Strategic Energy Policy Challenges for the 21st Century
Report of an Independent Task Force Sponsored by the James A. Baker III Institute
for Public Policy of Rice University and the Council on Foreign Relations, Edward
L. Morse, Chair, Amy Myers Jaffe, Project Director
April, 2001
http://www.rice.edu/projects/baker/Pubs/workingpapers/cfrbipp_energy/energytf.htm
CONTENTS
Foreword
Acknowledgments
Executive Summary: The Challenge
Introduction and Background
Findings
Strategic Policy Choices
Strategy, Recommendations, and Action Plan
Additional Views
Dissenting Views
Task Force Members
Task Force Observers
Appendixes
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FOREWORD
For many decades now, the United States has been without an energy policy. Now, the consequences of not having an energy policy that can satisfy our energy requirements on a sustainable basis have revealed themselves in California. Now, there could be more Californias in Americas future. President George W. Bush and his administration need to tell these agonizing truths to the American people and thereby lay the basis for a new and viable U.S. energy policy.
That Americans face long-term energy delivery challenges and volatile energy prices is the failure of both Democrats and Republicans to fashion a workable energy policy. Energy policy was allowed to drift by both political parties despite its centrality to Americas domestic economy and to our nations security. It was permitted to drift despite the fact that virtually every American recession since the late 1940s has been preceded by spikes in oil prices. The American people need to know about this situation and be told as well that there are no easy or quick solutions to todays energy problems. The President has to begin educating the public about this reality and start building a broad base of popular support for the hard policy choices ahead.
This recommendation sits at the core of an Independent Task Force Report sponsored
by our two organizations. The Task Force was chaired by Edward L. Morse, a widely
recognized authority on energy, and ably assisted by Amy Myers Jaffe of the
James A. Baker III Institute of Rice University. Their Task Force included experts
from every segment of the world of energyproducers, consumers, environmentalists,
national security experts, and others.
There are no easy Solomonic solutions to energy crises, only hard policy tradeoffs
between legitimate and competing interests. Tightening environmental regulations,
among other factors, have discouraged the rapid expansion of badly needed energy
infrastructure in many U.S. locations. But Americans are also demanding a cleaner
environment and cleaner energy.
Strong economic growth across the globe and new global demands for more energy
have meant the end of sustained surplus capacity in hydrocarbon fuels and the
beginning of capacity limitations. In fact, the world is currently precariously
close to utilizing all of its available global oil production capacity, raising
the chances of an oil-supply crisis with more substantial consequences than
seen in three decades. These limits mean that America can no longer assume that
oil-producing states will provide more oil. Nor is it strategically and politically
desirable to remedy our present tenuous situation by simply increasing dependence
on a few foreign sources.
So, we come to the reports central dilemma: the American people continue
to demand plentiful and cheap energy without sacrifice or inconvenience. But
emerging technologies are not yet commercially viable to fill shortages and
will not be for some time. Nor is surplus energy capacity available at this
time to meet such demands. Indeed, the situation is worse than the oil shocks
of the past because in the present energy situation, the tight oil market condition
is coupled with shortages of natural gas in the United States, heating fuels
for the winter, and electricity supplies in certain localities.
This Independent Task Force Report outlines some of the hard choices that should be considered and recommends specific policy approaches to secure the energy future of the United States. These choices will affect other U.S. policy objectives: U.S. policy toward the Middle East; U.S. policy toward the former Soviet Union and China; the fight against international terrorism, environmental policy and international trade policy, including our position on the European Union (E.U.) energy charter, economic sanctions, North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and foreign trade credits and aid. The Bush administration is in a unique position to articulate these tradeoffs in a non-partisan manner and to rally the support of the American public. U.S. strategic energy policy must prioritize and coordinate domestic and foreign policy choices and objectives, where possible. Moreover, the energy problem is inexorably intertwined with the fundamental challenge of creating sustainable economic growth without sacrificing environmental protection. The pursuit of a solution demands a major national effort.
Finally, we come to the pleasant task of thanking those on the Independent Task Force who were instrumental in supporting Ed Morse and Amy Jaffe in the organization of the Task Forces meetings and the preparation of the report. We would like to thank Col. James E. Sikes Jr., of the U.S. Army, who served as a Military Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations this year and also was the project coordinator of the Task Force; Sarah Saghir, a Research Associate at the Council on Foreign Relations; W. O. King Jr., Baker Institute administrator; and Jason Lyons, Baker Institute Energy Forum staff assistant. And for them and us, special thanks to all the participating members of the Task Force for their expertise, ideas, stimulating debate, and hard work.
Ambassador Edward Djerejian
Director,
Baker Institute
Leslie H. Gelb
President,
Council on Foreign Relations
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The Independent Task Force on Strategic Energy Policy Challenges for the 21st Century was a collective endeavor reflecting the contributions and hard work of many individuals. First and foremost, I am indebted to the superb chair, Dr. Edward L. Morse, for his dedication, wisdom, insights, superior writing and editing skills, guidance, and steadfast support during the past five months. Ed Morse made this challenging assignment look easy through his outstanding leadership and deep analytic understanding of the subject matter. I congratulate him on drawing together this outstanding group of professionals and policymakers into a broad consensus on highly complex and divisive issues. But most importantly, I would like to thank Ed Morse for his loyalty and faith in me that extends back more than a decade and has truly made a difference in my life and career.
I am also indebted to the Task Force members, observers, and reviewers who generously shared experience, information, ideas, and concepts. Their energetic participation in three complicated video conferences and teleconferences from diverse locations and time zones offered invaluable insight, suggestions, and advice during December, January, and February 200001. This report reflects their views and concurrence on the broad thrusts of this examination of U.S. energy policy. Although not every member signed on to every word or prescription, I am grateful for every view presented in this report, including the concurrence with the main report as well as additional views and dissent. The dedication of our Task Force members to enhancing the debate on this important matter of public policy is the cornerstone to a better framework.
The Task Force benefited greatly from the counsel and input provided by a group of reviewers with broad academic, economic, and energy expertise. These individuals reviewed drafts of the report at various stages and participated in the Task Force meetings. Throughout the period of their supportive collaboration, the Task Force benefited from their keen observations, and their insights greatly enhanced the final report. Additionally, the Task Force recognizes the contributions of those members of the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy and the Council on Foreign Relations staff acting as observers for the Task Force.
I want to thank Sarah Miller, Vice President of the Energy Intelligence Group, for her invaluable editing contribution to this project. Also, I extend my deep gratitude to the staff that made this project run so well, including Col. James E. Sikes Jr., U.S. Army, the project coordinator and military fellow for 200001 who worked closely with me; research associate Sarah Saghir of the Council on Foreign Relations; and my invaluable partner, Jason Lyons, the Baker Institute Energy Forum program assistant without whom it would not have been possible to complete this project in a timely fashion. Other staff members of the Baker Institute and Council on Foreign Relations also provided invaluable support, including the technical advisor at the Council, Irina Faskianos, who is the National Program Deputy Director; W.O. King Jr., Baker Institute Administrator; Jay Guerrero, Baker Institute events coordinator; Calvin Avery, technical advisor; and other Baker Institute technical staff, Katie Hamilton, and Suzanne Stroud. I would also like to thank my research interns Matthew Chen and Rachel Krause. I extend a special thanks to Falah Aljibury for his astute observations about the Middle East and his always sympathetic ear. Finally, and most importantly, to my husband and three great children, Jordan, Rebecca, and Daniel, for the personal sacrifices made in the hopes of a better U.S. energy policy and safer environment.
The Task Force was made possible through the generous support of Khalid Al-Turki,
a member of the Council's International Advisory Board, and the Arthur Ross
Foundation.
The Task Force reflected a productive institutional collaboration between the
James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy and the Council on Foreign Relations.
I want to express my special appreciation to Ambassador Edward Djerejian, Director
of the Baker Institute, for his mentoring, wise guidance, and insights, and
to Dr. Ric Stoll, associate director for Academic Affairs at the Baker Institute,
whose astute advice and counsel has kept me on track for this and many other
equally challenging projects. I also owe a debt of gratitude to the faculty
of Rice University who have taken me in and taught me the art form of academic
discourse, and to Joe Barnes and Robert Manning for their excellent counsel
in matters of policy formation and writing. At the Council in New York, I am
grateful to Les Gelb, the Councils President, for his support and astute
comments that helped us develop a clear and effective draft; Mike Peters, Senior
Vice President, for his general assistance in resourcing the Task Force; Vice
President Janice Murray; Director of Publishing Patricia Dorff; and Communications
Director April Palmerlee.
This final report reflects an extraordinary amount of work by a broad range
of experts who took the time to participate in this important endeavor. They
responded in detail to several drafts, improving the structure, providing understanding
on regional issues, providing information on federal and state regulatory policies,
expanding the horizon of the members on the impact of globalization on energy
issues, and filling in the gaps while suggesting new approaches to challenging
problems. Without the hard work and collaboration of the Task Force members
this project would not have been possible.
Amy Myers Jaffe
Project Director
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: THE CHALLENGE
For many decades the United States has not had a comprehensive energy policy. Now, the consequences of this complacency have revealed themselves in California. Now, there could be more California-like situations in Americas future. President George W. Bush and his administration need to tell these agonizing truths to the American people and lay the basis for a comprehensive, long-term U.S. energy security policy.
That Americans face long-term situations such as frequent sporadic shortages of energy, energy price volatility, and higher energy prices is not the fault of President Bush. The failure to fashion a workable energy policy rests at the feet of both Democrats and Republicans. Both major political parties allowed energy policy to drift despite its centrality to Americas domestic economy and to national security. Energy policy was permitted to drift even though oil price spikes preceded virtually every American recession since the late 1940s. The American people must know about this situation and be told as well that there are no easy or quick solutions to todays energy problems. The president has to begin educating the public about this reality and start building a broad base of popular support for the hard policy choices ahead.
This executive summary and the full report address the following questions. What are the potential effects of the critical energy situation for the United States? How did this critical energy situation arise? What are the U.S. policy options to deal with the energy situation? What should the United States do now?
What are the potential effects of the critical energy situation for the United
States?
As the 21st century opens, the energy sector is in critical condition. A crisis
could erupt at any time from any number of factors and would inevitably affect
every country in todays globalized world. While the origins of a crisis
are hard to pinpoint, it is clear that energy disruptions could have a potentially
enormous impact on the U.S. and the world economy, and would affect U.S. national
security and foreign policy in dramatic ways.
An accident on the Alaska pipeline that brings the bulk of North Slope crude oil to market would have the same impact as a revolution cutting off supplies from a major Middle East oil producer. An attack on the California electric power grid could cripple that states economy for years, affecting all of the economies of the Pacific Basin. A revolution in Indonesia would paralyze the liquefied natural gas (LNG) import-dependent economies of South Korea and Japan, affecting domestic politics and all of their trading partners. While oil is still readily available on international markets, prices have doubled from the levels that helped spur rapid economic growth through much of the 1990s. And with spare capacity scarce and Middle East tensions high, chances are greater than at any point in the last two decades of an oil supply disruption that would even more severely test the nations security and prosperity. The situation is, by analogy, like traveling in a car with broken shock absorbers at very high speeds such as 90 miles an hour. As long as the paving on the highway is perfectly smooth, no injury to the driver will result from the poor decision of not spending the money to fix the car. But if the car confronts a large bump or pothole, the injury to the driver could be quite severe regardless of whether he was wearing a seatbelt.
An energy crisis need not arise abruptly. One can emerge through slower contagions. Electricity outages already have our most populous state in a vice and are threatening to spread from California to other parts of the country. Natural gas is available to heat homes and run power plants in some parts of the United States only because prices softwared over the winter to many times previous historic peaks. Gas markets dealt successfully with a supply shortage, but only at the cost of driving a few lower priority industrial users to close plants and lay off workers, and many to desert gas for fuels that were more polluting. If economic growth continues, price spikes and supply shortages could become widespread recurring events challenging expectations of free energy and making the United States appear more similar to a poor developing country.
How did this critical energy situation arise?
How the United States and indeed the rest of the world got into this difficulty
is a long and complicated story. The situation did not develop overnight. But
one of the fundamental reasons it could develop is unambiguous. The United States
has not had a comprehensive, integrated strategic energy policy for decades.
Instead, many factors were allowed to converge to contribute to todays
critical energy situation. Infrastructure constraints, inadequate infrastructure
development, rapid global economic expansion, the lack of spare capacity and
the changes in inventory dynamics, a lack of trained energy sector workers,
and the unintended side effects of energy market deregulation and market liberalization
all contributed to the critical energy situation.
The reasons for the energy challenge have nothing to do with the global hydrocarbon
resource base, which is still enormous, and everything to do with infrastructure
constraints that can and must be addressed as a matter of the highest priority
at the highest level of government. In the United States, years of rapid economic
expansion coincided with tightening restrictions on building new facilities
and capital flight from smokestack to high-tech industries that discouraged
investment in conventional energy sources. The result was sudden, severe strains
at critical links in the energy supply chain. Now, acute shortages are evident
in electric power generation and transmission capacity. Natural gas production
was not adequate last year to replenish inventories during low demand seasons,
leading to this year's soaring prices. Oil refineries are barely able to produce
enough of the cleaner fuels that are increasingly in demand, refined product
imports are soaring, and isolated but politically troublesome shortages have
already occurred in both gas and heating oil. Oil and gas pipelines are operating
at so close to capacity that unexpected outages can quickly lead to price spikes
and even regional physical shortages, as witnessed with heating oil in parts
of New England last winter. And the industry faces critical shortages of trained
personnel, as well as of the capital equipment required to overcome these constraints.
At the same time, to bolster profitability and share prices, industry has adopted
strict "just-in-time inventory" policies that further weaken the safety
net.
Internationally, too, rapid economic growth during the past decade has stretched
to the limit world capacity to produce oil and natural gas. Falling real prices
for oil over much of the last two decades gave the few producing nations with
the bulk of the world's reserves little incentive to invest in new infrastructure
as the capacity cushion left from the 1970s gradually disappeared. Meanwhile,
across much of the developing world, energy infrastructure is being severely
tested by the expanding material demands of a growing middle class, especially
in the high-growth, high-population economies of Asia. As demand growth collided
with supply and capacity limits at the end of the last century, prices rose
across the energy spectrum, at home and abroad.
Since the 1970s, governments around the globe have, to varying degrees, retreated
from heavy regulation of national energy sectors. Market forces were freed to
stimulate investment and allocate resources. And up to a point, the strategy
worked. In the United States, as elsewhere, deregulation did bring initially
the expected lower energy prices in most cases. But market liberalization brought
some less desirable consequences, as well. For all their advantages, deregulation
and reliance on consumer preferences failed to provide incentives either to
build surplus infrastructure capacity or hold the inventories of fuel needed
to smooth out market dislocations. Capacity cushions that had built up earlier
gradually eroded. Shortages that have been years in the making seem to be springing
up overnight. As a result, todays situation arose by stealth, as years
of rapid growth crashed into the physical supply barricades that were erected
by decades of under investment in energy infrastructure.
What are the U.S. policy options to deal with the energy situation?
There are no easy overnight solutions. The United States faces three policy
paths to deal with the energy problem. One option is to continue the easy approach
of "muddling through" with marginal Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR)
management and complete free market solutions. A second option is to take a
near-term, narrow approach by expanding supply to ensure cheap energy while
enduring conflict with environmental and consumer groups and others. Finally,
the United States could develop a comprehensive and balanced energy security
policy with near-term actions and long-term initiatives addressing both the
supply side and demand side including diversification of energy supply resources,
which would enable the United States to escape from a pattern of recurring energy
crises.
The nation, like the international economy on which it depends for prosperity,
confronts a deep-seated energy problem that demands attention at the highest
level of government and industry, if it is not to act as a clamp on sustained
and sustainable economic growthin the United States and across the world.
Long-term, dedicated programs are required and explicit tradeoffs might well
be needed between energy objectives and other areas of public concern, including
economic growth, the state of the human habitat, and certain foreign policy
objectives, if these problems are to be overcome. Long-term problems require
long-term solutions and may literally require a higher price of energy goods
if the right supply and demand responses are to emerge.
Supply-side responses alone will not suffice. To be effective and politically
acceptable, solutions must also focus on demand-side efficiency and must address
the environmental and foreign policy concerns that frame so much of the American
public's attitude toward energy development and use. Indeed, if quick fixes
on the supply side alone brought prices back down in the absence of effective
efforts to promote energy efficiency, they might actually prolong the problem
the United States now faces in the energy arena, by bringing even greater reliance
on imports.
As it is, national solutions alone cannot work. Politicians still speak of U.S. energy independence, while the United States is importing more than half of its oil supplies and may soon for the first time become reliant on sources outside North America for substantial amounts of natural gas. More flexible environmental regulation and opening of more federal lands to drilling might slow but cannot stop this process. Dependence is so incredibly large, and growing so inexorably, that national autonomy is simply not a viable goal. In the global economy, it may not even be a desirable one.
What should the United States do now?
The United States must stake out new paths as it adjusts to economic interdependence
in energy. Alliances, effective diplomacy, freer trade, and innovative multilateral
trade and investment frameworks will all be tools for securing reliable energy
supplies in the 21st century. Traditional policies and long-standing institutional
approaches, developed mainly in the 1970s, are inadequate to the challenge.
Much has changed in the last 30 years, yet institutions such as the International
Energy Agency (IEA) have done little to revamp their outmoded missions, memberships,
and mechanisms.
The energy problems we face today are complex, and our response to them must range from a review of our domestic environmental, tax, and regulatory structures to a reassessment of the role of energy in American foreign policy. This uncomfortable truth is largely absent in todays public debate, which is all too often marked by simplistic analysis and debilitating accusation. We need not to apportion blame but to seek workable, integrated solutions that balance energy priorities with economic, environmental, and national security objectives.
Such a strategy will require difficult tradeoffs, in both domestic and foreign policy. But there is no alternative. And there is no time to waste. The problems facing the energy sector will take at least three to five years to solve. Some will take longer. Short-term measures can alleviate immediate bottlenecks or buttress emergency preparedness, but it takes years to license and build power plants, lay new pipelines, expand refineries, train skilled workers and engineers, and develop new oil and gas fieldsmuch less negotiate new international agreements and understandings. A successful U.S. energy policy must encompass not only quick fixes, but also long-term initiatives that produce results well into the future.
Until the emerging constraints are overcome, government will need to increase its vigilance and be prepared to deal with sudden supply disruptions. The consequences of inaction could be grave. Not only is economic growth at risk. But high prices and sporadic dislocations threaten public acceptance of market solutions and foster support for a return to regulation. The government will need to work hard to ward off political pressures, both at home and abroad, that could undermine the huge gains that have been made and to assure that markets become more efficient. Disadvantaged segments of the population need to be convinced that the right course of action is not a new form of government regulation.
Delay will simply raise the costs. As each year passes, the investment required to overcome supply bottlenecks grows. The president needs to act now to reassess the nations long-term objectives in this most important area of policy, with an eye to developing a comprehensive approach that can assure economic prosperity and international security for future generations.
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INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
Recent energy price spikes, electricity outages in California, localized oil product and natural gas shortages, and extreme energy price volatility have ushered in a new era of energy scarcity. The process of managing and working off surplus capacities that marked the past two decades is complete. Supply constraints have emerged across the energy spectrum, not only in the United States but around the world, presenting fundamental obstacles to continued economic growth and prosperity. The challenge of the new era is marshaling capital to develop adequate resources and infrastructure to meet rising demand for energy, in a manner that is consistent with environmental goals.
The cause of these energy infrastructure constraints is evident: persistent under investment juxtaposed with strong economic and oil-demand growth. Their solution will require a complex set of well-coordinated domestic and international efforts. The fact that oils input into Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has been nearly cut in half during the last fifty years does not mean that output can expand with no increase in energy. Nor does it break the link evident in the fact that virtually every U.S. recession since the late 1940s has been preceded by sharp rise in the price of oil. (See Appendix A.) The economic reversal now looming will, if it develops into a full-fledged recession, be no exception.
The United States faces a steep decline rate in its domestic oil fields and, to some extent, in its natural gas fields. Proven oil reserves have declined from about 26 billion barrels in 1990 to 20 billion today. Proven gas reserves had slipped to 164 trillion cubic feet in January 2000, from 177.6 trillion cubic feet a decade ago. However, this does not mean that ultimate resource levels were a major factor in the tightening of U.S. energy markets. The United States managed to produce 20 billion barrels during the decade in which the proven reserve levels slipped by 6 billion barrels, and it still has more proven oil in the lower forty-eight states today than it did in 1930, indicating a still substantial replacement rate. Even more important for the future, estimates of the amount of undiscovered oil outside the United States are still rising, according to the U.S. Geological Survey, while the global search for natural gas has barely begun. The world will not run short of hydrocarbons in the foreseeable future.
The problem is one of developing these and other fuels and getting them to the consumers who need them. U.S. investment aimed at accomplishing this failed to keep pace with rising demand in part because energy industry profits were dismal through much of the 1990s, hitting bottom during the oil price collapse at the decade's end. The situation was exacerbated because low returns coincided with tightening environmental restrictions and an uneven regulatory process, especially in the electricity sector. No new oil refineries are likely to be built in the United States, given the high costs of environmental compliance and historically low returns on investment. Meanwhile, U.S. product imports shot up by nearly 20 percent last year from 1999, to 2.25 million barrels a day, and appear to be growing even more rapidly this year.
Chronically low prices, adverse fiscal regulations, inter-state disputes about pipeline rights of way, and restrictions on land access have all undermined growth in natural gas availabilityat the same time that its clean burn has encouraged wider use of gas to heat buildings and fuel power plants and industry. In both 1998 and 1999, investment hit bottom amid plunging oil prices, and extremely mild winter weather masked both the rapid growth in underlying demand for natural gas and the erosion of spare "deliverability." All these events prevented the run-up in prices that might have sparked investment earlier. Then, in 2000 and early 2001, extreme weathera hot summer and a cold start to the wintersuddenly inflated the previously hidden underlying growth in gas demand. Lags in the supply system prevented a rapid response, leading to record low inventories and soaring prices. Some relief may now be on the way, given rising rig counts and increased imports from Canada, accompanied by fuel switching and closure of uneconomic industrial capacity. Yet questions remain as to how robust the domestic supply response will be, given high depletion rates in North America and a shortage of rigs and trained personnel.
The story in the power sector is similar. No new nuclear plants have been ordered in the United States in more than twenty years. For the last decade, well over 90 percent of all new power plants ordered have been gas-fired. In some states, such as California, environmental concerns raised the bar to impractical levels even for construction of conventionally fueled electric power stations. High gas prices, an unusually cold winter, an explosion at a major natural gas pipeline last August, maintenance closures at nuclear power plants, and a drop in hydroelectric power converged with incomplete deregulation to produce devastating shortages in the California power grid. The resulting public outcry has called into question the benefits of electricity deregulation, despite relatively successful programs in other parts of the United States. Spare generation capacity also looks to be in short supply in the New York State region, where brownouts could emerge in the summer of 2001 if hot temperatures inflate demand for air conditioning.
Other parts of the U.S. energy infrastructure are afflicted as well. Permits and rights of way are nearly impossible to obtain for new pipelines, especially oil lines, and tanker shortages threaten to occur again partly because of environmental regulations.
The 199899 downturn in U.S. oil and gas investment came against the backdrop of years of reduced oil-field development spending by state-owned oil companies in Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) countries. Internal political pressures impelled governments as diverse as those of Saudi Arabia and Venezuela to dedicate more of their oil revenue to social programs. This converged with an unexpectedly robust world economy in the late 1990s to virtually wipe out excess capacity. That, in turn, sparked anew debates about the depletion of conventional hydrocarbons in a way that sometimes obscured the true nature of the problem.
The enormous swings in energy prices over the last four years have affected different parts of the world differently. But it has been good for no one. In 1998, most of the world benefited as stunningly low crude oil prices filtered through consuming economies. Yet a handful of oil exporting countries faced a fall of up to 50 percent in their national incomes within a yearan experience that had severe political and economic repercussions. Governments changed in Algeria, Brunei, Indonesia, Nigeria, and Venezuela, as loss of income exacerbated other difficulties. The price collapse threatened to destabilize societies as diverse as Russia and Indonesia. The following year, non-OPEC producers Mexico, Norway, and Oman joined with OPEC to remedy the situation by cutting production, thus pushing the burden back onto the rest of the worldbut not before resentment had built up against the industrialized nations for turning a blind eye when prices fell so low. Industrialized countries, developing-country energy importers, and energy exporting countries have common concerns about severe price volatility and its impact on the domestic and international "political economy." The challenge now is how to turn this common perception into effective joint action.
In the past, energy crises have appeared simply to fade away over time. Sometimes, as in the late 1970s and early 1980s, recession solved the problem by radically reducing global energy demand. At other times, technological improvements reduced costs and created new efficiencies on both the supply and demand sides, fostering complacency among policymakers. Government attention to energy issues has tended to fade as prices fall. That complacency could be justified so long as surplus capacities existed. But in a world of energy capacity constraint, complacency could shackle the U.S. economy for years to come. If it does not respond strategically to the current energy circumstances, the United States risks perpetuating the unacceptable leverage of adversaries and leaving its economy vulnerable to volatile energy prices.
The time has come for a fresh strategic assessment of U.S. energy policyone that intelligently balances potentially conflicting objectives of energy supply promotion, sustainable economic growth, environmental protection, and national security. A comprehensive effort is required that will integrate energy with other policy goals, while developing new sources of supply and finding ways to prune expected demand growth in order to assure that clean and adequate energy supplies will be available. This Task Force offers a unique perspective on the problems at hand and the difficult choices that will be required to deal with them effectively.
The Past Two Decades: A Review of Policy
Through the 1980s and 1990s, the centerpiece of U.S. energy policy has been
to foster, at home and abroad, deregulated markets that efficiently allocate
capital, provide a maximum of consumer choice, and foster low prices through
competition. U.S. policy also favored diversity of supply, both geographically
and in terms of energy sources. Domestically, infrastructure needs have been
left to market forces. This hands-off policy has generally led to lower real
energy costs. But this, in turn, has brought a dramatic slowdown in efficiency
gains and a potentially dangerous complacency about energy supplies, energy
efficiency, demand management, and conservation.
Tax policy was not utilizedas it was in Europe and Japanto discourage use of hydrocarbons or to promote environmentally friendly fuels. Transportation's share of petroleum use had risen to 66 percent by 1995 from 52 percent in 1970, and could hit 70 percent by 2010 if new technologies are not put in place. Improvements in automobile mileage standards could dramatically influence these growth rates in U.S. consumption, while keeping the automotive industry competitive.
At the same time as it was ignoring demand management, U.S. policy frequently allowed energy supply goals to take a back seat to environmental considerations when it came to land management, emissions, and other policy requirements. Even in foreign policy, where the United States has frequently stated its desire to see new acreage opened to oil and gas exploration, it has not backed up its words with active support of these goals. On the contrary, it has frequently used energy sanctions as an instrument of foreign policy, blocking targeted countries from trade or investment, while making energy goals secondary to other foreign policy objectives.
For the most part, U.S. international oil policy has relied on maintenance of free access to Middle East Gulf oil and free access for Gulf exports to world markets. The United States has forged a special relationship with certain key Middle East exporters, which had an expressed interest in stable oil prices and, we assumed, would adjust their oil output to keep prices at levels that would neither discourage global economic growth nor fuel inflation. Taking this dependence a step further, the U.S. government has operated under the assumption that the national oil companies of these countries would make the investments needed to maintain enough surplus capacity to form a cushion against disruptions elsewhere. For several years, these assumptions appeared justified.
But recently, things have changed. These Gulf allies are finding their domestic
and foreign policy interests increasingly at odds with U.S. strategic considerations,
especially as Arab-Israeli tensions flare. They have become less inclined to
lower oil prices in exchange for security of markets, and evidence suggests
that investment is not being made in a timely enough manner to increase production
capacity in line with growing global needs. A trend toward anti-Americanism
could affect regional leaders ability to cooperate with the United States
in the energy area.
The resulting tight markets have increased U.S. and global vulnerability to
disruption and provided adversaries undue potential influence over the price
of oil. Iraq has become a key "swing" producer, posing a difficult
situation for the U.S. government.
Another new element is adding to vulnerability: Deregulation has encouraged U.S. and other energy companies to focus more single-mindedly on maximizing their competitive positions. One tool has been to slash inventoriescushions that are expensive but are needed to smooth out the functioning of markets during temporary dislocations.
How Did Energy Markets Suddenly Become So Constrained?
By the end of the 1970s, a consensus had emerged that the world economy had
entered a "permanent" period of tightness in energy supplies. But
actually, the high prices that followed the 1973 and 1979 oil crises attracted
increased investment in energy resources and energy efficiency. Oil use dropped
initially in absolute terms, especially in the power sector, where robust growth
of nuclear power and increased reliance on coal replaced it. At the same time,
the oil shocks and other factors contributed to a slowdown in some major industrialized
economies, further reinforcing the substantial drop in oil use. Higher prices
also encouraged investment in conventional and non-conventional fuels, especially
outside of OPEC, as well as in energy efficiency. As a result, for most of the
late 1980s and early 1990s, real oil and natural gas prices returned to historically
"normal" and more moderate levels.
New sources of oil supply outside of OPEC countries contributed to this price slide, as did increases in production from Iraq and Iran, whose capacities had earlier been constrained by war. Resource nationalism began to ebb, as deregulation and liberalization of markets seemed to provide energy consumers near-unlimited resources at low prices, whether in the form of oil, electricity, or natural gas. Surplus capacities along the entire energy chainaccumulated in the days of government-subsidized industry and falling demandmeant that there could be an expansion of energy use without significantly affecting underlying costs. These surpluses were found in all aspects of the energy industry, including refineries, tankers and pipelines, offshore and land rigs, other oil-field equipment, and power-generating capacity.
Concern about the adverse environmental impacts of higher energy use prompted public authorities throughout the industrial world to tighten regulations. These measures could be implemented without fear of price consequences because energy supplies were ample. New technologies were expected to continue reducing the costs of energy production, while at the same time creating adequate supplies to meet demand. Market deregulation and the emergence of futures markets reinforced the view that energy supplies would always be ample, while giving energy producers new financial instruments with which to mitigate price risks.
The persistence of surplus capacities also allowed policymakers to place a greater emphasis on non-energy goals than on timely resource development, without fear of economic consequences. Environmental restrictions on oil products were tightened, elaborate permit procedures for new infrastructure were created, and importantly, economic sanctions were imposed on key oil-producing countries for an array of foreign policy reasons. The U.S. government even moved 180 degrees away from its policy of the 1970s, and began to adopt secondary boycotts of certain oil-producing countries in an effort to combat terrorism. Sanctions policy was buttressed by the belief in many U.S. circles that economic warfare was partially responsible for the collapse of the Soviet Union.
The August 1990 Iraqi invasion of Kuwait witnessed a major test of global energy security. That test was readily met, creating a deeper sense of complacency among oil-consuming nations. With the end of the Cold War, U.S. leadership was able to forge an international coalition to repel Iraq. Although oil-supply security was a major issue cementing the coalition, it could be assigned a back seat to issues of international order because of three critical factors:
Surplus Capacity: The United Nations (U.N.) embargo on Iraqi and Kuwaiti oil was made possible by the existence of extensive surplus production capacity elsewhere. In August, some 5 million barrels a day of production was taken off the market through the embargo. By December, all of the lost production was made up through increases from Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, Abu Dhabi, and other OPEC nations, which had been carrying vast spare capacity and were willing to assist the coalition against Iraq. Previous surpluses also had cushioned the market with unusually high commercial stocks of crude oil and products.
Strategic Reserves: The more than 1 billion barrels of strategic petroleum reserves in International Energy Agency (IEA)-member countries loomed over the market, depriving OPEC or other oil producers of market power. It also restrained speculators, who would lose financially if those reserves were released. In the case of the Gulf War, the IEA system fulfilled its original mission to serve as a deterrent to market manipulation by adversaries during a crisis. Its very existence served to damp prices under the new market conditions.
Market Mechanisms: The deregulation of petroleum and refined product markets
in the 1980s and the growth of futures and forward markets provided rapid and
effective adjustment mechanisms. These developments facilitated refiners
orderly transition from Kuwaiti and Iraqi supplies to replacement oil from Saudi
Arabia, Venezuela, and Abu Dhabi, whether those refiners were in East Asia,
Europe, or the Western Hemisphere.
What Has Changed?
Perhaps the most significant difference between now and a decade ago is the
extraordinarily rapid erosion of spare capacities at critical segments of energy
chains. Today, shortfalls appear to be endemic. Among the most extraordinary
of these losses in spare capacity is in the oil arena. In 1985, when oil prices
collapsed, OPEC was estimated to have some 15 million barrels a day of shut-in
production capacity, equal to perhaps 50 percent of its theoretical capacity
(Iran and Iraq were at war with one another at the time) and 25 percent of global
demand. By 1990, when Iraq invaded Kuwait, spare capacity globally was still
about 5- to 5.5-million b/d, which was the amount of oil taken off the market
by the U.N. embargo. That was about 20 percent of OPECs capacity at the
time and about 8 percent of global demand. This winter, before OPECs seasonal
cuts, spare capacity was a negligible 2 percent of global demand.
The surge in energy demand worldwide that combined with under investment to create these shortfalls has been stunning, especially in high-growth Asian economies. In the United States, oil demand has risen on average 1 percent-2 percent per year since the late 1980s. In recent years, the rate has picked up to at least 2 percent, reflecting not only strong economic performance but also the relative neglect of policies related to conservation and energy efficiency. U.S. energy efficiency as measured by the amount of energy used per constant dollar of Gross National Product (GNP) declined from 8,300 British thermal units (BTUs) per 1996 U.S. dollar thirty years ago to 4,600 BTUs in 1995. But it dropped only an additional 400 BTUs between 1995 and 1999, despite great technological advances in many sectors of the economy. The decline in petroleum used, measured in terms of thousands of BTUs per dollar of GDP, was even more radical in the twenty-five years to 1995, from $15.15 to $8.43, reflecting structural shifts in the economy and improvements in energy efficiency. However, as energy costs fell starting in the mid-1980s, promotion of energy efficiency slowed dramatically.
Although appliances have become increasingly energy-efficient, energy consumption
patterns have loosened up. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the U.S. automobile
sector, with the growth in demand for light trucks (pickups, sport utility vehicles
[SUVs] and minivans) that burn more gasoline than smaller vehicles. The transportation
sector accounts for an increasing share of petroleum use in the United States,
rising from 52 percent in 1970 to 66 percent in 1995. This is expected to increase
to 70 percent by 2010 unless new technologies are put in place. The United States
is not unique in displaying this trend. Assuming no major breakthroughs in automotive
technology, the IEA projects that 59 percent of the 41-million b/d increase
in worldwide oil demand expected from 1995 to 2020 will come from the transport
sector.
Efficiency has increased in the transportation sector, where average miles per
gallon (mpg) for standard automobiles have increased from 15.1 in 1983 to about
21.5 in 1999. However, the potential to do much more is an attainable option.
The average fuel economy of light trucks on the road is only 17.4 mpg. Ford
and General Motors have vowed to improve fuel economy for certain SUVs by 25
percent by 2005, but across-the-board implementation of higher mileage standards
for light trucks could substantially lower oil use in the United States.
SUVs account for 25 percent of the category of "Light Trucks," up from 13.2 percent of all light trucks in 1992, yielding an average annual growth rate of 14 percent. The average annual growth rate for the entire "Light Truck" category was 4.42 percent. If fuel efficiency of light trucks matched that of cars, U.S. fuel savings would equal about 910,000 b/d of crude oil. If the fuel efficiency of only SUVs matched that of cars, the fuel savings would be 225,000 b/d. Thats just one example of the result of disregard of demand measures, where demand management could well be the most efficient way to "develop" more oil supply in the United States.
By 2010, without government intervention, high-mileage "post combustion" automobiles such as the gas-electric and fuel-cell hybrids could make up as much as 1520 percent of new vehicles but would still only trim U.S. crude oil demand by 600,000 b/d, according to private studies. However, in the period between 201020, such technology could begin to make a significant contribution to curbing the growth in energy use. Several major car companies have announced plans to introduce new prototype hybrid cars by 200304.
Since 1973, the share of oil in the U.S. energy mix fell from 49.5 percent to 41 percent in 1999. But this trend could slow in the coming years if rising natural gas prices discourage gas substitution for oil. Already, fuel switching back to oil has resulted in a 500,000 to 600,000 b/d increase in oil use in the United States in early 2001, according to Department of Energy statistics.
The share of natural gas has risen from 18.2 percent in 1973 to 24 percent in 1999. Nuclear power is an indigenous source of energy, unique in having the capacity to provide enough energy to last hundreds of years without emitting greenhouse gases. Nuclear energy represents 22.9 percent of total U.S. electricity generation and is expected to fall as older plants are retired and as new construction is thwarted by social concerns and by regulatory issues as well as waste-disposal obstacles. No new plants have been constructed in the United States for two decades, and if the licenses of existing plants are not granted extensions, license expiration could lead to a 50 percent reduction in nuclear generation capacity by 2020. The United States choice of an open fuel cycle (i.e., once-through utilization of nuclear fuel followed by geological disposal) is plagued by spent-fuel isolation issues. The alternative closed fuel cycle advanced in France, Japan, and other countries (i.e., reprocessing of spent fuel to extract and recycle plutonium) is plagued by large accumulations of separated plutonium and unfavorable economics. The proliferation danger posed by separated plutonium led to a U.S. decision in the late 1970s to pursue the open fuel cycle.
Also in the 1970s and early 1980s, companies began investing in renewable technologies, but as oil prices began to fall in the mid-1980s and some investors in renewable projects failed to turn a profit, this trend also slowed. Renewable energy sources, including biomass, solar, wind, and hydro, now represent less than 10 percent of total U.S. energy use. Technological advances that have led to cost reductions in some fuels such as solar and wind represent an area for expanded attention. But hydro is the dominant renewable resource and has minimal expansion potential in the United States.
Environmental factors have also led to a decrease in the share of coal in the U.S. energy mix from 30 percent in 1973 to 23 percent currently, despite the fact that the United States has among the largest coal deposits in the world. Still, more than 50 percent of all electricity generated in the United States is fueled by coal. Internationally, coal use is expected to double in the next fifteen years. Despite governmental and industry efforts to foster clean coal technologies, coals high carbon base has made it a subject of attack by environmental concerns. But progress has been made and can continue to be made in reducing coal emissions.
Influence of Environmental Restrictions
Besides influencing the mix of fuels used in the United States, environmental factors have also created market inefficiencies that have exacerbated the underlying tightening of energy infrastructure. Federal and state environmental regulations have created at various times anomalies in local and regional supplies. Refiners and distributors have lost much of the flexibility they used to have to move gasoline supplies around the country to keep local and regional supply in balance. Thirty years ago, U.S. refineries made gasoline, diesel, and heating oil to national standards. In recent years, petroleum companies have been required under environmental restrictions to formulate at least seven different varieties of cleaner burning fuels for national or wide-scale distribution. Nationwide, the U.S. market uses more than fifty different types of motor gasoline, comprising different regional and local environmental requirements, octane levels, and seasonal fuel requirements. This "Market Balkanization" as labeled by the Petroleum Industry Research Foundation, Inc. (PIRINC) has distorted markets, creating artificial supply problems as well as artificial barriers to free trade in products. The result is that local, pocketed markets with their own individual quality requirements have become extremely vulnerable to disruption and localized price spikes, raising the costs to consumers of meeting environmental goals.
The problem of Balkanization is easy to describe at a theoretical level. Uncoordinated state regulations require refiners to manufacture an increasingly larger number of types of specific products and to distribute and store these products in or close to final end-user markets in the states that mandate particular specifications that differ from one another and from general norms. With the refinery system of the United Statesindeed of all of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countriesconstrained in terms of their ability to meet both new national and multinational specifications mandated by environmental authorities, the addition of particular state specifications stretches the physical refining and distribution system beyond its limits. The result is supply shortage and high price volatility affecting consumers in specific locations. The shortages that emerged two years ago appear inevitably bound to worsen in the decade ahead.
Boutique fuels problems have become especially acute in the gasoline and, to some extent, the distillate markets, which have become highly segmented. For gasoline, problems in the Middle West and California in 2000 are likely to be repeated this year and indefinitely into the future unless efforts are made to smooth out market segmentation. Last year, California and the Chicago markets became extremely sensitive to disruptions in local supplies. In 2000, as PIRINC has shown, a 23 percenti.e., very smallsupply shortfall in the Middle West region of the United States helped create sharp increases in prices of reformulated gasoline in the region. As a result, average prices there, as has recently been the case in California, rose by up to 50 cents a gallon versus better-supplied markets (e.g., the U.S. Gulf Coast region).
The distillate situation last year in the Northeast United States displayed similar bottlenecks. Differentials between New England and U.S. Gulf Coast distillate prices widened significantlymore than 12 cents a gallon both in December and January. The differentials reflected differences in inventories being held in the regions. The newly created Northeast Heating Oil Reserve partially helped to solve the problem. But it took much longer than it might have to reduce these market differentials largely because heating oil marketers were forced to use U.S.-flagged tankers to move distillate from the U.S. Gulf Coast to New England. Meanwhile, distillate was being exported from the Gulf Coast to Latin America and Europe, where price differentials were high enough to make such trade profitable.
U.S. Northeast and Atlantic Coast markets are "net importers" of product. The imports come from abroad (mostly Europe and Latin America), and from the U.S. Gulf Coast (via pipelinemostly the Colonial lineand via tankers). The U.S.-flagged ("Jones Act") tanker fleet has been in long-term decline. Meanwhile, ever since President Ronald Reagan permitted the export of products, the Atlantic Coast and Northeast regions have had to compete with foreign markets for U.S.-produced products. Increasingly, there have been problems encountered in moving both distillate and gasoline into the Atlantic Coast market. When the pipeline is fully utilized and when imports are inadequate, there is a potential need to waive the Jones Act requirements on the U.S. product tanker fleet to enable non-U.S. flagged vessels to carry cargoes between U.S. ports. While Jones Act waivers are available, they are rarely granted. Streamlining procedures for issuing waivers to the Jones Act would facilitate the elimination of this market anomaly and free up supply within the U.S. market during severe logistics crises.
The failure to coordinate environmental policy in a manner consistent with energy supply goals is making itself felt in the pocketbook of the American consumer. Lack of coherent policy has led to lower attention to the kinds of demand-management programs and diversification strategies that will be needed to meet the dual challenges of environmental enhancement and energy security, including fighting global warming and expanding energy demand. Continued over-reliance on oilwith relative neglect of efficiencyhas left the United States and other importing countries more vulnerable to disruptions in supply. With limited spare capacity, a significant accident anywhere in the world, including, for example, along Alaskas pipeline infrastructure due to an earthquake, would affect global conditions. Accidents in two or more places would be even worse. It is in this context of limited surplus capacity that concern is raised about the resources of the Middle East. Gulf crude oil comprises about 25 percent of world supply today. Many analysts project it could increase to more than 3040 percent over the coming decade. If political factors were to block the development of new oil fields in the Middle East, the ramifications for world oil markets could be quite severe unless measures are taken immediately to diversify to other energy fuels.
International Issues
U.S. unilateral sanctions as well as multilateral sanctions against oil-producing countries have discouraged oil resource investment in a number of key oil provinces, including Iraq, Iran, and Libya. U.S. sanctions policy has constrained capacity expansion to some extent in Iran and Libya, although the unilateral aspect of the U.S. action limited its impact. In the case of Iraq, the U.N. sanctions imposed as a result of the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait have had a severe effect on potential Iraqi production.
Sanctions role in constraining investment in several key OPEC countries has aggravated the global problem of spare production capacity, which is now less diversified among a number of large producers than was the case twenty years ago. The consequent lack of competition has contributed to high prices. Most of todays spare productive capacity is located in Saudi Arabia. And Saudi Arabias high, and growing, level of production and the lack of significant spare unutilized capacity outside the kingdom have spotlighted that countrys critical role in determining the state of current and future oil markets, in turn creating unique political pressures. Iran and Iraq accuse Saudi Arabia of seeking higher production rates to accommodate the economic interests of the United States, Japan, and Europe at the expense of the needs of local populations, creating internal pressures in the Arabian Gulf region against a moderate price stance. Bitter perceptions in the Arab world that the United States has not been evenhanded in brokering peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians have exacerbated these pressures on Saudi Arabia and other Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries and given political leverage to Iraqs Saddam Hussein to lobby for support among the Arab worlds populations.
Several key producing countries in these important areas remain closed to investment. Encouragement of open investment policies in these countries would greatly promote renewed competition among the largest oil producers and the advancement of oil supplies in the coming years. A reopening of these areas to foreign investment could make a critical difference in providing surplus supplies to markets in the coming decade.
Removal of bureaucratic, logistical, and political obstacles to investment in Russia could also play a major role in promoting supply outside the Middle East. The deterioration of the Russian oil industry has been a prominent feature of international oil markets in recent years. While Russia has the worlds eighth-largest oil reserves, the countrys political and economic problems have discouraged investment by both domestic and international oil companies. As a result, oil production in Russia has fallen to about 6 million b/d in 1999, down from 12.5 million b/d in the late 1980s. Both Russia and the Caspian Basin countries show promise as key future suppliers of hydrocarbons. In fact these two regions could hold as much as 27 percent of the worlds undiscovered oil resources. But, bureaucratic, logistical, and political obstacles remain a hindrance to both the timely development of currently exploitable reserves and new discoveries.
Oil resource development in Latin America, which offers great strategic benefits to the United States, has also slowed in the past year or two as sharp declines in oil fields in Venezuela and Colombia have not been offset by new oil fields coming online. Political uncertainties in both countries are thwarting foreign investment, and state revenues are tight, discouraging spending in oil and natural gas fields by government-owned oil monopolies.
But it would be a mistake for the United States to continue to rely largely on development of key oil resources in the Middle East and Russia as the linchpin of energy policy. Instead, U.S. energy policy must also focus on reversing the decline in interest in energy efficiency and conservation at home. The experience of the 1970s has shown that energy security and energy price competition is enhanced by diversity of suppliers and of fuel choices. The economies of other countries such as Japan and Germany are better shielded from oil price changes than is the U.S. economy because of the greater emphasis on efficiency and conservation.
Unfortunately, there is no new technology available on the immediate horizon that could be commercialized for as widespread use as oil and gas in the next ten years. Promotion of renewable fuels (e.g., bio-fuels) sounds attractive and should be pursued. But even if renewable fuels use were to be doubled over the next ten years as a result of a sizable commitment to these more environmentally friendly fuels, they would still only represent a low share of both electricity and total U.S. energy use. Nuclear energy could be a clean, ample alternative for electricity but problems of waste fuels, safety, and public confidence would have to be overcome.
Similarly, industry and other groups are lobbying for the opening of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to foster energy development. This is an important issue for reasons seldom raised in current debates. Alaska oil production has entered a period of decline, which can be reversed only by opening up the ANWR. Such an opening could lead to the development of resources that could make a significant contribution to domestic supply for decades and would also bolster domestic industry and the local and national economies. While the opening of the ANWR would not in and of itself solve U.S. oil concerns, especially those related to foreign dependence, added resources would undoubtedly be significant. Yet, such a development program could take seven to ten years to implement (although industry optimists claim that a emergency effort could reduce the lag to three years) and would not free the United States from the cyclical energy supply dilemmas that keep recurring.
In sum there are no quick fix solutions to todays energy problems. Rather, a broad combination of measures is required that will stimulate investment, enhance access to new supplies of oil and gas, promote competition and eliminate political barriers to world energy markets, limit the increase in energy demand, and promote new, cleaner technologies.
Deregulation: Plusses and Minuses
Many industry representatives and specialists believe that market forces can eventually initiate many of these changes without government interference. They even argue that consumers can foster cleaner fuel preferences through the marketplace and market mechanisms. There is merit in these arguments in favor of market solutions. But energy sector deregulation and reliance on market solutions and consumer preferences can only go so far because they do not take into account critical "public goods" aspects of energy supply and environmental protection.
In the 1970s, virtually all governments in the industrial and developing worlds directly administered the prices of key energy components, both at the primary level (crude oil, natural gas) and at the consumer level (petroleum product prices, residential natural gas, and electric power). Governments were also involved in major purchase contracts for internationally traded energy commodities (oil and natural gas primarily), and often tied these contracts to other trade and national security issues (barter of oil for construction projects, soft loans, arms).
Today governments have largely retreated from the energy sector. There is a widespread global consensus that administered policies and regulations that fly in the face of market fundamentals are inefficient, impede smooth adjustment to rapidly changing times, and infuse energy issues with other political issues (in short, politicizing energy issues unnecessarily). Markets have been deregulated and liberalized; and government companies have been privatized. Wherever governments still own significant energy assets, the state-owned enterprises are generally run on commercial terms. Moreover, governmental monopolies in the energy area have been broken, and national preferential considerations have been reduced.
Generally speaking, liberalization has facilitated efficiency and smooth allocation of resources to users who most require these resources. But rapid deregulation of the oil, natural gas, and power sectors have also reduced the incentives for specific businesses to invest in large inventories or excess capacity that can help smooth markets during times of disruption or unexpected volatility in demand growth. Tightening environmental regulation for construction of new energy facilities has also discouraged investment in some locations. These changes have placed more pressure on how to achieve the public benefits of inventory and spare production and generation capacity without discouraging investment in energy resources. It has also changed the nature of the debate on strategic stockpiles and government-controlled assets.
The IEA has provided an important institutional mechanism for coordinating international preparations for such a disruption, and its members have instituted strategic stockpiles that have, in turn, served as a major deterrent against producer countries individually or collectively using their "oil weapon" to pressure or "blackmail" individual oil-importing countries. However, deregulation has brought some unintended consequences about strategic stockpiles. By and large, deregulation of energy markets has meant that the establishment of inventories and the determination of their size have been left by governments to the market to decide, except in the case of government-held emergency stores. But markets do not always send fully accurate signals. That is in part a result of lack of market transparency and the realities that with imperfect information market participants tend to take the short view.
More recently, the lagged interplay between supply and demand in several energy commodities this year has caused market disruptions. It is possible that for some of these commodities, the market may, over time, provide its own solution, through increased refinery runs, increased gas drilling/production, and greater stimulus for investment to increase capacity. But interventions may occur that hasten this process or ease constraints more quickly.
Inventories serve as a premier tool in preventing market failures and in managing supply dislocations. Spare petroleum or natural gas production and deliverability capacity or redundancy in power generation capacity are ultimately inventory and inventory management issues. Spare capacities reflect an inventory of available supply in case of market dislocation or unexpected disruption. Similarly, more conventional references to stores of natural gas or of petroleum products or of crude oil are also inventories. Energy markets are constantly challenged by unexpected eventsfrom severe weather to sudden technological changes that undermine forecasts of supply and demand. Without inventory or spare capacity, such events can create extreme price volatility, sometimes for short periods of time but also sometimes for extended periods of time. Moreover, severe price volatility can become self-generating by discouraging investment by industry players who cannot properly assess future market potential.
The unanticipated consequence of deregulation, industry consolidation and restructuring, and of environmental policies on inventories is now raising new challenges for policymakers. It is also redefining the debate on the appropriate role of government intervention in energy markets. Thats because of the political impact from supply shortfalls and price volatility on classes of consumers and on the general economy, when supplies are effectively auctioned to the highest bidder in times of shortage.
The Task Forces action program for implementing a coherent U.S. energy policy is framed in the context of the fundamentally changed circumstances in todays energy sector. For the two decades following the energy price spikes of the 1970s, the main opportunities and challenges for governments and consumers were based on the sometimes extraordinarily large surplus capacities that defined the energy system. These surplus capacities have now disappeared, or have been reduced to such low levels that there is only a limited cushion available to meet growth in demand or to buffer economies against disruptions. As demand moves against and away from capacity limits, the result is price volatility.
Over the past three years, the prices of most core energy sourceselectricity, natural gas, and oilhave been more volatile than at any time in recent history. At a global level, crude oil prices hit their highest and lowest levels since the price collapse of the mid-1980s between 1998 and 2000, with the exception of a brief price spike after Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990. In North America, natural gas prices this winter set all-time record highs, and may well do so again a year from now, while electricity prices have reached unprecedented peaks in California and other pockets of the United States. Other regions of the country are likely to suffer the same fate this summer.
Under these circumstances, history demonstrates that the main tasks of energy policy are the following:
To assure that markets operate efficiently so as to develop the infrastructure
necessary to meet growing requirements of demand;
To facilitate orderly growth in demand;
To ensure the well-being of the human habitat and ecosystem; and
To guarantee that mechanisms are in place for warding off and, if necessary, for managing disruptions to energy supply.
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FINDINGS
This report is motivated by the beliefshared by many energy specialiststhat pervasive shortages in the energy sector will not go away of their own accord, other than through a sharp economic downturn. Market solutions are fundamental to providing the kind of stable and predictable energy prices that are needed to sustain the economy and safeguard security over the long term, and they should be embraced. But market solutions go only so far, especially at a time when inventories of all sorts are so low as to result in price surges that harm consumers and cause political backlash. A more comprehensive strategic approach is needed.
Implementing this reinvigorated energy policy will take time. Quick fixes can alleviate supply bottlenecks or conserve energy use, but the energy sector is capital intensive and, with few noteworthy exceptions, involves projects that can unfold only within a three- to five-year horizon, or even one that is even longer.
Energy issues need to be brought before the public to counter some widespread misconceptions. There are no easy, overnight, and politically attractive solutions to the countrys or the worlds infrastructure and supply problems. There is no existing technology that can quickly replace oil in the crucial transportation sector. There is no place at home or abroad where enough oil or gas can be developed fast enough to moderate prices in the next six to twelve months. There is no cost-free way to allow unrestricted energy use and simultaneously safeguard the environment. But neither is the world running out of energy resources.
The Task Force acknowledges that energy policy starts at home. But any attempt to reframe U.S. energy policy must take into account the fact that the energy sector has become extremely interdependent internationally. The United States cannot achieve energy independence without the emergence of new technologies that are not yet on the horizon. Increasing domestic supplies will therefore not necessarily reduce U.S. vulnerability to disruptions to any substantial extent, and artificial ceilings or targets for imports will contribute little to security and could create unwanted distortions. An oil shortfall anywhere in the world will produce an equal price rise in every country, irrespective of the level of national import dependence, as long as markets are allowed to clear without government interference.
The United States must face up to this energy interdependence squarely and pursue new paths to assure that neither its economy nor policies are excessively vulnerable to foreign influence. For the foreseeable future, the Gulf will remain the worlds base-load supplier and least expensive source of oil to meet growing demand. The global nature of oil trade and pricing means that it matters little if Gulf oil flows to Asia or to the United States. Middle East Gulf pricing and supply trends will affect energy costs around the globe regardless. If the United States wishes to change this reality, it must start now to deploy new energy technologies that will lessen this dependence in the long run.
The Task Force determined ten broad findings:
The U.S. government has not for a long time adequately integrated the security, energy, technological, financial, and environmental policies that make up a comprehensive energy policy. It has relied on overlapping commercial and political interests with key oil-producing countries to meet the needs of its own economy and those of the international economy. A surplus in energy supplies during the past two decades convinced policymakers that other objectives could take precedence over energy security and that the costs of neglect would remain low. That period has ended. In todays tighter energy markets, the costs of leaving energy security unattended could become extremely high. These costs, and the means of reducing them, need to be evaluated in a more purposeful, strategic fashion.
There are no overnight solutions to the energy supply and infrastructure bottlenecks facing the nation and the world. Success will require long-term investments. It will also require the revocation of failed, outmoded, or simply less important policies, which interfere with the pursuit of energy security. Economic sanctions that limit energy investment and environmental policies that increase the costs or availability of energy sources require a fair-minded review. A few concrete short-term actions are available; but many of these clash with other policy objectives, which may need to be compromised or even scrapped.
Continuous governmental review is needed of the tradeoffs between energy security and other national goals. The articulation of a coherent energy policy requires the integration of foreign, national security, and trade policy with numerous domestic environmental, tax, and investment programs. Energy policy should play a significant role in diplomatic discourse, especially where bilateral relations with major powers are concerned. (See Appendix B.)
Environmental issues affecting energy policy require new approaches at home
and abroad. The American public cares as much as the citizens of other countries
about such issues as greenhouse gases and other atmospheric emissions, underground
leakage of noxious substances, and other environmental dangers. Sensible energy
policy must take this into account. But it is important that the public understands
that enhanced environmental standards come at a price to the availability and
cost of fuels. It is equally important that the public understand the environmental
and public-health consequences of unfettered energy consumption. The government
should take a leadership role in fostering such understanding. Also, better
coordination of fuels standards is needed, both inside the United States and
with U.S. trading partners.
Energy infrastructure can be rebuilt and expanded rapidly only if the government
actively facilitates private-sector decision-making and investment. The government
should pave the way by removing unnecessary jurisdictional and other obstacles
to construction and enlargement of pipelines, power plants, the electricity
grid, and other infrastructure. It also needs to weigh the desirability of incentives
to accelerate the development of spare infrastructure and the accumulation of
inventory to alleviate supply disruptions.
U.S. energy independence is not attainable. Policy must therefore focus on increasing the number of energy suppliers, the kinds of energy consumed, and the efficiency with which energy is used. The effort should include renewable and non-conventional forms of energy, as well as conventional fuels, while recognizing that even a doubling of renewable fuel supplies by 2020 could result in renewables having a lower share of the market than today. Oil supply-side policy should take into account the danger of relying on Middle East producers for all of the worlds spare capacity without also bolstering strategic stockpiles and reviewing rules for their use.
Persistently tight crude oil markets highlight the concentration of resources in the Middle East Gulf region and the vulnerability of the global economy to domestic conditions in the key producer countries. The Gulf nations have one major assettheir oil and gas reserves. They, like Russia, Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria, Venezuela, and some other oil-producing nations, depend heavily on hydrocarbons to support their citizens. If the current regimes in the Gulf cannot deliver a better standard of living for rapidly increasing populations, social upheaval could result, and anti-Western elements could gain power. Similar concerns exist with respect to some other oil-producing countries outside the Gulf.
Energy policy has underplayed energy efficiency and demand-management measures for two decades. It is clear that vigorous demand management could significantly lower the volume of energy required for economic growth. Demand curbs could apply to residential, commercial, and industrial uses, but they are likely to bring the greatest and fastest benefits in the core transportation sector.
The instruments available to deal with energy-supply disruptions are increasingly inadequate to the tasks they need to manage. To date, the keystone to managing emergency supply disruptions has been the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. The International Energy Agency and its policies, including building of strategic reserves of crude oil and petroleum products and mechanisms to share available supplies in times of disruption, play an important role, as well. But this program addresses yesterdays needs. IEA members oil consumption has stagnated, while demand has grown rapidly outside, causing the agency to lose the critical mass necessary for managing a future shortfall. The size and effectiveness of the ninety-day cushion mandated by the IEA also needs to be reexamined, as does management of the SPR, particularly by bringing in modern financial tools to help build the reserve with minimal impact on government budgets. Finally, what constitutes an energy supply shortfall needs to be redefined in light of changes in the structure of the global oil market.
The United States needs to articulate a new vision of how best to manage international energy interdependence, one that promotes market transparency and fair distribution of gains from increased trade and investment. Fundamental information about market trends is often unavailable. Energy producers and consumers need to find ways to build common institutions. Unless the U.S. government provides leadership in modernizing market and investment structures, there is a clear danger that others will take the reins and develop institutions that run counter to U.S. interests.
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STRATEGIC POLICY CHOICES
For two decades, the United States has gone without a serious energy policy. In the past, such complacency about energy could be justified because world supplies appeared to be indefinitely ample. The myth of plenty was reinforced by the enormous gains that were made as market forces were allowed to work, as regulations and controls were eliminated, and as energy prices fell in real terms across the world. These gains, in turn, allowed U.S. leadersboth Republican and Democraticto take a minimalist approach supported by the comfort of consensus politics that reflected an avoidance of strategic choices. From the perspective of this Task Force, there is no escaping the fact that we are reaching the beginning of an extensive period of sporadic supply shortages and periodic price hikes in the United States and in other parts of the world. This new situation requires a reevaluation of U.S. policy approaches. The United States faces three policy paths: first, continue the easy approach of "muddling through" with marginal Strategic Petroleum Reserve management and complete free market solutions; second, take a near-term, narrow approach by expanding supply to ensure cheap energy while enduring conflict with interest groups; or third, develop a comprehensive and balanced energy security policy with near-term actions and long-term initiatives addressing supply-side and demand-side policy instruments and diversification of energy supply resources that enables the United States to escape from a pattern of recurring energy crises.
Taking the Easy Approach
Clearly the path of maintaining the status quo of no energy policy is by far
the easiest short-term option. This is obviously the path of least resistance.
Under such an approach, very little initiative would be needed and could be
limited to a very circumspect focus: reviewing the size and mechanisms associated
with the SPR and its coordinated use with other countries in the International
Energy Agency. This limited policy would dictate that the United States simply
muddle through any portending crisis that might occur by reducing the pain of
such an actual event through the use of emergency measures at the time of the
event.
It is a path that could readily be chosen for two reasons. First, there is the ever-present hope that the market, left to its own devices, will eventually correct itself and overcome current supply problems. Secondly, history seems to justify this approach. Major oil disruptions with serious consequences seem to occur only every decade or so, it can be argued, seemingly limiting the costs of doing nothing. Electric power shortages will eventually get sorted out, and in any case states rather than the federal government bear the brunt of citizens claims. This approach obviates the need to tackle the difficult political issues that would have to be resolved to forge an energy policy consensus in Congress. No comprehensive policy means Congress does not have to make the compromises required to enact the legislation to backstop a more effective, comprehensive approach.
One clear benefit of this approach is that the short-term costs to the consumer would be limited and that no hard sacrifices would have to be made. The costs to U.S. taxpayers seem minimal and indirect and in any event they can be postponed. Consumers have the prospect of the market assisting them yet again in achieving low energy costs. Some of the real costs, such as the high-cost U.S. military presence in the Middle East, are already accepted and forgotten by the public.
But the problem is that there is overwhelming evidence that there will be no "free lunch" for taxpayers. A disruption might well occur at a time when the mechanisms for dealing with it have become outmoded, too narrowly confined to too narrow a segment of the world community to make a difference. And meanwhile, the market volatility of the past few years may be a precursor of much worse to comea roller coaster of prices confusing the investment climate and impeding the marshaling of capital required to overcome supply obstacles whose emergence triggered the new critical state to begin with.
Under this scenario, the United States remains a prisoner of its energy dilemma, suffering on a recurring basis from the negative consequences of sporadic energy shortages. These consequences can include recession, social dislocation of the poorest Americans, and at the extremes, a need for military intervention. Moreover, this approach leaves festering the conflict between rising energy demand and its potentially devastating impact on the global environment.
Taking a Supply-Side Approach
Another easy-to-digest approach would be one that focuses predominantly on supply-side
solutions. A supply-side perspective is attractive because it offers some eventual
reprieve from the negative impacts of energy shortages but with little or no
direct cost or sacrifice to the average American. A supply-side approach would
aim to increase the amount of land available in the United States and around
the world for resource exploration and exploitation and offer whatever tax or
other incentives would be needed to stimulate greater investment in energy assets.
The Task Force agrees that the supply side is an essential focal point of any
workable policy solution. Indeed, the Task Force recommendations incorporate
a number of supply-side options, including both convention and non-conventional
fuels. But the Task Force does not endorse an exclusively supply-side approach
for a number of reasons.
To begin, the costs of this policy are that it almost certainly will bring its designers into conflict with public interest groups, especially those that support environmental protection and land management. This will create an atmosphere where the American people might feel forced to make a difficult choice between a cleaner environment or ample energy supplies. Partisan politicians are already driving this perception by comments in the media or through partisan bills in Congress. But no such choice might be required over the long term if a more integrative, comprehensive approach were to be chosen. Environmental protection and energy policy do not have to be de-coupled, but they can be integrally linked through smart policy choices.
Another problem with a supply-side approach is that it creates the impression that cheap energy is an inalienable right and is available in the very near term. This creates an incentive to greater consumption that is not likely to be sustainable and will eventually net us back to shortages and price volatility once again.
Taking a Comprehensive Approach to Energy Security
Thus, it is the view of this Task Force that only by forging a comprehensive
energy policy can the United States escape from a pattern of recurring energy
crises. It is a tenet of the Task Force that a workable and comprehensive energy
policy requires a balance of supply-side and demand-side policy instruments
if it is to attract a practicable operating congressional majority in the United
States. Such a policy would favor diversification of energy supply by fuel and
by source.
The recommendations of this Task Force represent its best attempts to outline a more coherent and comprehensive outlook for a long-term policy initiative that also takes into account immediate steps. Thus, the recommendations contained in this report are intended to be considered as a whole. Outlined supply-side options require simultaneous pursuit of the demand-management instruments enumerated by the Task Force. Combining them provides a powerful mechanism for enhancing the energy security of American citizens.
By way of one simple example, it might well be the case that enhancing exploration and exploitation of hydrocarbon resources of the North Slope of Alaska might well uncover new resources that could substantially reduce U.S. dependence on imports. But the Arctic National Wildlife Reserve is unlikely to achieve needed support for permitting the access of companies to its exploitation in the absence of strong demand-side measures. As the report indicates, demand-side measures could, alone, have even greater and less costly an impact on Americas medium-term balance of fundamentals than a supply-side only policy. And a combination of the two, of new supplies and of lower demand, in all likelihood provides a more durable solution.
A truly comprehensive policy may well provide the kind of balance and compromise that are consistent with much of Americas political history. However, any comprehensive plan is likely to require confrontation with other policy objectives that have deep constituencies. In some measure, concessions will have to be made that will impinge on certain local environment goals, states rights, Middle East policy, economic sanctions policy, Russia policy, and hemispheric and international trade policy. Making compromises could be politically painful and will require sustained leadership from the highest levels of government.
But the benefits will be quite real. The comprehensive approach could minimize the negative consequences of a disruption in any particular fuel and help shield the American consumer from the painful effects of the cyclical nature of the energy business. It might allow us to reduce military spending down the road and to create export opportunities for American firms through the development of clean energy technologies. It might also allow us to experience sustained economic growth but without perilous environmental consequences.
The Task Force offers a detailed discussion of the components of a comprehensive approach with elaboration about the policy tradeoffs required for such an initiative.
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STRATEGY, RECOMMENDATIONS, AND ACTION PLAN
A Strategic Vision For The Future
To ensure Americas well-being and economic prosperity in this new era
of energy constraints, the United States must have a strategic energy policy
predicated on a clear vision of the requirements of energy security. This vision
must reflect domestic economic and environmental considerations, as well as
geopolitical trends and security imperatives. It is vital for the United States
to assure stable and transparent international energy markets that provide prices
which foster economic growth. It is also in the strategic interest of the United
States to assure that appropriate national and international mechanisms are
in place to prevent disruptions in energy supplies where possible, and to manage
efficiently and equitably any disruption that might occur. To this end, the
United States should promote a global network of arrangements that protects
against disruption, while securing equitable mechanisms for burden-sharing if
required.
Given the magnitude of the potential threat represented by global climate change, it is equally in the strategic interest of the United States to identify and implement cost-effective measures at home and abroad to stabilize the atmospheric concentration of greenhouse gases at levels that will not lead to catastrophic climatic change.
Many different constituencies within the U.S. government will need to work together to develop a unified and integrated energy policy framework with well-defined and orchestrated goalsa policy that will address not only todays energy bottlenecks, but also will seek to provide affordable, clean, and reliable energy supplies five to fifteen years into the future, in order to underpin long-term economic growth in an environmentally acceptable manner and to promote the security of the United States and its allies.
Strategy is about making choices among competing goals. In reaching the appropriate balance, U.S. energy policy must take into account the fact that the vigor with which environmental goals are pursued will affect the costs of energy supplies. Equally, the policy needs to consider that the vigorous pursuit of market-oriented solutions can diminish the level of consumer and general economic protection from the negative effects of price volatility. Finally, the goal of affordable, clean, and reliable energy supply places some constraints on and is influenced by U.S. diplomacy and strategic policy.
The Task Force developed a broad consensus on the following strategic goals for the nations energy policy:
Protecting and promoting long-term diversity of affordable energy supply for sustained global economic growth. Diversity refers both to the mix of energy sources and the geographic origin of that energy. The priorities established among fuels should take into account environmental objectives, fuel efficiency, and national security considerations.
Promoting energy end-use efficiency as a near-term approach to meeting economic, security, and environmental goals.
Providing adequate safeguards, both at home and abroad, against energy supply disruptions and against manipulation of markets by any party, state or private.
Promoting market forces wherever and whenever possible, while acting to ensure order in case of market failures or severe shortfalls or accidents. Market failures can involve interference in trade flows by private or state-owned entities and actions by adversaries. They can also involve flaws in regulatory structures, including environmental regulations.
Creating a stable, competitive, and predictable investment climate to ensure that energy resources and infrastructure expand to meet the growing needs of the worlds population in a manner that safeguards the environment, promotes consumer needs, and enables U.S. companies to operate on an even playing field.
Encouraging competition in the United States and abroad, both to the benefit of U.S. consumers and U.S. companies.
Ensuring that all citizens, and particularly less affluent Americans, have
access to reliable and affordable basic heating fuels and electricity when markets
fail to serve this critical function.
RECOMMENDATIONS
The recommendations of the Task Force are divided into two sections: The first comprises actions to be considered in the very short term to assure that appropriate mechanisms are in place to deal with potential supply disruptions and to buffer the economy from adverse impacts of price volatility. The second set of recommendations is longer term in nature. The first set of recommendations concerns action items designed to provide the government with "breathing space" in case of shortfalls or emergencies. The second set concerns a framework for dealing with the challenges of creating new supplies and ample capacities along various linked global energy supply chains, while also preserving and enhancing the human habitat.
Immediate Steps
1. Deter and Manage International Supply Shortfalls
Recent oil market-price volatility has been driven by a number of complex factors.
However, three key drivers continue to fuel upward pressure on prices: OPEC
policy and the organizations lack of spare productive capacity; the policies
of Iraq and concerns about the reliability of its U.N.-monitored oil exports;
and fears of a possible flare-up in the Arab-Israeli conflict. These factors
have created uncertainty in markets that has at various times outweighed considerations
of immediate market supply availability, fueling speculation and pushing prices
above $30$35 a barrel at various times in recent months. Although
these situations cannot be solved overnight, certain steps could be considered
to ameliorate their negative impact on oil market stability.
Develop a diplomatic program ensuring GCC allies remain prepared and willing
to maintain stable prices to promote global economic growth and also to fill
any unexpected supply shortfalls in times of turmoil in the oil markets, whether
created by accident or by the adverse political actions by any producing nation.
The vast majority of all unused, spare oil productive capacity is located in
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. It appears that Kuwait might soon
be added to that list. Saudi Arabia has over 1 million b/d of spare sustainable
capacity and considerably more surge capacity that could be brought online for
several weeks in a crisis. The UAE has some limited spare capacity of several
hundred thousand barrels a day. Kuwait might soon have a similar amount. These
are all very important countries for the United States, with a fundamentally
positive attitude toward cooperation and support, and with the only meaningful
spare production capacity in the world. They all deserve being cultivated as
special priorities of U.S. policy.
Over the past year, Iraq has effectively become a swing producer, turning its
taps on and off when it has felt such action was in its strategic interest to
do so. Saudi Arabia has proven willing to provide replacement supplies to the
market when Iraqi exports have been reduced. This role has been extremely important
in avoiding greater market volatility and in countering Iraqs efforts
to take advantage of the oil markets structure. Saudi Arabias role
in this needs to be preserved, and should not be taken for granted. There is
domestic pressure on the GCC leaders to reject cooperation to cool oil markets
during times of a shortfall in Iraqi oil production. These populations are dissatisfied
with the "no-fly zone" bombing and the sanctions regime against Iraq,
perceived U.S. bias in the Arab-Israeli peace process, and lack of domestic
economic pressures. A diplomatic dialogue that emphasizes common U.S.-GCC goals
and programs should be pursued at the highest levels to minimize the potential
for tension over these other issues. Goodwill efforts such as a U.S. offer to
buy oil from spare capacity for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve when market
circumstances warrant and a willingness to discuss coordinated response to supply
emergencies can be used to offset anti-American sentiment among elite groups
in these countries.
There are, however, some trade-off issues. Working together with the GCC could restrict some of the U.S. freedom of movement on security and foreign policy actions that might be desirable with regard to Iraq or the Arab-Israeli conflict from a U.S. point of view.
Prepare for contingencies and gain agreement on coordination in the IEA in efforts
to deal with any attempts by adversaries to remove oil from international markets.
Some European country positions on economic sanctions against Iraq differ from
the U.S. position, most notably France but also some other IEA countries including
Japan. Still, the IEA must be assured of efficient joint decision-making in
the event of a supply disruption under tight market conditions. This includes
any possibility that Saddam Hussein may remove Iraqi oil from the market for
an extended period of time and that Saudi Arabia will not or cannot replace
all of the barrels. (This is a contingency that hangs over the market given
the ability of Baghdad to continue to earn revenues through smuggling and other
uncontrolled oil exports, even if it officially cuts off exports that are permitted
through U.N. procedures.) IEA member countries should be in agreement in advance
of such an event on what joint actions it will take. The IEA has been very successful
in recent years in providing definitive and forceful statements of its intentions,
and these statements have improved the maintenance of orderly markets. The administration
needs to ensure that recent events do not derail this past success.
Minimize public conflicts with OPEC and other independent oil-exporting countries but emphasize importance of market factors in setting prices. The previous administration engaged in public exchanges with OPEC over the producer organizations decisions to push oil prices higher. This fueled anti-American sentiment among certain sectors of the population in the Middle East, lent support to the claims of Saddam Hussein, and brought pressures on some U.S.-friendly regimes in the region. The United States needs to prevent aggravation of this situation by avoiding public discussion of the targeting of particular price goals and emphasizing common interests of promoting and protecting growth in the global economy. Such growth maintains demand for OPECs oil. Rather than specify a price level that is "good for the United States"which creates an "us-against-you" mindset on oil-pricing policythe United States should emphasize as a first line of policy its position that market forces should be left to set the price of oil. Specific discussion of price should be kept to private diplomatic discussion whenever possible. Although short-term political gains can be garnered at home in the United States for jawboning OPEC, longer term this activity is likely to stimulate more entrenched positions within that organization, leading to higher oil prices and eventually wearing down any short-term public relations benefit inside the United States.
While moving to defuse tensions in the Arab-Israeli conflict through conflict resolution and negotiations, maintain energy and political issues in U.S.Middle East relations on separate tracks. The timing might not be appropriate for a major initiative to solve the Arab-Israeli conflict in a comprehensive manner, but it is important to reduce immediate tensions and violence in that conflict. While this is a tenet of U.S. foreign policy for other reasons, it can also be helpful to the oil situation in ensuring that the two issues do not become linked and are kept on separate tracks. Iraq has been engaged in a clever public relations campaign to intersect these two issues and stir up anti-American sentiment inside and outside the Middle East. The bombing of Iraq by the United States led coalition in February 2001 spurred anti-U.S. demonstrations in support of Iraq in traditional U.S. allies such as Egypt. Moreover, Saddam Hussein is trying to recast himself as the champion of the Palestinian cause to some success among young Palestinians. Any severe violence on the West Bank, Gaza, or Southern Lebanon will give Iraq more leverage in its efforts to discredit the United States and U.S. intentions. A focus on the anti-Israeli sympathies of some Arab oil-producing countries diverts attention from the repressive nature of the Iraqi regime. Instead it rewards Iraq in its claim to Arab leadership for "standing up to the United States for ten years." Israel will assert its right to defend itself from terrorist or other attacks, so it is important that both sides of the Arab-Israeli conflict are given a stake in avoiding conflict and violence. Creating an atmosphere where both sides are willing to show restraint can be an important goal for U.S. diplomacy on this issue.
Review policies toward Iraq with the aim to lowering anti-Americanism in the
Middle East and elsewhere, and set the groundwork to eventually ease Iraqi oil-field
investment restrictions. Iraq remains a destabilizing influence to U.S. allies
in the Middle East, as well as to regional and global order, and to the flow
of oil to international markets from the Middle East. Saddam Hussein has also
demonstrated a willingness to threaten to use the oil weapon and to use his
own export program to manipulate oil markets. This would display his personal
power, enhance his image as a "Pan Arab" leader supporting the Palestinians
against Israel, and pressure others for a lifting of economic sanctions against
his regime.
The United States should conduct an immediate policy review toward Iraq, including
military, energy, economic, and political/diplomatic assessments. The United
States should then develop an integrated strategy with key allies in Europe
and Asia and with key countries in the Middle East to restate the goals with
respect to Iraqi policy and to restore a cohesive coalition of key allies. Goals
should be designed in a realistic fashion, and they should be clearly and consistently
stated and defended to revive U.S. credibility on this issue. Actions and policies
to promote these goals should endeavor to enhance the well-being of the Iraqi
people. Sanctions that are not effective should be phased out and replaced with
highly focused and enforced sanctions that target the regimes ability
to maintain and acquire weapons of mass destruction. A new plan of action should
be developed to use diplomatic and other means to support U.N. Security Council
efforts to build a strong arms-control regime to stem the flow of arms and controlled
substances into Iraq. Policy should rebuild coalition cooperation on this issue,
while emphasizing the common interest in security. This issue of arms sales
to Iraq should be brought near the top of the agenda for dialogue with China
and Russia.
Once an arms-control program is in place, the United States could consider reducing restrictions on oil investments inside Iraq. Like it or not, Iraqi reserves represent a major asset that can quickly add capacity to world oil markets and inject a more competitive tenor to oil trade. However, such a policy will be quite costly as this trade-off will encourage Saddam Hussein to boast of his "victory" against the United States, fuel his ambitions, and potentially strengthen his regime. Once so encouraged and if his access to oil revenues were to be increased by adjustments in oil sanctions, Saddam Hussein could be a greater security threat to U.S. allies in the region if weapons of mass destruction (WMD) sanctions, weapons regimes, and the coalition against him are not strengthened. Still, the maintenance of continued oil sanctions is becoming increasingly difficult to implement. Moreover, Saddam Hussein has many means of gaining revenues, and the sanctions regime helps perpetuate his lock on the countrys economy.
Another problem with easing restrictions on the Iraqi oil industry to allow greater investment is that GCC allies of the United States will not like to see Iraq gain larger market share in international oil markets. In fact, even Russia could lose from having sanctions eased on Iraq, because Russian companies now benefit from exclusive contracts and Iraqi export capacity is restrained, supporting the price of oil and raising the value of Russian oil exports. If sanctions covering Iraqs oil sector were eased and Iraq benefited from infrastructure improvements, Russia might lose its competitive position inside Iraq, and also oil prices might fall over time, hurting the Russian economy. These issues will have to be discussed in bilateral exchanges.
2. Remove bottlenecks and other obstacles to energy supply, both domestically
and internationally
There are few options available to United States to expand supply in the short
run whether or not there are energy supply shortfalls. There are even fewer
options available to reduce short-term demand. Fortunately, in the area of petroleum,
the government has a fairly robust strategic reserve. But beyond petroleum,
the options are severely limited. It is in this context that the Task Force
recommends that the government consider all possible means of de-bottlenecking
supplies and removing obstacles to delivery of supplies, both domestically and
internationally. Options need to be considered that are unilateral as well as
those that are bilateral, regional, and international or multinational by nature.
In addition, the government needs to establish permanent machinery for integrating
energy policy with economic, environmental, and foreign policy on a sustained
basis.
Virtually all domestically available raw-material energy resources are being produced that can be. In fact, there are virtually no actions that can be taken in the short term to increase these home-grown supplies. However, there are significant obstacles to the production and distribution of certain petroleum products, gasoline in particular and distillates to a lesser extent, that have come about due to localized differences in regulations concerning petroleum product-quality specifications. These differences are related in some cases to the implementation of the Clean Air Act in areas with particularly troublesome pollution levels or because of regional preferences as discussed in the introduction to this report. These boutique fuels and the "Balkanization" that they create in the market hinders efficiency and promotes shortfalls in local markets even when surplus products of other specifications might be available nearby.
What can be done to deal with Market Balkanization? In general, the federal government should attempt to find ways to increase its flexibility in dealing with market anomalies that stem from product specifications and to increase product standardization so as to reduce the pernicious impacts of lack of standardization. Such actions involve steps to be taken both at home and abroad (see below).
Streamline procedures for waiving product specifications. A permanent interagency
task force needs to be created involving, at a minimum, officials from the Department
of Energy and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to review the impact
of boutique product specifications on regional markets within the country. It
should be empowered to take action expeditiously to waive or ease mandated specifications
for limited periods of time so that market dislocations can be managed.
There are a number of tradeoffs that need to be considered. Clearly, the suspension
of mandated standards could set back the achievement of national, regional,
or state environmental goals. Waivers of product standards that are issued in
order to enhance supply should explicit address the continued commitment to
the environmental objectives in the original regulations as well as the temporary
nature of the waiver. In addition, there are potential inequities to industry:
waiving certain standards could "punish" companies that had invested
in new equipment and technology to meet product specification requirements and
who stand to benefit from any increase in prices for their rare product. Such
inequities could be remedied in the longer term through tax policy favoring
those who complete costly investments
Establish procedures to grant Jones Act waivers without adversely affecting
U.S. ship owners or U.S. labor. As discussed in the introduction to this report,
U.S.-manufactured petroleum products are transported mainly by domestic pipeline
or by ship but under federal mandate only U.S.-flagged ships can be used for
these deliveries. For a long time the Jones Act tanker fleet was in long-term
decline, but U.S. flag owners and operators have invested significant amounts
of money to build vessels in the United States to comply with the Jones Act.
When the pipeline is fully utilized and when imports are inadequate as was experienced
last winter in New England, there is a potential need to waive the Jones Act
requirements on the U.S. product tanker fleet to enable non-U.S.-flagged vessels
to carry cargoes between U.S. ports. As long as the current law exists, the
government needs to send a strong signal that under no circumstances will it
provide a Jones Act waiver on purely economic grounds. This is needed to give
U.S. tanker owners the ability to recover costs associated with U.S.-built tankers
and remove any investment uncertainty. But when the U.S. government is concerned
with logistics issues, officials could signal that waivers would be granted
for foreign-flagged vessels to enter the trade on an emergency, case-by-case
basis when no vessels could be made available on the spot market by U.S. owners.
Similar issues concern labor, which has an interest in both the manufacture
and manning of the Jones Act fleet. While Jones Act waivers are available, the
procedures to accomplish this are cumbersome and the waivers are rarely granted.
Streamlining procedures for issuing waivers to the Jones Act would facilitate
the elimination of this market anomaly and free up supply within the U.S. market
during severe logistics crises.
Enact legislation for federal primacy over state regulations, especially with
respect to product specifications and pipeline right of way. Ways need to be
created to simplify the nations total petroleum product slate in order
to reduce Market Balkanization and therefore ease localized product-supply shortages
and related price volatility.
There is little doubt that establishing the primacy of federal regulations would
remove a significant bottleneck to future regional supply glitches in this as
in other areas. For example, it would enable the federal government to override
the objections of individual states to exploration and development in offshore
acreage. It could also expedite procedures involved in the siting of new or
expanded energy infrastructure, including new pipelines, refineries, or power
plants.
If the federal government wants to make a serious effort to foster market transparency, facilitate the development of new supplies, and expedite permitting for new energy infrastructure, legislation mandating federal primacy over state legislation and regulations in specific areas should be a very high priority. However, there are major obstacles to enacting this legislation.
Federal legislation would almost certainly be opposed by many states, whose
legislatures and elected governors have enacted product specifications that
are different from and at times more stringent than federally mandated specifications.
Federal legislation could be challenged as unconstitutional.
In the case of some boutique fuels, local authorities have mandated them in order to help their urban areas meet national Clean Air Act targets or targets of their own that are even more stringent. Such conflicts would have to be managed by structured cooperation among the EPA, federal agencies responsible for product standards, and local officials.
In efforts to mandate federal primacy, the administration might well feel compelled
to find a middle ground for quality specifications that are significantly less
stringent than what many state governments would find acceptable. Conversely,
if the federal standards were to be strict enough to assist the most polluted
urban areas, product quality standards and compliance costs would be unsuitably
high and unnecessarily costly for regions with less severe air quality problems.
Enact legislation to facilitate regional solutions to a variety of energy challenges.
Mechanisms that would be far less intrusive of the authority of state governments
and regulatory bodies could be created via regional approaches. Unlike legislation
mandating the primacy of federal regulations, the federal government could urge
and facilitate collaborative approaches that would provide federal incentives
for states that decide to work together on regional solutions. Regional approaches
would be far preferable to state-only approaches in a variety of areas, including
larger regional frameworks for mandating fuel specifications, emissions limits,
and for establishing siting requirements for new energy infrastructure. Regional
Councils should be established and mandated to work in a streamlined manner
with federal agencies including the EPA, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,
and the Departments of Energy and Commerce on a variety of permitting issues.
While regional solutions would be less efficient than national solutions in
eliminating bottlenecks to supply, they may in the end be more readily acceptable,
since they would lend the appearance of greater local control.
Investigate whether any changes to U.S. policy would quickly facilitate higher
exports of oil from the Caspian Basin region. Generally speaking, all oil-producing
countries outside of OPEC are producing at maximum rates. There are a few exceptions
where political problems block immediate shipments, such as pipeline problems
in Colombia, where guerrilla warfare against the government extends to attacks
on oil installations. Also included in this category are labor unrest and investment
disputes that slow the progress of developing and producing oil in Nigeriaor
Norway, for that matter. The U.S. government should assist with resolution of
these problems, but a quick resolution is unlikely.
However, the exports from some oil discoveries in the Caspian Basin could be
hastened if a secure, economical export route could be identified swiftly. It
is unclear how much oil could be thereby released: estimates range from a relatively
insignificant 10,000 b/d to well over 100,000 b/d. To this end, the administration
should review policies toward this region. The option exists to downplay diplomatic
activities that dictate certain geopolitical goals for specific transportation
routes for Caspian oil in favor of immediate commercial solutions that may be
sought by individual oil companies for short-term exports of "early"
oil, including exports through Iran. These geopolitical goals can later be articulated
for longer-term pipeline routing questions into the next decade.
The administration, of course, needs to take into account the tradeoffs of this policy shift. Some European companies might choose to send more oil via Iran. U.S. companies may seek case-by-case waivers to send oil through Iran that would otherwise not be produced, thus effectively forcing the United States to consider signaling a change in its policy toward Iran. In any event, the United States might find other reasons to improve relations with Iran. For example, Iran could serve as a regional counterweight to Iraq. A shift in pipeline strategy to favor commerciality might also encourage some regional Caspian players to seek a closer relationship with Russia in order to facilitate the movement of oil through Russian routes. Russia may interpret this policy as one showing weakness of resolve and a green light to press Georgia and other neighboring states to compromise their sovereignty in favor of Moscows interests. Still, it remains unclear whether these potentially adverse developments might occur regardless of U.S. policy toward pipeline routes. In general, for strategic reasons related to U.S.-Russian relations, the United States might want to move the Caspian region into a zone of cooperation with Russia, instead of a zone of competition or confrontation. (It might seek this, for example, in order to jointly counter the rise of radical, Islamic militant elements in the region). This arena of discussion could thus start with energy issues and later move on to other issues. Finally, U.S. insistence on the longer and costly Baku-Ceyhan pipeline route could jeopardize a more comprehensive approach toward the export of the Caspian Basins resources and would put at risk a more commercial approach.
3. Take a Fresh Approach to Building and Maintaining National Strategic and
Commercial Crude Oil and Petroleum Product Inventories
There is no doubt that the most important mechanisms for dealing with supply
shortfalls are inventories of crude oil and petroleum product held both by the
government and by commercial enterprises. Inventories, especially strategic
stores, provide the nations first line of defense against a supply shortfall
and therefore warrant immediate attention. Nor is there any doubt that the level
of crude oil and seasonal product inventories has become a significant domestic
political issue. For example, there was a strikingly widespread consensus nationwide
when the Northeast Heating Oil Reserve was created last year, although there
were questions raised about whether this should be managed by government or
by industry (with the latter through tax incentives). With respect to inventories,
the Task Force has a series of recommendations.
Review the size and financing of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. The SPR represents
the best means of replacing lost barrels of crude oil. Its ideal size relative
to the size of imports has not been officially reviewed in two decades. Meanwhile,
the SPR has declined both as a share of imports and in absolute size since the
mid-1990s. At its peak, the SPR covered more than eighty days of imports; today
it covers under fifty days. The administration should, as a high priority, review
what the ideal size of the reserve should be, given the fundamental changes
in the nature of disruptions that the country confronts. The review should take
place both as a national, stand-alone issue and in conjunction with an international
review. (See the section on longer-term issues, below.) For example, the administration
may choose to make its decision about the ideal size of the SPR in consultation
not only with other IEA members, but also in consultation with key OPEC producer
countries. The administration should also review how it should finance reserve
additions. Ideally this might be accomplished through direct budgetary allocations.
At a minimum the government should aim to fill all of the nearly 700 million
barrels of capacity it currently has available.
It should be recognized that one problem with trying to refill the reserve at
this time when markets are strong is that any purchases made by the U.S. government
(or other consuming countries) would add to the current tight supply of international
oil markets. Also, critics of the reserve may argue that it hasnt been
necessary to tap a full draw-down since its creation, arguing against the need
for a full ninety-day supply. Thus, other, more creative measures might be advised
for filling the reserve during times of temporary market weakness. One option
would be to make such purchases through a bilateral arrangement with a key oil
supplier of the United States, again at a time when markets soften. The purchases
could be designed to help an oil-producing ally maintain oil sales during a
time of market weakness. Another would entail buying oil that an OPEC country
might otherwise have held back from the market as part of its market-maintenance,
production-quota agreement. Such arrangements would have the benefit of demonstrating
U.S. support for positive consumer-producer relations. Such a signal might improve
relations between the United States and important foreign oil suppliers.
Efforts have been made in the past to "lease" unused production from Saudi Arabia at prices below the fair market value for the oil to be put in cheaper storage in the United States. These initiatives were rejected by Saudi Arabian officials who did not want to produce the resources and "lease" them for nominal amounts such as $2 a barrel. A plan that provided funds for the United States to pay "fair" market value to acquire unused Saudi or other producer-country oil for the SPR in times of market weakness would highlight the commitment of the United States to reciprocal relations, potentially easing tensions regarding conflicting oil price goals.
Establish professional criteria for managing the SPR. A significant amount of
controversy arose last year concerning President Bill Clintons use of
his discretionary authority to lease oil to the market on a time-swap or exchange
basis in order to address winter heating-oil inventory concerns. The criticism
was threefold: (1) The exchanges reduced the size of the SPR, making less prompt
oil available to manage a future disruption. (2) The SPR should not be used
as a buffer stock but rather to manage severe accidents or supply emergencies;
and (3) The time-swap was badly managed, thus earning the government far less
in interest than it should have. Unfortunately, perhaps, the governments
use of its swap authority in the autumn of 2000 became associated with a policy
that appeared to advocate that the SPR should be used as a market buffer stock
to damp prices and price volatility. In reality, proactive use of the swap or
exchange authority actually provides the government with an ability to build
the SPR over time and to improve its quality through prudent use of market structures.
It also enables the government to monetize its crude oil reserves, which otherwise
sit idly and unproductively. The government should look into ways to improve
management of the SPR through the following types of actions:
Take advantage of the markets forward price structure to make sure the
strategic reserve is strengthened efficiently over time. Thus, if the market
structure were backwardated, with future prices lower than current prices, the
government would be able to replenish the reserve with more oil than it had
leased on an auction basis. If the market structure were in contango, with future
prices higher than prompt prices, the government could lease its cheaper spare
storage capacity to industry, thereby also providing revenue to build government-owned
reserves at a later time. (Leasing spare tankage should also be considered separately
by the Department of Defense.) If a government agency did this on a regular
basis, as a standard operating procedure, it would earn far more than it did
in its initial efforts in the fall of 2000 and would have a means to finance
a larger reserve.
There are two objections that can be raised to this, however. First, there are potential physical limits to using underground natural salt caverns (salt domes) for storage in this manner without the need to leach them anew. Second, there are objectionsas there were in 2000on the ground that using the SPR oil in this manner reduces theoretically the amount of oil available in an emergency should one occur. That is a clear trade-off to be taken into account in policymaking.
Seek legislative authorization to expand the governments latitude in implementing SPR exchanges. Professional management of the SPR would require an expansion of the current limits on the authority of the government to undertake time-swaps of SPR crude. Current authority limits such swaps to 30 million barrels within a specified time frame, but the reserve isnt permitted to drop below 500 million barrels. The authority for time swaps could be increased by several-fold.
Establish Clear Policy for Use of the SPR. The administration should as an early
priority define publicly its general policy for using SPR crude. It is especially
important during times of lost supply and uncertainty about future supply for
the government to damp speculation that breeds price volatility. For example,
in August 1990, when Iraq invaded Kuwait, the government delayed an announcement
about use of the SPR until January 1991. Had the SPR been used by September
of 1990, if for no other reason than to calm markets until supplies could be
fully made up from other sources, the price spike of that autumn could have
been reduced and the likelihood of a recession in 1991 also reduced. The administration
should therefore define its position on the SPR soon. It should provide general
criteria for determining when strategic stocks might be tapped under the Presidents
authority, defining more generally what will be considered an emergency and
what conditions might prompt the President to authorize a time-swap. The administration
should also determine what conditions might prompt the Department of Energy
to either accelerate purchases for the SPR or to lease out storage space to
industry when future and forward oil price curves encourage this. Finally, the
administration should improve the operability of the SPR. Unlike commercial
stocks, the recent release of the SPR (mostly sweet) crude showed that the industry
isnt fully educated about logistical issues involved in getting SPR oil
into the domestic refining system efficiently. Therefore it would be prudent
to review and highlight the negative experiences of those who participated in
last years exchange program.
It should be noted that clarification of the use of the SPR would have a couple
of additional benefits. It would eliminate debate or trial balloons to media
in the event of an interruption that meets the clear criteria set by policy.
Trial balloons or public debate often cloud market transparency to the detriment
of predictable price formation and orderly markets. Public articulation of policy
would also eliminate the risk of holding hostage a release of strategic stocks
to the production policy of key OPEC countries.
Coordinate use of the SPR with other IEA countries. It goes without saying that the United States should coordinate release of the SPR in cooperation with other IEA countries. This would be especially important either in the case of a market in which one or more producer countries intentionally reduces or bans exports in order to increase prices, or in case of market disruption. Nonetheless, it should also be recognized that unilateral use of the SPR by the United States might be criticized for giving other countries that do not cooperate a "free ride" on the benefits of the SPR release. The free rider problem may well be an unavoidable consequence of having and using the SPRotherwise the United States would have to consult and share decisions about its use, which would also be risky and questionable.
Coordinate use of the SPR with actions by key producer countries. One of the unnoticed and less criticized aspects of the use of the SPR exchange by the United States in 2000 was that it was performed in a "cooperation" rather than a "confrontation" mode with producer countries in both OPEC and elsewhere. Only after the OPEC secretariat and key OPEC members repeatedly stated that "we have done our part" in easing the market and that "it is up to the industrialized countries to do their part," was the SPR exchange actually triggered. Its timing demonstrated that in a cooperative mode, use of the SPR could work hand-in-hand with diplomacy vis-à-vis producing nations. (See next section, number 4, below.)
Review tax, accounting, and other factors affecting industrys incentives
to hold petroleum product and natural gas inventories, with the intent of enhancing
inventories before seasonal demand and neutralizing any adverse impact of current
rules.
There has been significant bipartisan support in oil "consuming" areas
of the United States for government-controlled stockpiles of products and even
of critical product components (e.g., ethanol). There has also been support
for state governments mandating minimum stocks for fuel-switching purposes
of certain categories of consumers, including power plants. The federal government
last year also established the Northeast Heating Oil Reserve. Given the critical
role played by inventories in smoothing out supply shortfalls, the government
should undertake a wholesale review of product inventories and consider incentives
to industry to hold higher levels of inventory than has recently been the case.
Industry inventories would be an alternative to the federal Northeast Heating Oil Reserve. Industry generally fails to build inventory when futures markets are in backwardation; that is, when futures prices are lower than prompt prices. Industry builds stocks when markets are in contango and industry expects that future prices will be higher than prompt prices. Since industry is now managing inventories on a just-in-time basis, there is a danger that market structure will not go sufficiently into contango when product builds are required. Therefore, industry will not have an incentive to build gasoline stocks in advance of the traditional summer driving season or heating oil and natural gas stocks in advance of the traditional winter heating seasons. An alternative incentive could come from fiscal measures that reward firms that carry seasonal inventory or penalize firms that do not.
Accounting rules, especially "last-in, first-out" (LIFO) rules, create year-end changes in inventory in order for companies to reduce their tax liabilities. The federal government should review national and state government rules and their impacts on corporate inventory management positions, with the intent of neutralizing any incentive on the part of companies to reduce stocks at year-end when markets do not require rapid de-stocking.
Encourage states to review minimum inventory for fuel switching where feasible
and also fiscal incentives to industry to build inventories in advance of seasonal
demand increases. Such an effort could be incorporated into incentive programs
for state governments cooperating with one another on a regional basis. (See
recommendations for immediate actions, above.) States have traditionally made
the issue of backup supplies part of their regulatory frameworks. These requirements
have generally faded in the age of deregulation and should be reexamined.
4. Develop Mechanisms for a New National Approach to Energy Policy
If the energy policy goals of the country are to be articulated coherently and
implemented effectively, steps need to be taken to build as wide a consensus
politically as possible, especially if the tradeoffs among conflicting internal
objectives of policy are to be successfully worked out. This means that constituencies
must be brought together at several levels: within the federal government administration,
between the administration and Congress, between the federal government and
state governments, and between the federal government and the public at large.
In order to further this end, as series of steps should be considered:
Create an appropriate interagency process to articulate and promote energy security policy and integrate energy policy with overall economic, environmental, and foreign policy. For energy policy to be integrated with overall economic policy, environmental policy, and foreign policy, it needs to be vetted and articulated through a "permanent" interagency process that brings those responsible for these areas together. The Bush administration has moved rapidly in this direction through the creation of the White House Energy Policy Development Group headed by Vice President Dick Cheney. That group appropriately includes representations from the Departments of Energy, Interior, Commerce, Treasury, and State as well as representation from the Environmental Protection Agency and the FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency). As this process unfolds, the administration should find ways to establish a permanent framework for articulating energy policy, perhaps including representation from the Department of Defense as well. The secretary of energy should then be empowered to carry forward and implement the policy recommendations of the Policy Development Group.
Review and streamline the allocation of authorities within the federal government, especially in areas of land management and energy. The federal government has been institutionally hampered in its ability to articulate and implement a coherent national energy policy by the allocation of disparate and overlapping authorities across government departments. For example, the fact that land management for resource exploitation is managed by the Department of the Interior rather than the Department of Energy has created inefficiency in government decision-making that should be reevaluated. The White House Energy Policy Development Group should, in the process of its work, review such discrepancies in authority and make recommendations for streamlining them.
Convene a National Energy Summit to help develop a national consensus on energy policy objectives and means. The administration should use whatever mechanisms are at its disposal to educate the public concerning its views on how the nations energy problems can be dealt with. It should use similar mechanisms to forge the kind of domestic consensus that is likely to be required if its energy policy goals are to be implemented. One possible way to do this is by convening a nonpartisan, multi-industry summit, possibly chaired by the vice president, to review its national energy plan as developed by the Energy Policy Development Group. The summit should be designed not only to vet energy proposals to as wide a group of responsible companies and institutionalized interest groups as possible, but also to elicit proposals from those represented.
Develop a Strategic Communications Plan on Energy Security Policy in order to educate the public on the difficulties of achieving short-term, unilateral solutions to the nations energy dilemmas. The administration should conduct a thorough survey of constituency and advocacy groups within the country in order to develop initiatives concerning ways to build a national consensus on energy policy. It should unfold a strategic communications plan with the goal of gaining support of environmental groups and congressional leadership on whatever tradeoffs may be involved in its energy policy. For example, it should indicate its resolve to produce cleaner fuels if in its judgment it is also recommending temporary delays in new restrictions (such as sulfur production) or other environmental goals for compelling economic and national security requirements.
Long Term Policy Initiatives
1. Review International Approaches to Build, Maintain, and Use Strategic and
Commercial Crude Oil and Petroleum Product Inventories
The administration should, in parallel with a review of our national approach
to strategic and commercial petroleum and petroleum product inventories, conduct
a review of other approaches both in the International Energy Agency and by
non-IEA members. The United States needs to work together with other oil consuming
and importing countries to assure that there are adequate strategic stockpiles
available globally to manage future disruptions, beginning with a new definition
of "adequate." Two significant problems need to be reviewed and dealt
with:
First, the entire structure for managing supply disruptions is built around the notion that physical shortfalls can be measured independent of prices and in volumetric terms alone. The assumption that release of global strategic stocks could be triggered by a volumetric shortfall that was to be coordinated by an oil supply-sharing facility is outdated. It was predicated on a world of regulated trade flows that disappeared with market deregulation in the 1970s and 1980s. Instead, planning needs to be based on todays fast-paced global market and on the sorts of disruptions that are most apt to face us now, rather than those that were most likely in 1975.
Second, the mechanisms for dealing with disruptions are built almost exclusively
within the institution and membership of the IEA. IEA or OECD countries dominated
global oil trade when the IEA was founded in 1974. Today its share is rapidly
falling. Between 1985 and 2000, East Asian countries alone increased their share
of global oil consumption from less than 20 percent to more than 27 percent,
as the region represented 80 percent of the total increase in worldwide demand.
As IEA oil use continues to stagnate and as developing countries increase their
individual oil consumption and share of global consumption, mechanisms need
to be developed to encourage these high-demand growth countries to build their
own strategic stockpiles. They also need to participate in the global planning
that occurs within the IEA.
Enhance and modernize IEA strategic stockpile policies in light of the changed
international market, taking into account situations that technically fall short
of a supply disruption as well as different regulatory authorities among IEA
members.
The IEA should initiate a strategic review related to the size of strategic
stockpiles as well as their management. The review should recognize that the
divergent approaches taken within the organization to strategic stock management
make harmonization difficult. This is especially true for the relationship between
the European Union, with its requirement that refiners should hold stocks related
to seventy-five days of consumption (sixty-five days for non-refiners) and the
IEA, with its requirement that countries cover ninety days of net imports. It
should also try to find ways to harmonize the differences that exist between
those countries that hold government strategic stocks (essentially the United
States, Germany, and to some degree Japan) and the others, which require inventories
be held by companies.
Harmonization of plans within the IEA need to take into account the following issues, among others:
Situations requiring international coordination of stock release, short of a full supply disruption.
The differences between those that hold crude oil stocks and those that hold products, given the fact that release into the market of crude oil supplies affects markets indirectly, while release into the market of products, affects markets directly and immediately.
Differences between those with authority to use strategic oil on an exchange basis (essentially only the United States) and those permitted to use it only in an emergency. Efforts should be made to harmonize authorities in case decisions are made to release stocks in situations not covered by a shortfall that is fully defined as a supply disruption.
Encourage key non-IEA countries (e.g., China, India, Brazil) to develop strategic
stocks.
The International Energy Agency was created a quarter of a century ago as a
mutual-protection society of OECD countries. Designed as a political grouping
to prevent any oil-producing countries from using oil exports as a political
instrument to influence the foreign policies of IEA members, the IEA was formed
at a time when the OECD countries dominated global energy consumption. Today
it excludes the most rapidly growing energy-consuming countries in the worldChina,
India, and Brazil among them. And, as a result, these new consumers become vulnerable
economically in times of disruptions as well as vulnerable potentially to political
pressures of producers.
Part of the problem relates to free-riding. Countries that do not belong to
the IEA can and do free-ride at present. Any country that releases stocks or
undertakes policies to reduce its exposure to price shocks will bear the costs
of that action but the benefits accrue to all consumers including the large
consuming countries that are not members, such as China, India, Pakistan, and
Brazil. But part of the problem relates to what countries with rapidly growing
oil demand and imports should do for their own economic well-being and to prevent
spillover of economic problems they might encounter to the large industrial
countries. Moreover, at present some IEA members, Japan in particular, are working
bilaterally with neighboring states to do this.
Review IEA membership, taking into account the desirability of creating a new
class of associated members who could be encouraged to hold minimum stocks and
also benefit from direct participation in other IEA activities.
Although informal programs to encourage stocking by developing world countries
would have a positive impact, such efforts cannot replace the more effective
tool of centralized coordination with the IEA. Centralized efforts are needed
so that international norms and standards can be met during a crisis. This would
be the case even if Japan opts to finance such stocking activities by Asian
countries on its own. The United States should initiate a review of ways the
IEA can work with key countries that are not members of the IEA to encourage
them to define their strategic oil stockpile requirements and to build strategic
stocks (or to create minimum inventory requirements for industry). The IEA should
also consider creating a new class of associated members, who, in exchange for
making commitments to hold minimum stocks would gain direct benefit from participating
in certain IEA activities.
2. Accelerate Demand Management Efforts at Home and Internationally
The United States has trailed other industrialized societies when it comes to
oil-demand management. Most other industrialized countries have used fiscal
policy to curb the growth in oil demand by heavily taxing petroleum products.
While those efforts can be criticized on numerous groundsas they have
been by oil-producing countriesthere is little doubt about their effectiveness
in limiting the exposure of the economy to oil price shocks and promoting energy
efficiency and conservation. Still, it remains the case in the United States
that demand management has in recent years been the rhetorical stepchild of
national energy policy, even with the implementation of CAFE standards, appliance
standards and tax credits for a range of investments.
Yet it is clear that active demand-management policies could have less expensive and equally large impacts on the balance between supply and demand as supply-side solutions. Moreover, it is almost certainly the case that any supply-side efforts will need to be joined with vigorous demand-management actions to gain congressional approval as an overall energy legislative package.
The government should recognize that it has significant impacts on demand through its regulatory, tax and incentives framework. It also has a considerable ability to remove distortions in regulations and to promote market flexibility, with an eye on the impact of its actions on demand management. With 60 percent of U.S. oil consumption focused on transportation, the administration should encourage industry and government investments in technologies to increase the fuel efficiency of the nations fleet and to stimulate domestic development and deployment of fuel-efficient vehicles, including gasoline/electric or fuel cell hybrids. Actions could include the following:
Take a proactive government position on demand management. The best way to capture the nations attention on demand management is for the President to take leadership in mapping out a demand-management program as part of the nations energy strategy. Follow-up positions and speeches by the vice president and secretary of energy could specify the levels of supply savings that are targeted. They should also specify how these targets can be reached and how demand management can impact them (for example, with respect to sectors like transportation, residential, commercial, industrial, and power, and with respect to choice of fuels such as clean coal, cleaner oil, gas, nuclear, renewable sources, and new technologies).
Use federal procurement authority to enhance use of alternative fuels and develop
programs to introduce new efficiency technologies into federal buildings and
nascent transportation technologies into government vehicle fleets. The federal
government has an enormous impact on fuel choices in the market through its
procurement policies. These policies should be used to invest in alternative
fuels, including ethanol, natural gas and hydrogen, or hybrid vehicles, and
they should incentivize the development of alternative fuel infrastructures.
For example, under most current programs, federal and state agencies have been
purchasing vehicles with flexible fuel use rather than vehicles mandated to
actually use alternative fuels in question or emerging technology that greatly
improves mileage standards. The result has been the perpetuation of gasoline
use and traditional engines rather than use of alternative fuels or engine designs.
This squanders both the demonstration impact of federal programs as well as
the opportunity to create infrastructures for supply and fueling alternative
design vehicles.
It should be said, however, that the purchase of alternative design vehicles
could be more expensive than conventional vehicles and might encumber unanticipated
repair problems. There are clear cautions to worry about. Efforts to mandate
dual-fired ethanol cars, for example, to fulfill the alternative vehicle mandates
of the Energy Policy Conservation Act, were little more than bones to domestic
interest groups rather than scientific efforts at promoting alternative fuels.
It is also the case that federal purchasing of a particular design solution
or fuel puts the federal government in the business of trying to anticipate
future market preferences and benefits. These objections need to be taken into
account in designing the federal governments strategy. But they need not
stop the efforts as outlined. These efforts should be viewed as an investment
that promotes options of significance for energy security.
Use federal procurement authority to achieve other demand management goals.
For example, review and rigorously implement minimal targets for mileage standards
for the federal automotive fleet, standards for energy conservation in federal
buildings, and other current standards already in effect.
Review and establish new and stricter CAFE (Corporate Average Fuel Economy) mileage standards, especially for light trucks. There are many good reasons to accelerate efforts to reclassify SUVs and other vehicles (currently classified as "trucks") as "automobiles," for the purposes of application of CAFE as well as emissions standards. For example, mandating CAFE minimum fuel-mileage standards for light trucks of 25 miles per gallon (comparable level to four-door automobiles) could save 925,000 b/d of fuel demand. While the automotive industry has traditionally argued that artificial standards can weaken its profitability and therefore its ability to maintain employment levels and investments in competitive vehicles, it is also the case that such standards can increase their longer-term global competitive position given other suppliers efforts in this direction. It must be noted, however, that it takes seven to ten years for the entire U.S. automobile fleet to turn over. Therefore, changes to CAFE standards are not likely to have instantaneous results, which is a good reason to start now. Some tax breaks to consumers who purchase cars with more favorable mileage could hasten the process of moving low-mileage cars off the road quickly. Even without government intervention, hybrid vehicles still could make up as much as 15 to 20 percent of new vehicle purchases, experts predict. This will contribute to a drop in U.S. oil demand of 600,000 b/d. Studies show that tax incentives can hasten and magnify this process.
Actively promote the development of energy efficient technologies, including
fuel-efficient engine and vehicle technologies to encourage more efficient worldwide
use of scarce oil resources. China alone is projected to add more than 150 million
automobiles to the road in the next two decades. Efficiency of that fleet has
global implications for oil requirements.
3. Maximize Efforts to Develop Clean Sources of Domestic Fuel Supply
There is no doubt that the United States has a premier energy resource base.
But it is a mature province whose potential exceeds that of many other conventional
resource provinces. In addition, it is physically incapable of rendering this
country energy independent given our extremely high energy consumption rates.
And, during the past twenty years, while other countries have made more of their
resource base available for energy resource exploration and exploitation, the
United States is virtually unique in removing significant acreage that was once
available for these purposes from energy development.
The United States requires a better-balanced and more integrated approach to maintenance and enhancement of the environment and energy-supply objectives. Twenty years ago, nearly 75 percent of federal lands were available for private lease to oil and gas exploration companies. Since then the share has fallen to about 17 percent. And a significant share of the remaining 17 percent is for all practical purposes unavailable for drilling.
The Bush administration made vocal campaign promises about one major potential oil and gas provincethe coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. (It also supports a pipeline to bring some 49 trillion cubic feet of Prudhoe Bay gas reserves to the lower forty-eight states, a proposal that is designed to expand opportunities for additional gas exploration in Alaska). As the Task Force prepares its proposals, it cautions that unless the administrations proposals to permit exploration in the ANWR take into account other aspects of policyincluding other aspects of land management as well as environmental policy and demand-management policythe administration could seriously erode support for its ANWR proposals.
The Task Force recommends consideration of the following with respect to domestic resources and energy use. These recommendations recognize that at present domestic drilling is constrained by many factors other than availability of land. They also recognize that sound energy policy must begin at home since, from three perspectives, it is desirable to foster domestic supply: national security, balance of payments, and the comparative advantage of American industry. Even so, lack of equipment and personnel, in particular, will curtail the expansion of domestic and international supplies for a number of years.
A. Oil and Natural Gas
Accelerate completion of the U.S. oil and gas reserve inventory, as mandated by Congress, highlighting restrictions on resource development. Such an inventory needs to be completed soon and well before any plan is adopted to develop particular domestic resources. The secretary of the interior has been mandated to conduct an inventory of all onshore federal lands, identifying reserve estimates as well as restrictions on resource development on them. It is critical that this inventory be completed soon and well before any plan is adopted to develop particular domestic resources. It could well turn out, for example, that the estimated 300 trillion cubic feet of natural gas resources in the Rocky Mountain Overthrust could be a more appropriate and cost-effective target for industry exploitation than the distant resources of the ANWR. The virtues of completing the inventory first are that it would provide an information base on which intelligent decision-making concerning land availability can be made. It would also provide a more scientific base for any tradeoffs than need to be accommodated with conflicting environmental and other land-use policies. Additionally, expanding this national effort to an international one that includes Canada and Mexico as well could be an important step in delineating a hemispheric energy policy.
Undertake an accelerated and complete review of tax and fiscal policy as they
impact oil and gas development in the United States, taking into account the
competitive position of the U.S. fiscal regime as compared to international
conditions, in order to attract more capital to the sector. While the United
States has a mature oil and gas resource base, it also has one of the least
efficient tax regimes in the world when it comes to oil and gas development.
The main direct tax is the royaltywhich has a well-understood negative
impact on development and field abandonment. Changes to federal corporate taxes,
especially during the 1980s, further exposed the oil and gas industry. The Alternative
Minimum Tax has also posed a major problem to development of supply in that
its deters activity in a cyclical downturn. Industry has been adverse to a tax
reviewexcept with respect to royalty holidaysbecause of fear that
it could lead to even more restrictive policies (especially during a period
when the exploration and production sector is reaping record taxes). Yet any
effort to enhance domestic supply must be based on what makes for sensible fiscal
incentives. The administration should be encouraged, therefore, to undertake
this fiscal review as it also reviews its land management policies.
B. Electricity
Create an appropriate comprehensive statutory framework for electricity restructuring and for reestablishing a capacity cushion for the nations power supplies. A new framework needs to overcome the adverse impacts of todays highly fragmented regime, which has reduced the reliability of the U.S. power grid and impeded investment in new generation and transmission capacity. This is a key conclusion highlighted by the regional and national impacts of the California power crisis on electricity supplies and the economy. The patchwork nature of twenty-five separate state legal and regulatory frameworks has reduced the reliability of the transmission network and impeded investment in new generation and transmission capacity as these jurisdictions have instituted some form of electricity deregulation or restructuring. The uneven landscape of state-by-state deregulation, and growing competition for power supplies between regions, have produced a climate of investment uncertainty that is inhibiting system upgrades and expansion at a time of dramatically increasing electricity demand. Thus, states must work together with each other and with the federal government to ensure that regional power and transmission markets are efficient and competitive. State and federal authorities must also provide for the continued reliability of the interstate bulk power grid. The challenge will be simultaneously to do the following: meet increased demand for reliable and high-quality electric power; create a favorable investment climate to expand the power infrastructure to meet demand; expedite the development of new infrastructure; increase the efficiency of power generation and distribution; and, at the same time, mitigate the ongoing impacts of power generation, distribution, and use on the environment.
Work expeditiously to improve the statutory framework for approvals of the siting of power generating plants, as well as transmission and distribution infrastructure. This is likely to require an unprecedented level of cooperation between the federal, state, and local governments, as well as environmental, consumer, and industry stakeholders. Only the federal administration can provide the focus and leadership such an effort requires. The administration thus needs to consider incentives to states and localities to work together to encourage rapid construction of the required infrastructure.
Evaluate the need for incentives to stimulate the introduction of new technologies into the power marketplace, including distributed generation and co-generation. Working with industry partners, the administration should work to substantially increase investment in technologies that enhance the efficiency, reliability, and quality of the power transmission and distribution infrastructure. Policy should also focus on reducing the business, regulatory, legal, technological, and institutional barriers to the market introduction of new electricity technologies, such as distributed generation and co-generation. And the administration should continue to promote research and development for alternative sources of power and work with industry to help stimulate deployment of these technologies.
Work with state regulators and regional authorities to allow and incentivize companies to offer long-term contracts for electric power and to encourage them to hedge price risks associated with such contracts to maximize the part of the market that will not be susceptible to large shifts in the spot market price. The use of long-term contracts should help protect consumers from wild swings in electricity rates when a shortage occurs in markets. The downside is that companies who arent successfully hedged can be forced into bankruptcy by the margin call on adverse market swings or by an unwise hedging program. Experience shows that even the most expert traders can make these errors. Thus, the institution of long-term contracting is only a partial solution.
Encourage the development of power capacity cushions on a regional basis. For example, it could consider providing incentives to system operators to buy stand-by power at auction to cover anticipated energy level needs, in order to encourage construction and maintenance of spare capacity. The guaranteed market and forward sale of stand-by power will encourage generators to build up incremental capacity and to maintain spare generation capacity that can be used to smooth out market disruptions or anomalies. Although this will mean that overall costs for electricity might be slightly higher on a long-term basis, it will prevent sudden sharp rises that can be harmful to the public good.
Recognize that many of the policies and actions that are needed to meet increased demand for power generation are power source-specific.
Assure that regulations protect open access to electricity generated by new,
nontraditional fuel sources. This action is necessary to guarantee that new
sources cannot be locked out of the transmission system by suppliers using traditional
fuels.
C. Natural Gas
Apply strong leadership to develop a coherent, comprehensive strategy promoting efficient development and use of the nations natural gas resources. National policy can be especially effective in enhancing market efficiencies and in accelerating long-term supply. This was the conclusion of the National Petroleum Councils report of December 1999 on "Natural Gas: Meeting the Challenge of the Nations Growing Natural Gas Demand." There is no doubt that a strong White House role is required to coordinate the array of disparate government departments and independent federal agencies that play a part in decision-making on natural gas. A strong White House role is also required to promote collaboration between federal, state, local, and tribal governments, in order to ensure the availability and deliverability of natural gas to all classes of consumers.
Endorse the construction of natural gas pipelines from the Arctic to the lower-forty-eight
states and work bilaterally with Canada and the state of Alaska to address important
issues that need to be resolved.
U.S.-Canadian relations are critical for delivering natural gas to the Lower
Forty-Eight. Without full cooperation from Canada, efforts to harness additional
resources from Alaska will be stymied. Critical support for the pipeline would
include making the infrastructure permitting process efficient and helping resolve
differences surrounding questions of routing, environment, and construction.
This calls for a federal role in coordinating authorities in Alaska, within
a variety of U.S. federal agencies, and with Canada.
Assure that regulatory authorities work together to bring about natural gas
market efficiencies, including the provision of open access to markets by producers
and to supply by end-users, and that allow delivery costs to be determined transparently
by market forces so that commodity values are transparent to both producers
and consumers. The regulatory process needs to ensure that delivery systems
provide open access to markets by producers and to supply by end-users. Regulators
should promote efficiencies that allow delivery costs to be determined by market
forces so that commodity values are transparent to both producers and consumers.
Regulations also need to protect open access to electricity generated by new
fuels outside the traditional domain, such as fuel cells or biomass. This means
that regulators should:
Carry out regular pipeline rate reviews to assure that cost reductions are passed along to consumers.
Promote incentive rate-making plans to tie the financial returns of pipelines to efficiency gains and losses. Such plans should also require sharing of efficiency gains with customers.
Invest inor stimulate and encourage private-sector investment inresearch and development of technologies that focus on safe and cost-effective ultra-deep water production, smaller drilling footprints, and increased production from non-conventional sources, including methane hydrates. Production of abundant and affordable gas supply in environmentally sensitive ways will depend on technology developments.
Encourage natural gas exploration and production through a series of technology-targeted tax incentives that also encourage use of advanced, environmentally sensitive technologies and that provide counter-cyclical support for exploration and production. (E.g., geological and geophysical expensing, deepwater, marginal gas well production, and infrastructure investments in such equipment as drilling rigs.)
Initiate a mitigation forum process to evaluate infrastructure needs and reduce delays in new pipelines and storage facility siting. The process should involve regulators, environmentalists, technology developers, landowners, consumer advocates, and industry users. In this manner authorization to construct new pipeline infrastructure should be accomplished without undue delay, consistent with ensuring that environmental factors are fully considered and addressed. This new infrastructure will be needed to meet growing demand and to relieve capacity constraints wherever they exist. The federal government should work with industry and state agencies to re-engineer underground storage facilities.
Consider providing incentives to state and local governments that agree to expedite natural gas infrastructure siting.
Invest inor stimulate and encourage private sector investment intechnologies to ensure pipeline infrastructure integrity, reliability, flexibility, and safety.
Foster development of advanced storage technologies to increase regional storage capacity and serve peak power and distributed generation markets.
Evaluate the potential of imported Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) as a major additional
source of base load as well as incremental supply for the United States, and
in the process consider accelerating environmental reviews required for siting
as well as accommodating the commercial logistics and other user needs associated
with facilities built or operated by LNG suppliers. Accommodation of the commercial
logistics and needs associated with LNG regasification facilities will be important
where such facilities may be built or operated by LNG suppliers. Government
policy will need to address means of accommodating the commercial practicalities
that attend supplier-driven LNG facilities.
D. Coal
Given the nations abundance of coal resources, it is critical to foster
the development of clean coal technologies such as gasification to promote coal
use in power generation. At the same time, such development programs should
mitigate the environmental impacts of coal combustion to meet local, regional,
and global environmental challenges. Coal use continues to growit currently
supplies 55 percent of U.S. power generation and has increased in absolute volume
by 17 percent in the last decade. Its abundance makes it a fuel of choice for
national energy security reasons; but its use poses some of the most difficult
environmental challenges of energy production. Its worldwide use is also expected
to grow dramatically, as it represents an abundant and inexpensive source of
fuel for power in numerous fast-growing developing countries, including China
and India.
Investment in clean coal technologies continues to pay dividends. For example, in the United States, increased coal use has been accompanied by reduced sulfur emissions. These proven technologies need to be deployed more broadly and further advances in them need to be promoted through a renewed focus on research and development, as well as fiscal incentives that are offered to these ends. The government needs also to find ways to foster entirely new technologies, such as carbon sequestration technologies that could dramatically increase the attraction of coal internationally as a fuel whose use would not generate large greenhouse-gas emissions.
The vital importance of further breakthroughs in the area of clean coal cannot be understated. It could be a major contribution to U.S. and global solutions to energy and environmental needs.
E. Nuclear
Support the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in relicensing expeditiously plants whose licenses will soon expire in order to extend plant life where possible. Nuclear power plants now generate about 20 percent of the countrys power. Existing plants are operating with unprecedented capacity factors of more than 85 percent. The importance of this significant base load has been reinforced by recent events in California. Increased attention to power plant emissions, especially greenhouse gases, may further increase the attractiveness of nuclear power. Licenses of operating plants, some initially granted for forty years, are beginning to expire in 2010. The NRC is beginning to relicense to extend plant life by an additional twenty years.
Work constructively with stakeholders to resolve nuclear power plant spent fuel (and high-level defense waste) disposition within the next few years, since this is critical to preserving viable nuclear options for the nation. This will require high-level administration attention. In particular, the scientific study of Yucca Mountain as a repository site and parallel development of engineered barriers will present the President and Congress with the final suitability decision and licensing application in about a year. If the site is deemed suitable based on science and technology, the administration should work with the state of Nevada, the nuclear utilities, and the stakeholders to develop a path forward to resolve current disputes and meet federal responsibilities of accepting spent fuel, as well as disposing of high-level defense waste.
Work to improve the investment climate for new nuclear power plant construction, through NRC streamlining of licensing procedures and by resolving uncertainties surrounding electricity deregulation and restructuring. No new nuclear power plants have been ordered in the United States for more than twenty years. But the impact of reactor accidents at Three Mile Island and Chernobyl may well be fading, with the excellent safety record of Western-designed reactors and the availability of more advanced designs and their additional safety features. However, safety alone is not the issue. Uncertainty surrounding deregulation is also a problem, given the very large capital costs of nuclear plants.
Work with Congress to sustain the front-end domestic nuclear fuel cycle through the next half-decade. A key element is the development of U.S.-origin competitive enrichment technology. The front-end of the nuclear fuel cycle requires attention. Congress has established a statutory requirement to maintain viable domestic uranium mining, conversion, and enrichment industries, yet all three sectors are unhealthy. Uranium enrichment is particularly sensitive because of its implications for nuclear weapons proliferation, and reliability of American enrichment supply is as important for slowing the spread of enrichment technology as it is for supplying domestic utilities.
Work with Western European allies and Japan to shape a future nuclear fuel cycle that would garner shared support. The very large disconnect between U.S. versus European and Japanese fuel-cycle policies is detrimental to sustaining nuclear power as a viable and potentially important option. Unresolved issues concerning spent-fuel isolation plague the choice of an open fuel cycle by the United States (i.e., once-through utilization of nuclear fuel followed by geological disposal). The alternative closed fuel cycle advanced by France, Japan, and others (i.e., reprocessing spent fuel to extract and recycle plutonium) is plagued by large accumulation of separated plutonium and unfavorable economics. The proliferation danger posed by separated plutonium led to the U.S. decision in the 1970s to pursue the open fuel cycle. The administration needs to work actively and closely with allies to help shape a future fuel cycle that would satisfy our nonproliferation concerns and their energy security needs, while minimizing waste issues and enhancing safety.
Work with the education system to reinvigorate training in nuclear science and technology. There has been a precipitous drop in the number of American students studying nuclear engineering, and some leading universities are on the threshold of irrevocably cutting out the relevant essential educational programs and infrastructures. The administration needs to work with the university community to sustain nuclear science and technology education during the next decade in order to help preserve the nuclear power option. New technologies such as small innovative reactors promise to offer an alternative to traditional designs and the problems described above.
4. Augment Diplomatic Initiatives to Spur Non- OPEC Production Increases
The more supply that is available on international energy markets and the more
diversified their sources, the better equipped markets will be to handle a disruption
without a market failure or extreme price response. The United States has a
stated policy favoring diversity of oil supply and working to promote oil production
from countries outside of OPEC.
Expand Oil and Gas Forum programs
One method used to promote investment in non-OPEC resources and to remove fiscal,
bureaucratic, or political obstacles thwarting such investment is to convene
major trade conclaves involving U.S. energy companies and political leaders
from non-OPEC countries. The Departments of Energy, Commerce, and State together
have initiated such forums as the China Oil and Gas Forum and the Latin American
Oil and Gas Forum, which provide a venue for discussion of investment opportunities
and problems among U.S. industry, U.S. government, and non-OPEC industry and
government. The budget for such programs should be expanded to cover other important
oil-producing countries or regions such as Russia, West Africa, the Caspian,
and Indonesia.
Investigate ways to facilitate increased investment in Mexicos oil and
gas sectors
Mexico is one of the four largest oil suppliers to the United States and could
become a significant natural gas producer if it had the resources to finance
additional exploration activities in the Yucatan peninsula. Northern Mexico
has strong demand for natural gas and electric power and currently imports a
net of 0.25 billion cubic meters of natural gas from the United States. Mexico
has an important role to play in North American energy markets, and assistance
should be brought to bear in its struggle to finance a higher level of investment
in its hydrocarbons sector. Higher production of natural gas in Mexico would
not only satisfy demand from northern Mexico, creating a backup for natural
gas supply in the United States, but could be an important source to meet rising
U.S. demand. At a minimum, the administration should investigate ways to support
Mexican government investment in natural gas resources. But the administration
may also want to consider leverage tools that could be brought to bear to assist
political leaders in Mexico who advocate that Mexico open its energy sector
to foreign investment, starting with natural gas. This latter policy would garner
the strong support of U.S. energy companies and demonstrate the administrations
commitment to increase natural gas supplies in the hemisphere. Activity that
would encourage U.S. participation in Mexicos energy industry would deflect
suggestions that support for Mexicos oil and gas industry should take
a second seat to developing U.S.-based resources.
Ultimately, Mexicos resources are closer and maybe more economical to
develop than those in Alaska. However, Mexicos constitution blocks ownership
participation in oil and gas fields by foreign entities, and Mexicos oil
workers unions are heavily set against any foreign participation in Mexicos
oil and gas activities under any kind of arrangement. Thus, U.S. visibility
on this issue could create some political tension with Mexico in the short term,
even if it is beneficial for both countries in the longer term. One solution
to this dilemma might be to keep discussion of opening Mexicos natural
gas sector within a hemispheric focus, including Canadian and Brazilian oil
and gas firms as well as American firms, in order to diffuse attention from
the negative aspects of Mexican popular opinion regarding U.S.-led investment
in Mexican resources.
Encourage reforms in Russias energy sector
Further enhancement of the Russian energy sector would help the United States
attain the diverse oil and gas supplies that will be needed during the coming
years to moderate rising dependence on the Middle East. Without a massive injection
of capital, Russias production, which has dropped by half since the collapse
of the Soviet Union, could continue to stagnate if not fall in the coming years.
Russian oil production is projected to rise only marginally to about 6.5 million
b/d during the next decade and then only if investments can be increased to
twice the current level, according to Russias Ministry for Fuel and Energy.
Investment scandals, poorly articulated property rights, unstable tax and legal
regimes, and bureaucratic barriers have had a chilling effect on foreign investment,
scaring away most international investors from Russias energy sector.
The Gore-Chernomerdyn effort included a rehabilitation package for Russias
oil and gas industry but many of the funds allocated were not extended due to
the significant barriers encountered by U.S. companies trying to operate in
the country.
However, there appears to be a major change taking place in Russia under President
Vladimir Putin, whose government is showing renewed interest in energy-sector
reform, and new oil and gas laws look to be forthcoming. This progress from
the Russian side might open the door for a new initiative from the United States
on energy trade and investment, as well as the development of a production-sharing
agreement law. In particular, the United States should support European initiatives
to bring Russia into the European energy charter. (See section on multilateral
institutions, recommendations 7 and 9.) However, while energy is a potential
area of cooperation between the United States and Russia, other foreign policy
and security issues are likely to take precedence. Still, the United States
must consider seriously the fact that a declining Russian energy industry, while
possibly curbing Russias military budget and thereby reducing Moscows
ability to challenge U.S. interests, will make it extremely difficult for the
United States to promote diversity of international supply. Given Russias
important role as an energy supplier to Europe, U.S.-Russia policy should not
be pursued without debate concerning energy supply considerations and consequences.
Improve access to information, as well as transparency of comparative oil and
gas fiscal commercial regimes
Oil and gas investment in any particular country or region is influenced not
only by geology, but also by the fiscal regime and other aspects of government
take. Experience has shown that major changes in tax policy can stimulate new
investment and delay a decline in oil production or even promote a production
increase in mature fields. This was clearly demonstrated through the 1980s in
the U.K. sector of the North Sea. Non-OPEC countries must stay abreast of international
trends in fiscal terms and other aspects of government take to ensure that their
investment terms remain competitive; but competitors may seek to cloud transparency
for competitive reasons, making it difficult for countries to know when an improvement
in terms is necessary. The United States has a strong interest in promoting
transparency and education about trends in oil and gas investment terms in non-OPEC
to help keep these countries competitive and attractive for investors. This
can be handled via the Oil and Gas Forums mentioned above, through reviving
the program of publicly available embassy reports on the oil and gas industries
of various host countries, and through U.S. Agency for International Development
(AID)sponsored training programs, as well as through Internet resources
such as the Department of Energy website and IEA reports.
5. Initiate Diplomatic Efforts to Spur the Reopening of Countries That Have
Nationalized and Monopolized Their Upstream Sectors
Middle East Gulf crude oil currently makes up around 25 percent of world oil
supply, but could rise to 3040 percent during the next decade as the regions
key producers pursue higher investments to capture expanding demand for oil
in Asia and the developing world. If political factors were to block the development
of new oil fields in the Gulf, the ramifications for world oil markets could
be quite severe.
There have been discussions in several important oil producing countries, notably Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, to reopen their upstream oil and gas sectors to foreign investors to garner the necessary finance and technology for the massive investment necessaryestimated at anywhere from $6 to $40 billion. This reopening is important and should be on the bilateral U.S. agenda with these countries. The Department of State, together with the National Security Council, the Department of Energy, and the Department of Commerce should develop a strategic plan to encourage reopening to foreign investment in these important states of the Middle East Gulf. While there is no question that this investment is vitally important to U.S. interests, there is strong opposition to any such reopening among key segments of the Saudi and Kuwaiti populations. This opposition must be taken into account so that pursuit of the investment program does not fuel anti-Americanism in these countries or destabilize their ruling regimes.
6. Review Oil Sanctions Policy to Identify Ways to Reduce the Negative Impact
on Energy Supplies While Accomplishing the Objectives for Which the Sanctions
Were Imposed.
More oil could likely be brought into the market place in the coming years if
oil-field development could be enhanced by participation of U.S. companies in
countries where such investments are currently banned, particularly in Libya
where frozen U.S. assets remain in limbo. Resources are large and, with major
contributions of foreign investment capital, large additions to production rates
could be accrued in the coming two to three years.
Efforts should be made through cooperation and collaboration with Congress to phase out or drop sanctions that are no longer relevant to U.S. strategic objectives. Sanctions regimens that are ineffective should be reevaluated and restructured to increase their chances of producing the desired outcomes. An easing of sanctions in any particular country might conflict with other U.S. policy goals and must be reviewed in this context. However, the costs of prolonging these sanctions, both in terms of energy policy and foreign policy, must also be taken into account. The government needs to weigh arguments that sanctions are needed to restrain revenues of regimes whose policies are hostile to U.S. interests against the reality that imposition of oil sanctions on too many regimes at once can be ineffective and can have cumulative adverse effects. When they are effective they can also reduce market competition and contribute to overall higher oil price levels, higher U.S. vulnerability to disruption, and higher revenues for the very same adversaries. The latter can especially be the case when world markets are tight and other suppliers will not or are unable to increase supply to make up for the loss from the sanctioned country.
7. Develop a Credible International Stance on Global Warming and Other Environmental
Issues
The United States lacks a clear and consistent policy reconciling energy and
environmental objectives, and this is a large deficit in both U.S. domestic
and foreign policy. Attempts to integrate energy and environmental policy continue
to be hampered by the existence of market externalities, in which the true social
costs of consumption of different fuel sources are not reflected in their purchase
price. It is important in fashioning policy to clearly define externalities
and environmental objectives from the outset. Environmental economic measures
must tackle pollution at the point where it occurs, and such measures should
also be deemed to have significant effect. They should be based on sound science
and not constitute a tax on general economic activity. Thus, some specialists
advocate that "green" taxes should be revenue neutral, except when
spent on related activities, such as cleanups. Tradable permits can be considered
in cases where tax solutions offer a strong policy alternative. Cleaner fuels
should face a lower fiscal burden than those that have higher negative environmental
consequences and thereby impose real costs and social burdens.
Conduct a thorough review of the Kyoto Accords and recommend ways for the United
States to revive international discussions on climate change and also execute
bilateral agreements with regard to promoting environmental safeguards
A greater U.S. commitment on the global warming issue can help demonstrate seriousness
regarding environmental issues, which have become central concerns of the international
community. A strong U.S. international commitment can build on the strong U.S.
domestic record on environmental matters, especially at a time when some more
limited immediate environmental regulations might have to be waived temporarily
to defend or de-bottleneck energy supply.
Investigate new ways to promote efficiency and clean energy technologies, including
clean coal, expanded natural gas use, and automobile mileage and emission standards,
for use in large consuming countries in Latin America and Asia, especially China
and India
Programs can include joint research on safer, proliferation-proof nuclear technologies,
clean coal, renewable technologies, and alternative fuel automotive design.
The IEA program on energy efficiency education and technology transfer should
be expanded, and education programs on energy conservation practices should
be developed not only inside U.S. public schools but also for governments and
schools in other countries such as Russia, the Former Soviet Union, China, India,
etc.
Develop a strategy to coordinate with the European Union and the Association
of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) on refined petroleum product specifications
through multilateral dialogue and bilateral agreements.
Just as better coordination is required between environmental regulators and
energy policy officials nationally, so too should better coordination between
these authorities be promoted on an international level. The issue of Market
Balkanization referred to earlier in these recommendations exists on an international
level as well as on a national level. Lack of coordination on both product specifications
and the timing of their introduction into the market have an important impact
on trade and on pockets of supply shortages internationally. Better coordination
would mean that shortfalls in one country could be rebalanced more easily by
exports from another. This will help smooth localized price volatility and create
more orderly international products trade.
8. Support Efforts to Develop and Disseminate Timely and Accurate Information
about the Fundamentals of Energy Market Supply and Demand.
Market efficiency and the smooth transition to deregulated energy supply and
price is highly dependent upon adequate market signals and information. Yet
ironically, in the information age, in which technology and communications advances
have facilitated the development and dissemination of data, there has been a
perceived decline in market transparency.
One of the major roles of public authorities in assuring the smooth functioning of markets now centers on the provision of data and information to facilitate market transparency. So far, this important role for governments has been under-recognized. There are clear obstacles to market transparency, and these will be hard to eliminate. These include the following:
Restructuring of industry, with new "nontraditional" enterprises emerging that have not reported fundamentals to government (e.g., Independent Power Producer (IPPs in the United States).
Restructuring of industry, with loss of old reporting functions in some companies.
Lack of government commitment to collecting data.
Increased role of non-industrialized societies in the global energy sector, with lack of data collection and development infrastructure.
Decline of data collection integrity with the collapse of the Soviet Union, at a time when the Russia and other successor states are more integrated into global energy markets.
Refusal of some governments, most importantly oil producing countries including
Saudi Arabia and Venezuela, to provide fundamental transparent information on
supplies to markets, capacity to produce, reserves, and levels of inventories.
As a result, neither companies nor governments are receiving adequate and timely
information at a time when markets are more volatile and more subject to large
price movements. They are often making inappropriate decisions affecting the
public good largely because their information base is wrong, threatening stable,
affordable energy prices and reliable supply. It is widely agreed that the most
reliable data are those compiled by the IEA. Yet there is widespread distrust
of the integrity of IEA data, not only in OPEC and in the developing world but
within OECD countries as well. Recognizing this, recently the Saudi government
proposed establishing a permanent global institution in Riyadh to bridge differences
between exporting countries and others. Yet Riyadh has acted in the past to
thwart a transparent energy system. The commitment of Saudi Arabia to promote
data transparency should be explored and tested by the administration.
Recognizing that transparency is an important element in maintaining orderly
markets generally and in times of energy or unexpected disruption in particular,
the administration should provide a higher budget for the Department of Energys
Energy Information Agency.
The agency needs to strengthen its ability to collect domestic data on all aspects
of market fundamentals in order to restore the integrity of information on the
U.S. market, a critical step in enhancing market transparency. It should work
together with the IEA to improve the worldwide energy database, including data
on fundamentals for all primary energy sources, including country specific data.
The DOE should also investigate how to support and promote the sharing of accurate
data among major oil-producing and oil-consuming countries through private or
multilateral Internet publishing, publications, or regional organizations
9. Lay the Foundation for New Global Energy Institutions
If the domestic and international goals of U.S. energy policy are to be maximized,
it is time for the United States to consider revitalizing and revamping the
international mechanisms governing international investment and trade in energy.
The United States should try to lay the institutional framework of new international energy institutions. The institutions should be designed to achieve such goals as:
Greater Transparency. If the general goal of U.S. energy policy is the perfection
of markets so that investments can be made efficiently on a global basis in
energy resources, that goal must start with transparency. (See recommendation
9 above.)
Rules of Trade and Investment. At an international level, the energy sector
has retained far more of the elements of the pre-free trade and investment environment
of the 1920s and 1930s than any other sector, save, perhaps, agriculture. It
is, at the core, a highly politicized sector. Efforts to defuse those politics
have been relatively unsuccessful. There is little doubt that the objectives
of securing diversified energy resources on a diversified geographic basis would
be fostered by the adoption of international rules governing trade and investment
in energy resources. Nor is there much doubt that as societies have abandoned
the critical elements of resource nationalism, the basics are increasingly in
place for the establishment of such rules.
Keeping Energy and Other Issues on Separate Tracks. One of the major benefits
of establishing institutions through which governments agree to a set of rules
governing their mutual arrangements for trade and investment is that through
these rules governments would virtually explicitly be renouncing the use of
energy as instruments of foreign policy for non-energy purposes. The energy
world would parallel the world of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT) and the World Trade Organization. Governments would effectively agree
to most-favored-nation principles of trade and investment and would thereby
forswear the use of energy as an instrument of foreign policy against others
party to the agreements. For example, neither oil producers/exporters nor oil
importers would be able to embargo or boycottwith impunitytrade
or capital flows with other agreed parties. Such a rule would civilize the energy
sector much as other sectors of international trade and investment have been
civilized, with disputes settled about the sector per se, not about exogenous
issues.
The issue for the United States is not so much whether such new international
institutions are desirable. Rather, it is how to achieve them. But it is clear
that unless the United States assumes a leadership role in the formation of
new rules of the game, it will not simply forfeit such a role, which others
will assume. It will rather become reactive to initiatives put forth by other
governments which, if agreed by others, could leave U.S. firms, U.S. consumers,
and the U.S. government in a weaker position than is warranted. This could be
already happening, for example, with respect to the establishment of a new information
base for energy, given the commitment of the Saudi government to house such
a base within its borders. It could also be happening with respect to the European
Energy Charter, if Moscow agrees to ratify the Energy Charter treaty. In addition,
such an effort would assist in preventing the emergence of international groupings
of countries that could be antithetical to U.S. interestsfor example an
effort by Venezuela, Iraq, and Russia to align their interests against the United
States on a host of international energy and non-energy issues.
Embrace the spirit of "producer-consumer" dialogue, but not the framework with which it has been associated. The idea of a broadly based and ongoing dialogue of oil producers and consumers, graced by the presence of big oil companies, has increasingly moved back into the international limelight. It has been reinforced by the spirit of cooperation between key OPEC and non-OPEC countries working together on production constraints and working with key oil- importing countries on an implicit understanding over a "just price" for oil. OPEC governments have been pushing this theme for several reasons: volatility in oil prices; the collapse of oil prices and revenues in 1998; and high consumer taxes on petroleum products in Europe and Japan. Producers, including non-OPEC members Mexico and Oman, argued that a handful of relatively poor developing countries were forced to assume unfairly an extraordinary burden of adjustment to lower oil prices. They argued that those benefiting from the lower prices had an obligation to both understand their plight and assist them in doing something about it. It was for this reason that most OPEC countries were sympathetic to the U.S. governments use of SPR time-swaps in 2000 to help damp the price peaks of the autumn of 2000. OPECs position has been straightforward: OPEC cannot, by itself, bring stability to oil markets. Collaboration is needed both with other producing countries and with importing country governments, especially on thorny issues related to information on fundamentals, including the level of and management of inventories. The issues of this dialogue are global; but the framework wont work: market-based countries such as the United States cannot guarantee price floors; producer countries with limited output capacity cannot guarantee price ceilings. There can be no such bargain. Additionally, most OPEC governments do not want to see markets left to operate without government intervention. Some OPEC countries want not just a floor price, but a gradually rising one, however anti-competitive and administratively difficult this may be to enforce.
With U.S. leadership, foster broad international cooperation on a host of issues, including 1) sharing information on oil market trends and the basics on evolving environmental standards on petroleum products and emissions; 2) promoting mechanisms for attracting investment capital; and 3) coordinating information on investments in refinery upgrading and in new demand, which would define the requirements for new grassroots plants. The question is, How should appropriate global arrangements be institutionalized for a globalized world energy sector?
Build global energy institutions in three ways:
Consider using the European Energy Charter as the basis of the sort of energy
institutions that the United States should want to adopt on a global basis.
The original idea of a single European energy market extending from the Atlantic
to Siberia, put forward in 1990, was that once unleashed by Western investments,
ex-Soviet oil and gas resources could make Europe virtually self-sufficient,
ending dependence on the Middle East.
The main weakness of the original European scheme has always been that it takes
a long time to get from here to there. Ex-Soviet output has languished; the
rule of law has yet to be put in place in Russia; and no appropriate administrative
procedure has been developed in any of the successors to the Soviet Union. Moscow
has yet to ratify the treaty. The United States and Canada and Norway and Japan
all had fears of being left in the cold, and wavered between joining and killing
off the plan before it took root. But the Energy Charter put in place exactly
the genre of rules the United States should want to seek, covering investment,
trade, third-party transit, and fundamental environmental standards in member
countries. The United States was unable, however, to sign the final texts because
the European Union members included certain stipulationsWest-West issues
as they were knownthat were impossible to ratify because they touched
on constitutionally fundamental federal/state divisions of labor that were impossible
to overcome.
It is time to re-examine the European Energy Charter as the basis of the sort of energy institution that the United States should want to adopt on a global basis. The United States should take the lead to help forge a document that is in line with its interests and free from the problems of the past restrictions.
Build on overlapping interests and relations between the worlds largest
oil exporter (Saudi Arabia) and the largest energy consuming country (the United
States). Immediately after the end of the Gulf War, the two countries had a
once-in-a-generation opportunity to put in place the elements of a new institution
governing oil trade. They failed to take advantage of that window of opportunity.
Nonetheless, the elements of an agreement between the two superpowers of energy
are worth considering; they could enhance not only Saudi and U.S. energy security,
but that of much of the rest of the world as well. It could also help to assure
the smooth operation of market forces and the needed growth in international
oil trade and the energy trade in general. Whats more, this process could
work without either country undermining its respective partners in OPEC or the
IEA.
Negotiation of a bilateral agreement might start by fleshing out the long-standing
Saudi call for a system of "reciprocal energy security." In return
for even modest demonstrations of goodwill toward their country, Saudi ministers
have suggested that the United States and other consumer nations could gain
guaranteed access to "a fairly priced ocean of oil." A dialogue between
the two countries could focus initially on short-term mechanisms designed to
mitigate the economic damage caused by extreme oil price volatility. One element
could be bilateral planning for strategic oil storage and use.
Explore a mechanism promoting a North American or Western Hemispheric energy
agreement. NAFTA in many ways lays the groundwork for an internationally expanded
energy sector. Trade in energyin oil, natural gas, and electricityis
considered a central feature for the NAFTA agenda. The NAFTA-style framework
could serve as a starting point for extension of its energy stipulations southwards
into Central and Latin America, at least where energy issues are concerned.
The main impediment to pursuing an expanded NAFTA in energy on a hemispheric
and global basis has resided both in the Mexican political refusal to consider
amending its constitution to permit foreign investment in its energy sector
and in resistance from Canada.
As with Saudi Arabia, the United States has a major decision to confront with
respect to Mexico. Should the United States, in the process of pursuing more
secure access to more energy resources, more assertively pressure its energy
trading partners to open their sectors to foreign investment? Or should it remain
passive about such a decision, respecting the objectives of those countries
that chose to maintain a monopoly over their domestic energy resources? Whichever
route chosen by the U.S. government, long-range commercial links will remain
critical to reestablishing market stability in the petroleum sector. They are
equally central to making sure that the next time a supply glut develops, the
burden of adjusting to it is more equitably spread around the world.
Form the core of future multilateral agreements through bilateral or regional
arrangements based on improving markets, ensuring energy security, and guaranteeing
investments and trade on a mutual, reciprocal, and nondiscriminatory basis.
The benefits first captured by the United States and Saudi Arabia in a bilateral
agreement, or by the United States, Canada, and Mexico in a NAFTA agreement,
or by signatories to an Energy Charter, could be progressively enlarged with
similar agreements signed with other countries.
Building new international institutional arrangements in the new century will
not be easy. But it is by no means impossible. It need not require the dismantling
of OPEC or the IEA. Equally important, it need not require a politically difficult
dialogue between the two organizations, a broader U.N. forum, or another setting
for grand but fruitless discussions. Yet over time it could supersede all of
these. It could provide the foundation for a kind of General Agreement of Petroleum
and Petroleum Products, and Natural Gas, and Electricity. Thats how the
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade emerged from bilateral trade agreements
based on the extension of most-favored nation treatment to a broad array of
countries.
ACTION PLAN
The Task Force recommends a two-part action plan. The first stage consists of immediate actions to establish appropriate mechanisms to manage potential supply disruptions and to buffer the economy against harm from price volatility. The second part, consisting of longer-term actions, tackles the causes of recent shortfalls and emergencies. These initiatives establish a framework for developing new supplies and ample capacities along various linked global energy supply chains, while preserving and enhancing the human habitat.
Immediate Actions
There are few options available to government to expand supply in the short
run or to reduce short-term demand. Consequently, immediate actions should consider
all possible means of de-bottlenecking supplies and reducing obstacles to delivery
of supplies, both domestically and internationally. In addition, the short-term
actions must establish permanent machinery for integrating energy policy with
economic, environmental, national security, and foreign policies. To the degree
that new supplies alleviate energy shortfalls in periods of peak demand, they
will provide protection to consumers against price spikes.
Virtually all actions available to remove obstacles along the supply chain in the very short term involve tradeoffs with other policy objectives, including environmental, national security, and foreign policy concerns. Therefore, tradeoffs must be carefully weighed. Any supply-side relief also eliminates the only current mechanism for controlling demand: higher prices. Proper policy must consider measures that will prevent the public from keeping U.S. energy security perpetually beyond reach. For the immediate and short term, two sorts of policies need to be considered:
Those that quickly alleviate supply bottlenecks and damp demand.
Those that need to be adopted in a timely manner in order to have a desirable impact in the longer term, given the long lead times required in order to mobilize capital or new technologies.
Key elements of this plan are designed to:
safeguard supply in times of accident or disruption to ensure orderly markets.
ease and eventually eliminate constraints in the energy infrastructure.
promote diversity of clean, fairly priced, abundant supply sources.
enhance energy efficiency and curb unbridled growth of energy consumption.
ensure fair competition and market solutions.
promote restructuring of formal institutions and informal arrangements for
managing international energy relations.
Steps:
Deter and manage international supply shortfalls
Develop a diplomatic program ensuring GCC allies remain prepared and willing to maintain stable prices for global economic growth and also to fill any unexpected supply shortfalls in times of turmoil in the oil markets, whether created by accident or by adverse political actions on the part of any producing nation.
Prepare for contingencies and gain agreement on coordination in the IEA in efforts to deal with any removal of oil by adversary nations from international markets.
Minimize public conflicts with OPEC and other independent oil-exporting countries but emphasize importance of market factors in setting prices.
While moving to defuse tensions in the Arab-Israeli conflict through conflict resolution and negotiations, maintain energy and political issues in U.S.-Middle East relations on separate tracks.
Review policies toward Iraq to lower anti-Americanism in the Middle East and elsewhere; set the groundwork to eventually ease Iraqi oil-field investment restrictions.
Remove bottlenecks and other obstacles to energy supply, both domestically and internationally.
Streamline procedures for waiving product specifications.
Establish procedures to grant Jones Act waivers without adversely affecting U.S. ship owners or U.S. labor.
Enact legislation for federal primacy over state regulations especially with respect to product specifications and pipeline right of way.
Enact legislation to facilitate regional solutions to energy challenges.
Investigate whether any changes in U.S. policy would rapidly facilitate higher Caspian Basin oil exports.
Take a fresh approach to building and maintaining national strategic and commercial crude oil and petroleum product inventories.
Review the size and financing of the SPR.
Establish professional criteria for managing the SPR.
Establish clear policy for use of the SPR.
Review tax, accounting, and other factors affecting industrys incentives to hold petroleum product and natural gas inventories with the intent of enhancing inventories before seasonal demand, and neutralizing any adverse impact of current rules.
Encourage states to review minimum inventory for fuel switching where feasible and also fiscal incentives to industry to build inventories in advance of seasonal demand increases.
Develop mechanisms for a new national approach to energy policy.
Create an appropriate interagency process to articulate and promote energy security policy and integrate energy policy with overall economic, environmental, and foreign policy.
Review and streamline the allocation of authorities within the federal government, especially in areas of land management and energy.
Convene a national energy security summit to help develop a national consensus on energy policy objectives and means.
Develop a strategic communications plan on energy security policy in order
to educate the public on the difficulties of achieving short-term, unilateral
solutions to the nations energy dilemmas.
Long-Term Policy Initiatives
Review international approaches to build, maintain, and use strategic and commercial
crude oil and petroleum product inventories.
Enhance and modernize IEA strategic stockpile policies in light of the changed international market, taking into account situations that technically fall short of a supply disruption as well as different regulatory authorities among IEA members.
Encourage key non-IEA countries (e.g., China, India, Brazil) countries to develop strategic stocks.
Review IEA membership, taking into account the desirability of creating a new class of associated members who could be encouraged to hold minimum stocks and also benefit from direct participation in other IEA activities.
Accelerate demand-management efforts at home and internationally.
Take a proactive government position on demand management.
Use federal procurement authority to promote use of alternative fuels and develop programs to introduce new efficiency technologies into federal buildings and nascent transportation technologies into government vehicle fleets.
Use federal procurement authority to achieve other demand management goals.
Review and establish new and stricter CAFE mileage standards, especially for light trucks.
Actively promote the development of energy-efficient technologies, including fuel-efficient engine and vehicle technologies.
Maximize efforts to develop every clean source of domestic fuel supply.
Oil and natural gas
Accelerate completion of the U.S. oil and natural gas reserve inventory, as mandated by Congress, paying special attention to restrictions on resource development. Such an inventory needs to be completed soon and well before any plan is adopted to develop particular domestic resources.
Undertake an accelerated and complete review of tax and fiscal policy as they impact U.S. oil and gas development, taking into account the competitive position of the U.S. fiscal regime internationally, in order to attract more capital to the sector.
Power (Electricity)
Create an appropriate, comprehensive statutory framework for electricity restructuring and for reestablishing a capacity cushion for the nations power supplies. A new framework needs to overcome the adverse impacts of todays highly fragmented regime, which has reduced the reliability of power grid and impeded investment in new generation and transmission capacity.
Work expeditiously to improve the statutory framework for approvals of the siting of power generation plants, and transmission and distribution infrastructure.
Evaluate the need for incentives to stimulate the introduction of new technologies into the power marketplace, including distributed generation and co-generation.
Work with state regulators and regional authorities to let companies offer long-term contracts for electric power, and to encourage them to hedge price risks.
Encourage the development of regional power capacity cushions.
Recognize that many of the polices required to meet increased demand are power-source specific.
Assure that regulations protect open access to electricity generated by new nontraditional fuel sources.
Natural Gas
Apply strong leadership to develop a coherent, comprehensive strategy promoting efficient development and use of the nations natural gas resources.
Endorse the construction of natural gas pipelines from the Arctic to the lower forty-eight states and work bilaterally with Canada and the U.S. state of Alaska to address important issues that need to be resolved.
Assure regulatory authorities work together to bring about natural gas market efficiencies, including the provision of open access to markets by producers and to supply by end-users, and that allow delivery costs to be determined transparently by market forces so that commodity values are transparent to both producers and consumers.
Invest inor stimulate and encourage private sector investment inresearch and development of technologies that focus on safe and cost-effective ultra-deep water production, smaller drilling footprints, and increased production from non-conventional sources, including methane hydrates.
Encourage natural gas exploration and production through a series of technology-targeted tax incentives that also encourage use of advanced, environmentally sensitive technologies, and that provide counter-cyclical support for exploration and production.
Initiate a mitigation forum process to evaluate infrastructure needs and reduce delays in new pipeline and storage facility siting.
Consider providing incentives to state and local governments that agree to expedite natural gas infrastructure siting.
Invest inor stimulate and encourage private-sector investment intechnologies ensuring pipeline infrastructure integrity, reliability, flexibility, and safety.
Foster development of advanced storage technologies to increase regional storage capacity and serve peak power and distributed-generation markets.
Evaluate the potential of imported Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) as a major additional source of base load as well as incremental supply, and in the process accelerate environmental reviews required for siting as well as accommodate the commercial logistics and other user needs associated with facilities built or operated by LNG suppliers.
Coal: Given the nations abundance in coal resources it is critical to foster the development of clean coal technologies to promote coal use in power generation, while mitigating the impacts of coal combustion to meet local, regional, and global environmental challenges
Nuclear
Support the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to extend plant life where possible
Constructively work with stakeholders to resolve nuclear power plant spent fuel (and high-levels defense waste) disposition within the next few years, since this is critical to preserving viable nuclear options for the nation.
Work to improve the investment climate for new nuclear power plant construction through NRC streamlining of licensing procedures and by resolving uncertainties surrounding electricity deregulation and restructuring.
Work with Congress to sustain the front-end domestic nuclear fuel cycle through the next half-decade.
Work with Japan and allies in Western Europe to shape a future nuclear fuel cycle that would garner shared support.
Work with the education system to reinvigorate training in nuclear science
and technology.
Augment diplomatic initiatives to spur non-OPEC production increases.
Expand Oil and Gas Forum programs.
Investigate ways to facilitate increased investment in Mexicos oil and gas sectors.
Encourage reforms in Russias energy sector.
Improve access to information and transparency on comparative oil and gas fiscal/commercial
regimes.
Initiate diplomatic efforts to encourage the reopening of countries that have
nationalized and monopolized their upstream sectors.
Review sanctions policies, to identify ways to reduce the negative impact on energy supplies while accomplishing the objectives for which the sanctions were imposed.
Develop a credible international stance on global warming and other environmental issues.
Conduct a thorough review of the Kyoto Accords and recommend ways for the United States to revive international discussions on climate change and also execute bilateral agreements to promote environmental safeguards.
Investigate new ways to promote efficiency and clean energy technologies, including clean coal, expanded natural gas use, and automobile mileage and emission standards, for use in large consuming countries in Latin America and Asia, especially China and India.
Develop a strategy to coordinate with the European Union and the Association
of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) on refined petroleum product specifications
through multilateral dialogue and bilateral agreements.
Support efforts to develop and disseminate accurate and timely and information
about the fundamentals of energy market supply and demand. The administration
should recognize that transparency is an important element in maintaining orderly
markets generally and in times of emergency or unexpected disruption in particular,
and thus should provide a higher budget for the Department of Energys
Energy Information Agency.
Lay the foundation for new global energy institutions
Embrace the spirit of the "producer-consumer" dialogue, but not the framework with which it has been associated.
With U.S. leadership, foster broad international cooperation on a host of issues including (1) sharing information on oil market trends and the basics of evolving environmental standards on petroleum products and emissions; (2) promoting mechanisms for attracting investment capital; and (3) coordinating information on investments in refinery upgrading and in new demand, which would define the requirements for new grassroots plants.
Build global energy institutions in three ways:
Consider using the European Energy Charter as the basis of an energy institution that the United States should want to adopt on a global basis.
Build on overlapping interests and relations between the worlds largest oil exporter (Saudi Arabia) and the largest energy-consuming country (the United States).
Explore a mechanism promoting a North American or Western Hemispheric energy
agreement.
Form the core of a future multilateral agreement through bilateral or regional
arrangements based on improving markets, ensuring energy security, and guaranteeing
investments and trade on a mutual, reciprocal, and nondiscriminatory basis
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ADDITIONAL VIEWS
On Environmental Considerations, Coordinated Energy and Environmental Policy,
Federal and State Jurisdictions, and Enhanced Demand-Side Measures
Energy policy is a derivative policyderiving from our security, economic,
and environmental goals. These are often in conflict. It is therefore difficult
to chart an energy policy path that is both coherent and on which consensus
can be achieved. Although supportive of many conclusions in the report, we are
generally more sanguine than the report regarding the ability of the market,
especially under current prices, to bring forth necessary increases in supply
for oil and gas. We would place primary emphasis on attending to those infrastructure
and volatility issues that are principally governmental in origin and solution.
We would also like to emphasize the need for government action in certain areas.
These include:
The need to focus international discussions on atmospheric concentrations of
greenhouse gases.
The development of a coordinated energy and environmental policy that includes
specific attention to carbon dioxide and incentives for voluntary early action
activities. Unless carbon dioxide is addressed, and addressed in a way that
is credible with major domestic constituencies and with others internationally,
the environmental regime will remain unstable, increasing investment uncertainty
and hence raising energy costsall this quite apart from ones judgments
about environmental impacts.
A legislative rebalancing of the boundaries between federal and state jurisdictions
to increase federal and regional influence over environmentally based standards
and within the electric power sector. The purpose of such a move would be to
establish and enforce a consistent and efficient transmission and reliability
regime applicable to all industry participants.
Efforts to enhance efficiency. Efficiency has a critical role in balancing supply
and demand. An analysis by the President's Committee of Advisors on Science
and Technology has shown that from 1970 to 2000, improvements in the overall
efficiency in the U.S. energy system (measured as real GNP divided by primary
energy supplied) saved two and one-half times more energy than the growth of
all sources of supply combined.
Increased federal support of research and development related to energy and
environmental technologies on both the demand and supply sides in order to sustain
a stable economic environment for energy, to accommodate economic growth, and
to meet environmental objectives. Technology has been critical to energy development
in the past and will continue to be so in the future.
Enhanced demand-side measures, including incentives for the accelerated introduction
of technology. More effective strategies for the deployment of existing technologies
can in particular make a significant difference. In electric power markets,
regulation must make demand sensitive to the cost of power if those markets
are to work properly. In other markets, the report calls for regulatory intervention
to achieve demand restraint, presumably on the unstated assumption that Americans
will not tolerate the use of taxes even though, we note, taxes would often be
a more efficient instrument of control.
Finally, we caution against using the "crisis" label, which in the
past has been the source of much energy policy mischief. Apart from the very
serious problems in the California and Western electricity markets, which largely
derive from policy, current energy markets are not in "crisis," and
precipitous action should not undermine thoughtful resolution of our conflicting
energy, economic, environmental, and security concerns. Apart from the very
serious problems in the California and Western electricity markets, most policy
made, current energy markets are not in "crisis" and precipitous action
should not undermine thoughtful resolution of our conflicting energy, economic,
environmental, and security concerns.
Graham Allison
Joseph C. Bell
Charles B. Curtis
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On Nuclear Energy
Nuclear power is an indigenous source of energyinvented and developed
in America. It is unique in having the capacity to provide enough energy to
last our nationand the worldfor at least a millennium. And it can
do so without emitting greenhouse gases. Nuclear energy should not be considered
as an option, but as a necessity to supply electricity for the nation now and
in the future. The Energy Information Administration has predicted that between
now and 2020, the United States will need 300,000 megawatts of additional generating
capacity, or the equivalent of three hundred large new plants of any type. A
minimum of one hundred fifty of these plants should be nuclear.
Michel T. Halbouty
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On Efficiency
Between 1973 and 1986, the U.S. economy's energy intensity (energy consumption
per dollar of GDP) declined by 35 percent; since then, the rate of decline slowed
dramatically, amounting to only about 15 percent over the period. That slowdown
raises total national energy costs by about $100 billion per year. Technologies
are in hand to once again accelerate energy efficiency and associated environmental
gains significantly. To realize this in a timely way requires that integrated
fiscal, regulatory, and technology policies be implemented by the administration
and Congress. In addition, the government should use its own procurement activities
far more aggressively to develop a reasonable domestic market for new clean
and efficient technologies and alternative fuels. It should also work with the
private sector and international financial institutions to advance associated
deployment in developing countries. Such actions, in creating stable markets
adequate to permit private development of alternative technologies and infrastructure,
can be an important element of energy security policy and reduce upside price
volatility. They fall into the category of "public good" actions addressing
market shortcomings. Opportunities are clearly available in both the transportation
and electricity sectors. Such demand-side initiatives can have a substantially
greater impact than supply-side initiatives on the overall supply/demand balance
over the next several years. However, the importance of stability to the success
of such initiatives requires a pragmatic joint administration-congressional
commitment.
On Diplomacy
In regard to dealing with oil-producing nations during periods of oil price
volatility, the report properly emphasizes the importance of quiet diplomatic
discussion and a bedrock principle of reliance on market forces. However, the
administration, confronted with non-market behavior, also needs to retain the
flexibility to use all diplomatic tools of engagement, including appropriate
use of public statements. For example, such diplomatic engagement during the
last year saw significant production increases while holding in place key international
support for use of the SPR to address inventory shortfalls and associated price
volatility.
On Critical Infrastructure Protection
Protecting our energy infrastructure from being disabled is an energy security
concern of increasing importance. Heightened vulnerability to physical and/or
cyber disruption stems from increased infrastructure interdependence, increased
risk of cascading failures, and increased reliance on information technologies
and telecommunications in the energy infrastructure. An appropriate response
demands new forms of cooperation between the private sector, local governments,
and the federal government, including robust and timely exchange of sensitive
information on both sides. The critical infrastructure protection initiative
of the last few years needs substantial upgrading in order to better coordinate
with infrastructure interdependencies, provide realistic evolving vulnerability
assessments, develop technologies to protect control systems, develop and deploy
integrated multi-sensor detection systems to warn of system disruption, and
lower institutional barriers to the associated public-private coordination activities.
A significant increase in Federal research and development funding for energy
infrastructure protection is needed.
Ernest J. Moniz
Melanie A. Kenderdine
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On Tax Incentives, Demand Efficiency, the SPR, and Reserve Capacity
Based on the serious energy supply problems facing the United States and in
view of past national energy policy initiatives (starting in the Nixon administration),
the greatest emphasis has always been focused on increasing supply of traditional
fuels. Also overlooked is the fact that the tax code has been extraordinarily
favorable to the exploration, production, and development of oil, natural gas,
and coal, and that the federal government has subsidized the development of
nuclear power far more than it has solar, wind, and other clean alternatives.
It is also obvious that there is little need to provide any tax or other incentive to the oil and gas industry. The major companies are reporting record profits and prices are at very high levels. Consumersespecially low- and moderate-income consumersare suffering from the high cost of natural gas and other heating fuels. Furthermore, many low-income households are facing utility cutoffs because of the sharp increase in heating costs. These problems require immediate solutionfrom sharply increasing low-income heating assistance and weatherization programs to prohibiting shut-offs.
While the report does recommend demand-side energy efficiency initiatives, I believe that such initiatives can go much further. Tax incentives for building energy-efficient homes and buildings, installing energy-efficient equipment, and purchasing energy-efficient appliances would create a vigorous market for energy-efficient products. On-the-shelf energy-efficient technologies are available. Expanding U.S. production of energy-efficient technologies will also enhance our domestic economy and provide new opportunities for exports.
While I support the reports recommendations regarding the building of the SPR, it is also important to define clearly when it should be used. Essentially, rapid increases in price are a sign of market failure. An emergency situation calling for use of the SPR could be defined as a percentage increase in price within a specified period of timesay, 25 percent over ten or fifteen days.
It is also critical to determine a requirement for companies that refine and import petroleum to hold a certain level of stock. As the report correctly points out, deregulation and reliance on the market does not ensure supply security. Previously, companies deemed it to be in their economic self-interest to hold inventory. Now, companies seek to hold as little inventory as possible in order to lower costs. This strategy of just-in-time inventory management has been very costly to consumers and the economy, and requires intervention by the federal government. While some may argue that we should rely on market forces to determine appropriate inventory levels, experience has confirmed that market forces are not working. Requiring all companies to hold a minimum level of inventory will provide at least some cushion of supply during periods of disruption.
A similar strategy ought to be applied to suppliers of natural gas, propane, and electricity. Deregulation of the electric utility market has left utility customers at the mercy of independent electricity generators who, unlike regulated utilities, have no incentive or requirement to build reserve capacity. The lack of reserve capacity, like the low levels of oil inventories, is a growing threat to consumers and the economy.
Ed Rothschild
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On Demand Restraint
The "energy crisis" described in the report results in large part
from the unconstrained growth of energy consumption. The United States is unique
among the industrialized countries in that it does not use fiscal measures to
limit growth in energy use. This policy must change to control growth of energy
use and maintain environmental quality. The most efficient mechanism would be
broad-based taxes on energy. In addition, the United States should consider
imposing higher taxes on vehicles to encourage the expedited introduction of
more efficient energy-using technology. These taxes should be introduced in
a revenue-neutral fashion. In addition, regions such as California, which face
energy disruptions due to infrastructure constraints, should consider replacing
regressive sales taxes with taxes on energy designed to offset the infrastructure
constraint.
On the Use of Strategic Stocks
The authors of the report are to be congratulated for their extensive discussion
of the role of inventories. Industrialized countries must recognize that the
increasingly competitive structure of the global economy prevents firms in the
energy sector from holding reserve capacity (whether in the form of inventories
or reserve generation capacity). Energy prices will be more volatile as a consequence.
Governments must develop measures to compensate for this structural change if
they wish to moderate the increase in the effect of price volatility. Such incentives
can include more frequent use of governmentally owned inventories or the provisions
of tax incentives to firms to build reserves. In planning such measures, governments
should recognize that mandated stocks or imposition of reserve requirements
by regulation generally are not effective. It must be understood that the cost
of any measure designed to mitigate price volatility will be borne either by
the taxpayer or the consumer. Efforts should be made to achieve the maximum
reduction in volatility at a minimum cost.
Philip K. Verleger Jr.
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DISSENTING VIEWS
On Caspian Energy Export Routes
Which export routes for Caspian energy are most appropriate depends primarily
on which transit countries offer favorable conditions by facilitating construction
of pipelines and charging reasonable transit fees. The actual pipeline construction
cost is only one componentand not necessarily a large oneof any
commercial decision about which route to use. The record of Russia and most
especially Iran is one of long delays and unreasonable demands. At this stage,
the Baku-Ceyhan project is more advanced than any other oil pipeline project
not yet under construction. In these circumstances, it is inappropriate to assume,
as the report does, that promoting Baku-Ceyhan is at odds with a commercial
approach toward Caspian energy.
Patrick Clawson
David L. Goldwyn
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On Alternative Energy Sources, Minimum Petroleum Inventory Standards, an Organization
of Petroleum Importing Countries, Nuclear Energy
U.S. energy policy should be guided by a stronger commitment to developing alternative
energy sources and protecting vulnerable households and businesses from price
shocks resulting from hikes in the costs of heating oil, gasoline, and diesel
fuel.
Mandating minimum standards for petroleum inventories in the United States and creating an Organization of Petroleum Importing Countries (OPIC) to stand up to the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries are measures that should be taken to more aggressively protect our oil-dependent economy.
The establishment of federal minimum inventory standards for domestic wholesalers would buffer consumers from skyrocketing prices associated with inadequate inventories at times of high demand. In New England, for example, home heating oil prices went up $1 a gallon in the winter of 2000, when a severe cold snap combined with low inventories to send fuel costs through the roof. Similar supply shortages have resulted in soaring gasoline prices in the Midwest during the summers peak demand months.
An OPIC to offset the clout of OPEC would use the threat of sanctions to keep the cartel from illegally manipulating production quotas to their advantage and our detriment. Moreover, OPIC would negotiate an end to radical price fluctuations that hurt producing and consuming nations alike by supporting a floor price for crude oil in exchange for OPEC backing of a ceiling price. A floor price of $20 a barrel would ensure adequate revenues to producing states, which depend on such dividends for their political, economic, and social stability. A ceiling price of $25 a barrel would guard against price shocks while encouraging the development of alternative energy sources in consuming nations.
U.S. policy guided by the goals of expanding nuclear capacity and exploiting domestic sources of oil and gas will not succeed in the long run. Energy independence is critical. This cannot be achieved by more drilling within U.S. borders. The only method is to increase our dependence on effective and affordable renewable energy sources in addition to creating a stable pricing environment for all our energy needs.
We must aggressively pursue promising alternative sources of energy to heat our homes, run our vehicles, and power our businesses. At the same time, we must take a tougher line toward the oil industry domestically to protect the most vulnerable, and use our clout internationally with oil producers to end the price shocks caused by their manipulation of oil markets.
Joseph P. Kennedy II
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TASK FORCE MEMBERS
ODEH ABURDENE is managing partner of Capital Trust S.A. He was a manager in the International division of the American Security Bank in Washington, D.C., and served as a Vice President with the First National Bank of Chicago.
GRAHAM ALLISON is Director of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard Universitys John F. Kennedy School of Government, and Douglas Dillon Professor of Government. In the first term of the Clinton administration, Allison served as Assistant Secretary of Defense for Policy and Plans.
JOSEPH C. BELL is a Partner with Hogan & Hartson, L.L.P. Bell was previously U.S. Designated Representative for the International Energy Agency, Dispute Settlement Center; Assistant General Counsel of International Affairs for the Federal Energy Administration (197477); and the Cabinet Task Force on Oil Import Controls (1969).
PATRICK CLAWSON is Director for Research at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, and was previously a Senior Economist at the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the Defense Department's National Defense University. He has written or edited twelve books about the Middle East.
FRANCES D. COOK heads the Ballard Group LLC, a business facilitation service in Washington. She is a three time former ambassador, including twice to energy-exporting countries. She twice served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State, where her specialty was political-military affairs. Her regional focus is the Arabian Gulf and Africa.
JACK L. COPELAND is Chairman of Copeland Consulting International, an investment and geopolitical advisory firm.
CHARLES B. CURTIS is Senior Adviser to the United Nations Foundation and the President of NTI, a newly formed foundation organized to reduce the contemporary threat from weapons of mass destruction. He has previously served as the Deputy Secretary and the Undersecretary of the U.S. Department of Energy, the Chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, and the Chief Energy Counsel of the U.S. House of Representatives Energy and Commerce Committee.
TOBY T. GATI is Senior International Adviser at Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, L.L.P. She served as Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for Russia, Ukraine, and the Eurasian States at the National Security Council in the White House in 1993, and then as Assistant Secretary of State for Intelligence and Research until May 1997.
LUIS GIUSTI currently serves as Non-Executive Director of "Shell" Transport and Trading, and as Senior Adviser to the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Formerly, he was Chairman and CEO of Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A.
DAVID L. GOLDWYN is the principal of Goldwyn International Strategies, LLC, an international consulting firm. He served as Assistant Secretary of Energy for International Affairs and Counselor to the Secretary of Energy, Senior Adviser to the Permanent Representative to the United Nations, and Chief of Staff for the Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs under President Bill Clinton.
MICHEL T. HALBOUTY is an internationally renowned earth scientist and engineer whose career and accomplishments in the fields of geology and petroleum engineering have earned him the recognition as one of the worlds outstanding geo-scientists.
AMY MYERS JAFFE is the senior energy adviser at the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy of Rice University. Prior to joining the Baker Institute and President of AMJ energy consultants. Jaffe was the senior economist and Middle East Analyst for Petroleum Intelligence Weekly. Jaffe is the author of numerous articles on oil geopolitics, the Middle East, and the Caspian basin region.
MELANIE A. KENDERDINE is the Vice President of the Gas Technology Institute. Previously she was Director of Policy at the Department of Energy, Senior Policy Adviser to the Secretary of Energy for oil and gas, Deputy Assistant Secretary at Department of Energy, and Chief of Staff to Congressman Bill Richardson (D-N.M.).
JOSEPH P. KENNEDY II is Chairman and President of Citizens Energy Corporation, a nonprofit firm he founded in 1979 to provide low-cost heating oil to the poor and the elderly. Before leaving Citizens in 1986 to serve six terms in the U.S. House of Representatives, Kennedy built the company into a leading innovator in the electricity, natural gas, and prescription drug industries, all the while using revenues from the companys successful for-profit subsidiaries to finance charitable programs for the poor here in the United States and abroad. Kennedy returned to Citizens Energy full-time in 1999 and serves on the boards of companies in the health care, telecommunications, and energy industries.
MARIE-JOSEE KRAVIS is an Economist and Senior Fellow at the Hudson Institute. She specializes in trade and international financerelated issues and serves on the Secretary of Energys Advisory Board. She also sits on the board of the Ford Motor Company, Vivendi Universal, U.S.A Networks, Hasbro Inc., Hollinger International, and the CIBC.
KENNETH LAY is Chairman and CEO of Enron Corporation. Lay also was chief executive officer of Enron from 1985 until February 2001. Currently, Lay serves on the board of directors of Compaq Computer Corporation, Eli Lilly and Company, i2 Technologies, Inc., and Trust Company of the West. He is a Vice-Chairman of The Business Council and a member of the Board of Trustees of Howard University, Eisenhower Exchange Fellowships, Inc., Resources for the Future, the H. John Heinz III Center for Science, Economics, and the Environment, the American Enterprise Institute, and the First United Methodist Church in Houston. Lay is also a member of The Trilateral Commission and was selected to receive the Private Sector Councils 1997 Leadership Award, received the 1998 Horatio Alger Award, and was named by Business Week as one of the top 25 managers in the world for 1999. Lay is a member of the Texas Business Hall of Fame.
JOHN H. LICHTBLAU is Chairman and CEO of Petroleum Industry Research Foundation, Inc. (PIRINC). He has been a member of the National Petroleum Council (Advisory Council to the Secretary of Energy) since 1968 and is also a member of the International Associates of Energy Economics.
JOHN A. MANZONI is Regional President for British Petroleum in the eastern United States. Prior to being the Regional President, Manzoni was Group Vice President for the Refining and Marketing business, with responsibility for European marketing and global downstream planning and performance. Prior to that Manzoni headed up the BP side of the BP/Amoco merger directorate.
THOMAS F. MCLARTY III is Vice Chairman of Kissinger McLarty Associates, an international strategic advisory firm with offices in Washington, D.C., and New York. McLarty was President Bill Clintons first Chief of Staff and also served as Counselor to the President and Special Envoy for the Americas. Prior to joining the Clinton administration, McLarty was Chairman and CEO of Arkla, Inc.
ERIC D.K. MELBY is a Senior Fellow with the Forum for International Policy and a principal in the Scowcroft Group. He handled economic and energy issues on the National Security Council staff from 198793 and was Special Assistant to the Executive Director of the International Energy Agency from 198185. Has also worked in the Department of State and Agency for International Development.
SARAH MILLER is Editorial Vice President and Group Editor of the Energy Intelligence Group. Miller was European Director of McGraw-Hill News and London bureau chief and energy correspondent for McGraw-Hill World News.
STEVEN L. MILLER is Chairman of the board of directors, President, and CEO of Shell Oil Company. He is a member of the National Petroleum Council and the Business Roundtable.
ERNEST J. MONIZ is a Professor of Physics and former Head of the Department of Physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He served as Associate Director for Science in the Office of Science and Technology Policy in the Executive Office of the President (199597) and as Undersecretary for Energy, Science, and Environment in the Department of Energy (19972001). At the Department of Energy, he also served as the Secretarys Special Negotiator for Russian Programs.
EDWARD L. MORSE is currently Executive Advisor at Hess Energy Trading Co., LLC, a proprietary trading firm, with offices in London and New York. His career in the energy sector spans more than two decades and includes senior positions in business, government, academia, and publishing. He joined HETCO in April 1999 after more than a decade as Publisher of Petroleum Intelligence Weekly. In the winter of 200001 he chaired the joint Task Force, cosponsored by the James A. Baker III Institute and the Council on Foreign Relations, that prepared this Report. From 1978 to 1981 Morse was in the U.S. government as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for international energy policy. A frequent commentator on oil market trends, both in writing and for broadcast media, Morse is the author or co-author of four books on politics, finance, energy, and international affairs. He has written some four dozen scholarly articles and numerous other commentaries. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and of the Oxford Energy Policy Club. He is a trustee of the Petroleum Industry Research Foundation and a member of the advisory boards for the energy programs at New York University, the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, and the University of Houston.
SHIRLEY NEFF is an Economist for the Democrats on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee. She is the senior staff member responsible for policy and tax issues for oil and gas, electricity and renewable energy, climate change, and international energy matters. Prior to joining the committee staff, she was an economist for a state public utility commission and for an oil and gas company and an electricity utility.
DAVID O'REILLY has been named Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer for ChevronTexaco. Since January 2000, he has served as Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Chevron Corp. Earlier, O'Reilly was one of the company's two Vice Chairmen, responsible for Chevron's worldwide exploration and production and corporate human relations.
KENNETH RANDOLPH is General Counsel and Secretary of Dynegy, Inc, responsible for all of Dynegys legal and regulatory activities. Prior to joining Dynegy, Randolph served as an energy attorney for the law firm of Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld in Washington, D.C.
PETER ROSENTHAL is Chief Correspondent on energy and commodities for Bridge News.
GARY N. ROSS is Chief Executive Officer of the PIRA Energy Group, a New Yorkbased international energy consultancy retained by some three hundred companies in more than thirty countries. Ross consults with many energy ministries around the world on energy markets and public policy.
ED ROTHSCHILD is Principal at the consulting firm of Podesta/Mattoon in Washington, D.C. Formerly the Energy Policy Director of Citizen Action and consumer advocate on energy matters from 197197, he is also the author of numerous reports and studies on natural gas and oil pricing issues, competition, and concentration in the petroleum industry.
JEFFERSON B. SEABRIGHT is Vice President of Policy Planning for Texaco Inc. He was formerly the Executive Director of the White House Task Force on Climate Change, Director of the Office of Energy, Environment & Technology, U.S. Agency for International Development; on the Advisory Council, National Renewable Energy Laboratory; and Board Member, Keystone Center.
ADAM SIEMINSKI is the Director and Global Energy Strategist at Deutsche Banc Alex. Brown. From 198897, Sieminski was a Senior Equity Analyst for NatWest Securities, covering the major U.S.-based international oil companies. He is a member and past President of both the National Association of Petroleum Investment Analysts and the Washington chapter of the International Association for Energy Economics, as well as Chairman of the Independent Petroleum Association's oil and gas supply/demand committee.
MATTHEW SIMMONS is President of Simmons & Company International, a specialized energy investment bank. He is a Member of the National Petroleum Council and Bush-Cheney Energy Transition Advisory Committee, and past Chairman of the National Ocean Industries Association.
RONALD SOLIGO is a Professor of Economics at Rice University with a specialty in development and energy economics. He has authored a number of studies on energy-related topics for the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy at Rice University.
MICHAEL D. TUSIANI has been Chairman and CEO of Poten & Partners since 1983. Prior to joining Poten in 1973, he was employed by Zapata Naess Shipping Company. Tusiani has written two books: The Petroleum Shipping Industry A Non Technical Overview and The Petroleum Shipping Industry Operations and Practices.
PHILIP K. VERLEGER JR. is President of PK Verleger LLC and a Principal with the Brattle Group. Verleger served as an energy adviser in the Ford and Carter administrations and advised President Ronald Reagan on energy issues. Verleger has been a Visiting Fellow at the Institute for International Economics and is the author of two books and numerous articles on the causes of energy price volatility.
ENZO VISCUSI is Group Senior Vice President and Representative for the Americas of Eni, the Italian-based integrated energy company, where he also serves as Chairman of Agip Petroleum Co. Inc. He is primarily involved in promoting international ventures.
CHUCK WATSON is the Chairman and chief executive officer of Houston Dynegy Inc., a leading provider of energy and communications solutions. He established NGC Corp, Dynegy's predecessor, in 1985 and served as president until becoming chairman and chief executive officer in 1989. Watson currently serves on the National Petroleum Council and is a founding member of the Natural Gas Council. He is a board member of the Interstate Natural Gas Association of America and the Edison Electric Institute.
WILLIAM H. WHITE is President of the Wedge Group Inc., a diversified investment firm with subsidiaries in the oil services, engineering, hotel, and real estate business. White is chairman of the Houston World Affairs Council. He served as deputy secretary and chief operating officer of the U.S. Department of Energy from 1993 to 1995.
DANIEL YERGIN is Chairman of Cambridge Energy Research Associates. He is author of The Prize, for which he received the Pulitzer Prize, co-author of The Commanding Heights, and recipient of the U.S. Energy Award. Yergin is on the Board of Directors of the United States Energy Association and a member of the National Petroleum Council, the U.S. Secretary of Energy Advisor Board, and the Bush-Cheney Energy Transition Advisory Committee.
MINE YÜCEL is Senior Economist and Assistant Vice President, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. Yücel is a member of the U.S. Association of Energy Economics and the author of numerous articles on energy and the economy.
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TASK FORCE OBSERVERS
PAUL W. CHELLGREN is Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Ashland, Inc. He is Director or Trustee at PNC Financial Services Group, Medtronic, Inc., the University of Kentucky, Center College, and American Petroleum Institute. Chellgren is a member of the Business Roundtable Policy Committee, the National Petroleum Council, the National Refiners Association, and the Society of Chemical Industry.
RICHARD N. COOPER is Maurits C. Boas Professor of International Economics at Harvard University. He was formerly chairman of the National Intelligence Council, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, and Undersecretary of State for Economic Affairs. He is the author of The Economics of Interdependence and other works.
CHARLES DUNCAN JR. serves on the board of directors of Newfield Exploration Company, Inc., and The Welch Foundation. He is Treasurer and Director of Methodist Health Care System, and Chairman of its subsidiary, Methodist Care, Inc. Duncan was former Secretary of the Department of Energy from August 1979 until January 1981, and former President of the Coca-Cola Company.
WILLIAM E. HENDERSON III is manager, Joint Venture Coordination, Ashland, Inc.
JUDITH KIPPER is an internationally recognized Middle East specialist. She is the Director of the Council on Foreign Relations Middle East Forum and the Director of the Middle East Studies program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Kipper is a consultant on international affairs to ABC News. Previously, she was a guest scholar at The Brookings Institution and a Resident Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.
ROBERT A. MANNING is the C.V. Starr Senior Fellow and Director of Asia Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. He is the author of The Asian Energy Factor: Myths and Dilemmas of Energy, Security and the Pacific Future, and co-author of China, Nuclear Weapons, and Arms Control: A Preliminary Assessment. From 1989 until 1993, he was a Policy Adviser to the Assistant Secretary for East Asian and Pacific Affairs at the Department of State. He has also been an adviser to the Office of the Secretary of Defense (198889).
RICHARD MURPHY is Hasib J. Sabbagh Senior Fellow for the Middle East at the Council on Foreign Relations. He held successive appointments as Ambassador to Mauritania, Syria, the Philippines, and Saudi Arabia. He served as Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs. President Ronald Reagan nominated him to the rank of Career Ambassador in 1986.
STEPHEN OXMAN is a Senior Adviser, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter; former Assistant Secretary of State for European and Canadian Affairs; and former Partner with James D. Wolfensohn Incorporated. He is a member of the Advisory Council of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University.
MICHAEL L. TELSON has been Chief Financial Officer of the U.S. Department of Energy since October of 1997. Telson was Senior Analyst of the Committee on the Budget, U.S. House of Representatives, served as the Staff Economist of the House Ad Hoc Committee on Energy, and on the governing council of the International Association for Energy Economics (IAEE).
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APPENDIXES
Appendix A:
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Appendix B:
Past Oil Crises and Recent Issues Concerning Petroleum Security Guarantees
Reason Crisis
First oil crisis
(Oct. 1973) Second oil crisis
(Dec. 1978)
(Oct. 1980) Iraq - Iran War Gulf Crisis
(Aug. 1990) Present Market2000
· Fourth Middle East war
· Embargo by Arab oil producers · Iranian revolution
· Rapid oil production decreases in Iran
· Iran-Iraq War · Iraq attacks Iran · Iraq invades Kuwait
· 1999 Opec Agreement
and Low Investment
Supply decrease period · About 6 months · About 4 months ·
About 5 months · About 7 months · 12 months plus
Supply decrease magnitude · 4.34.5 million B/D (2 months)
· 2.22.6 million B/D (2 months) · 5.35.6 million B/D
(2 months)
· 3.8 million B/D (2 months) · 3.74.1 million B/D (2 months)
· 2.53.0 million B/D (3 months) · 5.05.3 million B/D
(2 months)
· 4.04.7 million B/D (3 months)
· total loss approx. 400500 million barrels · Over 1 billion
barrels sustained Opec production cuts
Excess production capabilities · About 3.75 million B/D · About
4.55 million B/D · About 6.70 million B/D · About 6.20 million
B/D · 1.02.0 million B/D
No. of days of petroleum stocks in OECD · Public: 0
· Private: 70 days · Public: 7 days
· Private: 65 days · Public: 9 days
· Private: 77 days · Public: 25 days
· Private: 61 days · Public: 28 days
· Private: 53 days
Petroleum market structure · Majors posting price system
· Majors rights in long-term crude contracts · Sales pricing system
by governments of oil-producing countries
· Long-term contracts with oil-producing countries · Sales pricing
system by governments of oil-producing countries
· Long-term contracts with oil-producing countries · Market-linked
pricing system
· Development of oil futures market
· Term contracts with oil-producing countries and expansion of spot transactions
· Market linked pricing system
· Active oil futures market
· Term contracts tied to spot transactions
Note: In the Gulf Crisis, reduced crude oil supplies continued even after the war had ended, until Kuwaiti production recovered.
Source: James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy.
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Appendix C:
RADICAL POLITICS
Adrian Binks
Mar 26, 2001
Copyright © Petroleum Argus, 2001
The seventies are back. OPEC producers are warming to the rhetoric that underlined Third World radicalism 30 years ago. Having suffered the destabilising consequences of a price collapse in 1998, OPEC members are demanding a "fair" price for their oil. And what they see as fair is not what consuming nations accept. Producers are in no mood to do favours for consumer economies battling against slowdown and recession. Producers were there two years ago, and consumers not only failed to mourn, but scarcely even noticed. Revenue and the battle over oils economic rent have once again taken centre stage. And an emboldened OPEC is pressing home its advantage (see pp 8-11).
Revival
As with most revivals, not everything is as it was. Key OPEC producers Saudi
Arabia, Iran and Kuwait are gradually opening up to foreign investment
rather than wresting control of their oil industries from the majors as they
did 30 years ago. But the same argument that underlined nationalisation then
is driving OPECs $25/bl oil policy now. OPEC members, including Saudi
Arabia, believe the industrialised world is denying it justice in the oil markets.
In the seventies, the majors prevented producing nations from receiving
a fair income for their national treasure. Now it is the greed of high-tax consumer
governments that is attracting OPECs ire.
The language reflects the trauma OPEC producers suffered following the 1998 price collapse. Those events dominate OPEC thinking, and have fundamentally changed the attitude of even moderate members. Anti-tax rhetoric from OPEC is hardly new. But the organisation has rarely been more united, allowing it to make its position felt. An increasingly hawkish Saudi Arabia is finding common cause with Venezuelas Hugo Chavez a populist, self-styled champion of the Third World in true seventies fashion. That axis is giving OPEC the solidarity that evaded it for much of the nineties. Output discipline has kept markets tight and prices high turning the screw on consumer governments. When European consumers rebelled last year against fuel taxes, OPEC scented blood. "People always talk about revenues of OPEC. They never talk about [oil tax] revenues of industrialised countries," says Algerian oil minister and OPEC president Chakib Khelil. "Before [consumer governments] point a finger at OPEC, they should probably reduce taxes in their own country."
OPECs more strident position would not be possible without the consent of Saudi Arabia. It suffered heavily in 1998, and fears a repeat price collapse as global economies slow. Saudi-U.S. relations crucial to OPEC policy since the United States became a net importer of oil in the early seventies are under strain. U.S. support for a bellicose Israel is acutely embarrassing for the kingdom. OPEC is not about to wield the oil weapon, seventies style. But Saudi Arabia cannot afford to draw accusations that it is doing the United States a favour by pressing for oil price moderation. Although the new administration of George Bush would seem to be the dream team for its Middle East allies, so far Bush has conspicuously failed to demonstrate any special magic in his relations with them. The Saudis certainly did the United States no favours at the OPEC meeting.
When it comes to the impact of energy prices on economic growth, OPEC is at best non-committal, and at worst seemingly in denial. "Oil is not that important to economic growth," said OPEC president Chakib Khelil last week. Riyadh agrees. "We think $25/bl is a fair price," says Saudi oil minister Ali Naimi.
The concept of a fair price is hard to pin down. But there is such a thing
as a sustainable price. It is, of necessity, a compromise between buyers and
sellers. The difficulty for OPECs core Mideast Gulf producers is that
$25/bl is needed to sustain the unreconstructed state-driven economies of the
Middle East. But the experience of the seventies shows that high prices
eventually unleash a wave of investment in non-OPEC oil and a massive improvement
in energy efficiency. This is not what OPEC wants, but what it might get.
© Copyright 2001
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