. Look at it like that,
and Washington’s position comes full circle in the GULF. It’s still paying billions
of dollars on external security to maintain open sea lanes from the MIDDLE EAST,
only to see OPEC states internally implode under the weight of (U.S. inspired)
lower oil prices. Contradictory stuff, at best.
CHIMERICAN
CONTRADICTIONS
Yet
the ‘contradictions’ run far deeper when you bring US-CHINESE relations into
the equation, and does so on two strategic levels. First, AMERICA is busy
strengthening its military presence in SOUTH ASIA and AUSTRALASIA in what’s
been coined an AMERICAN ‘pivot’ as a direct affront to growing CHINESE regional
interests in the SOUTH PACIFIC / SOUTH CHINA SEA. The GULF is merely the
secondary line of naval defense that Washington holds over Beijing, and one
that gives AMERICA a useful bargaining chip to exact political concessions in CHINA’S
backyard.
EVERYONE KNOWS AMERICA HASN’T NEEDED MIDDLE EAST OIL FOR
YEARS; IT NOW IMPORTS LESS THAN 12% OF ITS OIL FROM THE SAND.
But
its position on the map still makes the MIDDLE EAST an important geopolitical
asset for the State Department to maintain. Stay planted in the GULF, and AMERICA
can make its presence felt more acutely in ASIA-PACIFIC and EURASIA. What was
once a game of oil has turned into one of power for Washington.
THE ONLY REASON AMERICA CAN MAINTAIN A STRONG PRESENCE IN
THE GULF IS THANKS TO CHINESE PURCHASE OF U.S. DEBT
That
raises our second, deeply ironic strategic factor: The only reason AMERICA can
maintain this position in the GULF is thanks to CHINESE purchase of U.S. debt.
In geo-economic terms, CHINA holds the aces. It’s entirely Beijing’s call as to
how long Washington plays an overlord regional role, letting AMERICA have its
geostrategic cake and eat it. Outgoing President, Hu Jintao, was perfectly
happy to keep a low profile, ‘free riding’ on the back of U.S. military muscle
to quietly build up Beijing’s supply side links. MENA states account for more
than half of CHINA’S 5.6mb/d total oil imports, and Hu wasn’t particularly
picky about where he’s done business. KUWAIT, UAE, QATAR, YEMEN, OMAN are all
on the list, as are SAUDI ARABIA, IRAQ and IRAN. But as the IRANIAN ‘supply
option’ highlights, the lines are becoming increasingly blurred for CHINA
between purely commercial relations and political imbroglios in the GULF. At
some point Beijing needs to reconcile where its political preferences rest
between the vast bulk of ARABIAN oil production and PERSIA’S predilection for
proliferation. Just as Beijing needs to decide how engaged it’s going to be in
regional political reform and how much maritime muscle it’s willing to invest
in the region. The more CHINA plays a central economic role in the GULF, the
more Beijing will be expected to take up some of the security slack. Regional
players all know the U.S. can no longer be categorically relied on to cover
their backs beyond conveniently sticking their finger in the Hormuz dyke. The ARAB
flag will inexorably follow CHINA’S trade. Beijing needs to be ready.
HIDDEN
DRAGON
But
that’s Xi Jinping’s entire problem. It’s not that CHINA has been throwing its
weight around too much in the MIDDLE EAST, but that it still sees the Gulf
largely in commercial terms. For all the hype around CHINA’S ‘String of Pearls’
strategy spanning from the PERSIAN GULF to the CHINESE mainland via the Strait
of Hormuz to the Malacca Straits, this amounts to little more than a maritime
insurance policy should the U.S. 5th fleet in Bahrain haul anchor too quickly,
not a blueprint for ensuring global oil supplies. Internal dynamics across the GULF
are no different. Sure, CHINA consumes a vast amount of GULF oil, but it
remains highly unlikely to do any heavy lifting rebuilding states such as IRAQ,
YEMEN or LIBYA beyond narrow confines of energy infrastructure. When you strip CHINESE
external energy policy down to its essentials, you get three core aims.
‘Security of supply’, ‘diversity of supply’ and ‘reducing price risk exposure’
through equity deals. That doesn’t mean meddling in the internal affairs of
producer states, nor does it mean dropping the façade of ‘business is business’
‘politics is politics’ line. But it does mean keeping as many supply side
options open for as long as possible, irrespective of the political costs. Xi
isn’t about to change that formula anytime soon. Military bulk and political
swagger in its own backyard is one thing, but CHINA will remain a consumer of
geopolitical stability, not a provider when it comes to the ‘big, bad, energy
world’.
CHINA'S INVESTMENT IN THE AMERICAS
Obviously
none of that sits particularly well for the MIDDLE EAST’S security posture, but
where the picture turns particularly ugly, is that CHINA’S also working very
hard to avoid structural dependency on MENA oil thanks to global unconventional
gains elsewhere. Beijing is under no illusions that it needs OPEC to fill its incremental
supply gaps in the years the come (the vast majority of oil demand growth is
going to come from the MIC markets (MIDDLE EAST, INDIA & CHINA)), but one
of its key hydrocarbon investment targets is the AMERICAS. Not just in VENEZUELA,
ARGENTINA, ECUADOR, BRAZIL and BOLIVIA, but NORTH AMERICA as well, deep into CANADA
and AMERICA. The economic rationale is simple; CHINA has no compunctions
supporting NORTH AMERICAN supply growth, even to the point of investing in
uneconomic fields, so long as it hedges CHINA’S upstream energy portfolio, and
in the long term, continues to provide downward pressures on benchmark prices.
Cynics could even argue that CHINA is looking to repeat the U.S. shale gas
experience that’s made gas a perennial buyer’s market and apply it to oil. The
true prize is shifting liquids from a price based game to one of volume, with AMERICA
acting as the lightening rod. Achieve that, and Beijing has secured nothing
short of an ‘import’ miracle: with supply dependency set to run at 80%, CHINA still
gets to drive through its industrial revolution on the cheap, rewriting the
rules of the energy game as they go. Play to Washington’s energy independence
dreams, all while working towards CHINESE interests.
THE U.S. IS SLOWLY WINDING DOWN ITS POSITION IN MIDDLE EAST
Obviously
it remains to be seen how far that narrative will stick given rampant ASIA
demand side growth, but if nothing else, it brings our ‘CHIMERICAN’
relationship full circle. The U.S. is slowly winding down its position in MIDDLE
EAST on the back of AMERICAN liquid supply growth; investment for which will
increasingly come from CHINA. The GULF is left holding the incremental oil
baby, with Washington and Beijing not merely unwilling to underwrite security
arrangements, but inadvertently working towards an oil market based on volumes,
not price.
ENTROPIC
FUTURE?
To
say that would be a disappointing outcome for GULF STATES would be an
understatement. Back in the real energy world where OPEC – and more
specifically – GULF STATES, are fundamental to the functioning of world energy
markets, it would be remarkably helpful if Mr. Obama and Xi Jinging sat down to
work out who should be doing the geopolitical heavy lifting for what (and
where) in the GULF. IRAQ massively reduced U.S. stock in the MIDDLE EAST, as
much as LIBYA has raised serious questions over AMERICAN resolve. Put the AMERICAN
‘energy independence’ narrative into the mix, and it’s abundantly clear that
vacuums need to be filled. Instead of fighting CHINA for geopolitical primacy
in the ASIA-PACIFIC, AMERICA should be pro-actively bringing CHINA into the
international security fold: A shared division of geopolitical labour in the MIDDLE
EAST would be a perfect place to start given CHINA’S economic significance in
the region. Beijing has to start filling inexorable AMERICAN gaps, not just with
ongoing treasury purchases from the Fed, but with military hardware to boot.
But
leave this all to chance by playing narrower ‘CHIMERICAN’ games, and things are
going to end very badly. Not just for GULF STATES struggling to maintain
political stability in a lower price environment, but more explosive issues on IRAN
where no common approach has been agreed. When the political powder kegs
explode, it’s only then that markets will realise how crucial GULF STATES remain
to balancing oil markets on a daily basis. Everything else will prove to be hot
air; U.S. energy independence rhetoric won’t match supposed pricing power with
market practice. Scorched earth. Scorched markets. Everyone loses out.
Despite
the long odds, there could still be a final twist in the tale for the GULF here
though. If Washington and Beijing end up passing the MIDDLE EAST buck in favour
of their own perceived interests, as brutal as that might be for the region,
once we finally enter a volumes based energy world thanks to U.S. supply
growth, OPEC will almost certainly come out on-top. MIDDLE EAST oil vs. the U.S
MID-WEST? The sand wins hands down in a utilitarian race to the ‘bottom of the
barrel’, with OPEC not just reclaiming, but enhancing its share of global
production to over 50% by 2030. That’s something that Mr. Obama and Xi Jinping
would do very well to bear in mind in the years ahead. The MIDDLE EAST might be
stuck between two hopeless ‘CHIMERICAN’ claimants right now, but writing the GULF
off full stop, would be a very big mistake for the energy world indeed.
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