Forget Saudi Peak Oil—Worry About Peak Grain

May 21, 2008 RSS Feed Print
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To oil world watchers and worriers, the words Twilight in the Desert are instantly recognizable. That's the name of the book by energy investment banker Matthew Simmons, who used hundreds of internal documents to bolster his case that oil production has peaked or soon will be peaking in Saudi Arabia—home to what the world trusts as the largest source of petroleum reserves. But it turns out that long before we learn whether Simmons's prediction pans out, the sun is setting on another resource in the kingdom.

Grain production in Saudi Arabia is now down 42 percent from the peak of 4.9 million tons reached in 1994 and is now on track to decline rapidly in the coming years. Thanks to Lester Brown of the Earth Policy Institute for compiling these figures from the U.S. Department of Agriculture:

It's a stunning reversal for Saudi Arabia, which realized after its role in the Arab oil embargo of 1973 that it was vulnerable to retaliation. To protect itself, Saudi Arabia aimed to become self-sufficient in grain production, and to do that in its largely desert landscape, it tapped into a large fossil aquifer—a deep, ancient water source that is not replenished by rain or streams. As it turned out, the wells' days were numbered—even more surely than the days of the fossil fuel that Saudi Arabia pumps to the world. Thanks to water depletion, by 2016, Saudi Arabia will be one of the world's major importers of wheat, the U.S. Department of Agriculture projects. What price will Saudi Arabia pay for grain to feed its Texas-size population of 23 million, which is growing at a relatively rapid rate of 2 percent per year? The kingdom will be able to pay plenty, thanks to oil revenue that is growing exponentially, as these U.S. Energy Information Administration figures show:

Both The Oil Drum and Celsias have written extensively on the Saudi grain and water situation. But with the world already reeling because of skyrocketing food prices, we seem to be entering a new phase. A growing source of pressure on world food prices will be oil-rich states that are able and willing to pay top dollar to shore up their food supplies with imports. The latest reports are that Saudi Arabia is now seeking to invest in farms in Thailand, the world's largest rice exporter, to help secure its long-term food supply.

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Peak Oil

The age of human energy has begun and we face the biggest challenge the planet has known in the last 100 years. What we must now do is take a great leap backwards. Globalisation along with cheap energy is an aberration. We must now concentrate on equality as a new paradigm. We do this or we perish. We cannot embrace such a change without acceptance of a universally acceptable moral code. We need absolutes in every sphere of human activity . Humanity has proven its need for moral guidance. Global law based on a fair and just society must now be our ruler. This is our biggest challenge, a challenge that Plato wrestled with and we must too.

Bryan Pepperell

Wellington (NZ)

bryan pepperell 10:47AM June 11, 2008

The Road Ahead / Paul Metz

From: "Paul Metz"

Bryan,

In addition to the introduction of Land Value Taxation instead of existing counterproductive taxes on property, I believe that a broad tax reform is a- if not THE - key instrument to achieve a sustainable, i.e. fair for all the world's citizens and ecologically future-proof. That reform can - and should for political acceptance - be revenue neutral and give price incentives that benefit 'goods' and punish 'bads'.One consequence of this concept I have started to promote recently: the recognition that all world's citizens have equal right to emit greenhouse gases. The new foundation B4FET - Business for Fair Emission Trade - will try to educate the negotiators of the Kyoto Protocol and help establish an allocation of emission rights mechanism that is fair and, as a consequence, attractive for the citizens of all countries (not necessarily for the ruling elites). Key outcome would be that each citizen - as a shareholderof Earth's Global Commons - has an annual coupon, which can be sold and generates a "microdividend". This combines climate protection with fair trade and poverty alleviation, also within rich countries - or, as Dave names it, 'redistribution of wealth'. In my experience 'fair trade' is much less unwelcome in the mainstream than 'redistribution of .... anything'.I hope to inform on B4FET soon; we are now acquiring Dutch sponsors first. Now my weekend is over, I have some clients waiting and look forward to rejoin you next week. Paul Metz Sent: maandag 30 januari 2006 21:50

To: 'Paul Metz'

Subject Oil

Paul

I see we agree on the kind of measures needed but I'm not sure about implementation and political will. I'm all ears on any suggestions about getting the global community to co-operate in time. Recently I watched the Indian Minister for the Environment say that India wanted to do its share of polluting and wasting. We in the West have been very hypocritical with our demands and we show little sign of changing. China feels the same way, not to mention the list of developing countries. I agree we are on our own.

Cheers

Bryan

From: Paul Metz

Sent: Tuesday, 31 January 2006 11:41 a.m.

To: 'Bryan Pepperell'

Subject: Environment and Oil

Bryan,

It is even worse: it is in our self interest to make the growth of India, China, etc sustainable. And our leaders do not realize that, they let 'unsustainable outsourcing' happen and thus destroy the planet faster than ever before.

Yes, good governance is the scarcest resource on Earth, precautionary approaches are illusions as a result. But we should not stop promoting and practising them ....

Paul

To: Paul Metz

The Netherlands

Subject Oil

By now the world is using one thousand barrels of oil a second. Your own examples show that demand can only increase with outsourcing.

We can only continue to speak out about this (coming?) crisis. It appears to be moving into a terminal stage.

Perhaps other people in the political strata will begin to speak up. I live in hope.

Cheers

Bryan Pepperell

Wellington

New Zealand

Bryan Pepperell 3:38AM June 10, 2008

Just as the Saudis used up their aquifer on a plan that was destined to fail (grain in sand?), we are on the same path. Had they thought the plan through they could have engineered a method to control water use, for the crops (like desalinate ocean water). We are running our country on non renewable resources. In other words the party will end one day. We should pick the day instead of waiting for someone else to pick it for us. With some fore thought we can lead the way out of this storm rather than create it.

Chuck of MO 9:15AM June 09, 2008

Beyond the Barrel

Marianne Lavelle, senior writer, seeks out the path to an energy future that doesn’t wreck the planet or put you in the poorhouse.

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