Showing posts with label Brown Outs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brown Outs. Show all posts

Saudi Race to Failure

SUBHEAD: We are facing the reality of betting everything on a non-renewable source.

By Matthew Wild on 23 July 2010 in Peak Generation -
(http://peakgeneration.blogspot.com/2010/07/its-race-to-failure-between-rogue.html)

 
Image above: Five fuels trucks in Pakistan fired bombed by terrorists. From (http://dprogram.net/2009/04/24/msm-pakistan-on-verge-of-collapse-as-taliban-surge-towards-islamabad/). 

Dwindling global oil supplies are leaving the world ever more reliant on a group of unstable countries – many of which are themselves facing major domestic problems right now. Believe it or not, many of the world’s major oil exporters cannot maintain their own domestic energy requirements.

Venezuelan consumers endure electricity blackouts of “seven or eight hours a day,” but less well known is the situation in the Middle East, where residents are facing rolling power outages just as summer temperatures soar, and with it, the demand for air conditioning.

 Furthermore, a report in Forbes this month points to growing fears about the stability of Saudi Arabia, for decades the swing producer maintaining the world’s oil exports at a steady level. While any upheaval in any of the main oil exporting nations would be felt across the globe, Saudi is a special case, as its reserves are acquiring an ever more geopolitical significance due to the decline of non-Opec oil.

The West is becoming more reliant on the health of this highly secretive nation – essentially, if Saudi Arabia sneezes, the rest of the world catches cold. It’s a fact of life that oil tends to come from unstable places – the very term "petro state" is shorthand for a country with “weak institutions and a malfunctioning public sector,” and an economy based around imports, not exports, due to exchange rates. Power is in the hands of the few, essentially the government, that control the petro-rent, and these are essentially violent, unhappy places for much of the population.

The reality is that seven of the countries currently listed by the US Energy Information Administration as the nation’s current Top 15 sources of crude oil are also on the State Department’s Travel Warning List, for their “long-term, protracted conditions that make a country dangerous or unstable.”

These are: Saudi Arabia, Mexico, Nigeria, Iraq, Columbia, Algeria, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo – with Saudi Arabia, Mexico and Nigeria being respectably second, third and fourth most important source of US imports. (Of course, Canada, the US’s largest single source of oil imports, is a model of staid stability – but many observers question the future expansion of its oil sands output which has arguably been overhyped for years.)

 Oil fuels our industry, maintaining our lifestyles – and is as addictive to the West as it is to the producing nations. As US president Barack Obama said, when addressing the nation on June 14 in the immediate aftermath of BP’s Deepwater Horizon oil disaster,
“Each day, we send nearly $1 billion of our wealth to foreign countries for their oil.”
This is all money that isn’t being invested at home. It’s going on a product that is causing global climate change, which is making many unstable parts of the world more desperate, with geopolitical commentators now talking of coming wars over resources as basic as water.

So addicted are we to oil that we apparently have little money left over to prepare for the transition to a future based around renewable energy. Instead, buying vast amounts of imported oil is taking money out of the US domestic economy and funding, in the main, rogue states that are adding to global security risks. Read the State Department’s travel advisory about Nigeria for an idea of the kind of regimes that oil is maintaining:
Violent crime committed by individuals and gangs, as well as by persons wearing police and military uniforms, is a problem throughout the country. Since January 2009, over 111 foreign nationals have been kidnapped in Nigeria, including 18 in 2010. Six foreign nationals were killed in connection with these abductions; two U.S. citizens were killed in separate abduction attempts in Port Harcourt in April 2010. Local authorities and expatriate businesses operating in Nigeria believe that the number of kidnapping incidents throughout Nigeria is underreported. Since March 2010, five improvised explosive devices (IEDs) have been detonated in the Niger Delta region with no reported casualties.
It’s the same situation in Algeria, Columbia and the Congo – yet the remaining, more stable petro states are in turmoil of some sort, albeit less headline grabbing. An item in Abu Dhabi English language newspaper The National earlier in July, Gulf braces for power shortages, is worth quoting at length:
The big heat has come early to the Gulf, and residents opting to stay are settling in for another summer of discontent punctuated by power cuts. All Gulf states except Qatar face electricity shortages that intensify during the airconditioning season. Already this year, the emirate of Sharjah as well as Kuwait and Saudi Arabia have suffered disruptions. On May 10, a 90-minute power cut grounded flights at King Abdul Aziz International Airport near Jeddah. Last month, a series of electricity disruptions afflicted cities in the north and west of Saudi Arabia, including Mecca, Medina, Jeddah and Taif, amid temperatures reaching 52°C. Some schoolchildren taking exams passed out from the heat.
It goes on to state that other than in Iraq, where war destroyed much of the grid, these electricity blackouts are due to “rapid industrialisation and population growth.” Underpinning it are low domestic energy prices that attract energy-intensive industries and “wasteful consumer habits,” with the national focus on obtaining expansion as quickly as possible that overlooks any form of long-term energy efficiency. (This manic drive to have something to show for the oil bonanza is common to all petro states.) The article gives, as example:
Karim Elgendy, an architect and sustainable design researcher based in San Francisco, also believes the style of architecture has played a role. “Rapid urbanisation in the UAE, as well as in other GCC member states, has been characterised by forms of imported western architecture which were not environmentally responsive to the region’s climatic conditions,” he said. “High-rise buildings with large areas of glass facade, and huge demand for electricity for air conditioning can be seen in all new urban centres such as Dubai and Abu Dhabi, as well as other cities such as Riyadh and Doha.”
Saudi Arabia is the classic example of how striking oil can be a blessing and a curse. An item in Forbes earlier in the month, Saudi Arabia's House Of Cards, peels back the veneer. It cites an open letter to Saudi royals allegedly written by dissident prince Turki bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud, a prominent exile in Cairo. In this the prince supposedly states the government is no longer able to contain grassroots discontent, and that his fellow royals would be advised to flee before the masses "cut off our heads in streets." (A June 14 edict by the Saudi Press Agency claims the prince told them this letter was “fabricated by enemy parties wishing to spread confusion and excitement” – which seems, as far as I can tell, to be an implicit warning to the domestic media that reporting on the item will result in a rather swift visit from Saudi security forces.)

The Forbes article quotes from Matthew Simmons’ peak oil classic, Twilight in the Desert, with questions of just how much longer the highly secretive state can go on as the world’s major oil producer considering “no major new energy fields have been found in Saudi Arabia since the 1970s, and the chances of such discoveries are now, in Simmons' words, ‘remote.’” But, stark as this may be, it’s followed by the sucker punch: Saudi Arabia doesn’t have to run out of oil to face collapse, “thanks to the country's ballooning entitlement class.” It states:
The actual size of the Saudi royal family is subject to some debate, but informed estimates a few years ago placed the number at more than 30,000 members, with some 4,000 princes each afforded a luxurious monthly stipend of tens of thousands of dollars apiece. And because of officially sanctioned polygamy, their ranks are swelling exponentially, projected to reach 60,000 or more by 2020. Needless to say, their allowances, and the attendant extravagant indulgences, are possible solely because of Saudi petrodollars. All of which has prompted an insatiable appetite for ever greater production and consumption of the Kingdom's lifeblood.
Meanwhile, life is getting tougher for “an impoverished underclass” – essentially, everyone else outside the royal elite. It states: “Since the oil boom of the 1970s, per capita income in Saudi Arabia has constricted precipitously, falling from $28,000 in the early 1980s to below $7,000 in 2001.” According to a separate Bloomberg item, “Saudi Arabian inflation accelerated to a 13-month high in June as housing and food costs increased in the largest Arab economy.”

 The Saudi government cannot afford for the global economy to slip further, cutting both the volume of its own oil exports and prices per barrel. Theirs is a very expensive place to run. The geopolitical implications of all this are staggering. Saudi Arabia, which has been accused of having a greater involvement in the 9/11 attacks than most realize and has shown subsequent “indirect troublemaking in Iraq and Afghanistan,” has long been a source of regional instability.

But that will be nothing as to the turmoil that will unfold from any domestic upheaval, such as an Iranian-style revolution (upheaval in that country, in 1979, caused the second energy crisis of the decade, mitigated somewhat by the Saudis increasing output). Groups like al-Qaeda have long been “highly critical of and violently opposed to western influence within the country,” especially its close relations with the US, and are reportedly working to bring about revolt. What, then, would an Islamic revolution in Saudi Arabia mean to the oil consuming world? In the immediate term, supply would cease, due to the domestic turmoil.

And beyond that, there’s every reason to believe the new government would be less inclined to export so much oil to the West. This, is in effect, the nuclear option. As far as the rest of the world is concerned, there is not enough alternate oil to go around; right now a Saudi oil embargo would bring the economies of many Western nations to a grinding halt. It’s all due to diminishing surplus production capacity.

 A June Bloomberg report, Oil Price Swings to Worsen as Spare OPEC Capacity Shrinks: Energy Markets, stated that “OPEC’s shrinking spare production capacity increases traders’ concern about supply shortages.” This states that output of non-Opec oil is unable to keep up with global demand, putting more and more importance on Opec’s ever dwindling spare capacity. It states:
OPEC, supplier of 40 percent of the world’s oil, pumped 29.4 million barrels a day in May, with capacity of another 5.5 million barrels idled, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The group’s spare capacity was as low as about 2 million barrels a day in July 2008, when oil prices peaked, before tumbling as the global recession crimped energy consumption. Spare production capacity will drop as supplies from outside the group fail to keep up with demand, according to the IEA. The agency estimates world oil usage will rise 6.4 percent by 2015 to 91.93 million barrels a day, while output, excluding OPEC crude, will increase 3.7 percent. That means the world will need more of the group’s oil to meet demand.
This seems to be saying that, as world energy demand creeps up – earlier this week China was confirmed as the world's biggest energy consumer, burning more energy than the US – the key figure to watch is Opec’s surplus capacity. To which I’d add that, to all intents, the term diminishing spare production capacity can be used interchangeably with peak oil. If Opec’s surplus cannot meet demand, we will surely have passed the tip of Hubbert’s peak, and find ourselves on the downslope – which is when the market turmoil and recession sets in. But things could get difficult a lot sooner than that. It doesn’t require the physical limits of the Earth’s oil to have been reached – reserves are now low enough that domestic turmoil at any one of the major oil producers will have the same unfortunate results to most of the world. As Bloomberg states:
Saudi Arabia accounts for almost 60 percent of OPEC’s spare capacity, according to Bloomberg estimates. The country is investing as much as $30 billion on new supplies over the next five years to keep a minimum 1.5 million to 2 million barrels-a- day of spare capacity, Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said in a May 18 interview with consultant Petroleum Policy Intelligence. “Markets are sensitive to when OPEC spare capacity starts getting down toward 3 million barrels a day,” according to Wittner of Societe Generale. Should supplies be disrupted from a producer such as Iran or Nigeria “there would not be much left after that,” he said.
Reading between the lines, it’s all a delicate balancing act. The rogue states that produce oil are now key players in this geopolitical game. At the same time, we are relying more and more on Opec output, as this is where the world’s largest accessible reserves are. And Opec output is more and more dependent on Saudi reserves. Even without some calamity befalling global basket cases like Nigeria or Venezuela, we are desperately reliant on two distinctly plausible possibilities not happening: Saudi output dropping, or the Saudi economy being plunged into chaos for some internal economic or political reason. It’s a race to failure. But, then, that’s the reality of betting everything on a non-renewable source.

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The Long Emergency begins?

SUBHEAD: In NYC Con-Ed fights to keep lights on. Is this what the beginning of the 'Long Emergency' looks like?
Image above: Con-Ed Headquarters in NYC (center rear) with Zeckendorf residential towers in foreground seen from Union Squire. Juan Wilson worked on 3D modelling of building for Davis-Brody & Associates in the mid 1980's. From (http://newyorkdailyphoto.blogspot.com/2007/04/towers.html). By Patrick McGeehan on 7 July 2010 in New York Times - (http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/08/nyregion/08heat.html)

From the 19th floor of Consolidated Edison’s headquarters in Manhattan, generators were dispatched to supplement a burning substation. Emergency alerts were relayed to major customers and companies. The go-ahead was given to cancel Little League night games on Staten Island to conserve the wattage used by field lights.

Con Edison, with an ability that might strike some as Big Brother-like, even exercised its ability to periodically shut off central air-conditioning units in some 20,000 homes and businesses to ease the burden on its system.

The scene inside Con Ed’s command center showed both the urgency of the utility’s efforts, and the nature of its reach — this was one of the few times it has adjusted residential thermostats from afar — as it struggled to cope with another record-setting day of heat and demand.

On one giant screen on the west wall, the number of megawatts being consumed was teetering at a dangerously high level, reflecting the unyielding heat, which again broke the daily record as it hit 100 degrees.

Another screen displayed real-time information revealing the spots — isolated, for now — where customers had lost power. And where there were problems, a Con Edison supervisor’s name would be affixed to it, for all to see at the afternoon emergency briefing.

From Con Edison’s base of operations in Rye, a plea rang out: “I would like to request another 4kv generator to support this grid because it doesn’t look like this section’s coming back any time soon.” That was Anthony Suozzo, a general manager of electric operations, asking for four kilovolts; he was dealing with a substation in Westchester County that had just caught fire, knocking out power to more than 1,700 customers.

So it went throughout the area, as accommodations were made to try to avert brownouts or blackouts. Horse racing at Belmont Park was called off. New Jersey Transit canceled some morning trains. Amtrak warned customers of delays on its Northeast Corridor service on Wednesday because trains were operating at reduced speeds.

There were reports that a woman who died in Queens on Tuesday was the first heat-related death in the city, but officials had not confirmed that. A spokeswoman for Charles S. Hirsch, the chief medical examiner, said that the woman’s autopsy would be conducted on Thursday.

As the temperature hit triple digits for the second straight day Wednesday, memories of the catastrophic failure of part of New York City’s power grid in 2006 were still vivid inside and outside Con Ed’s makeshift command center near Union Square.

In Astoria, Queens, business owners and elected officials remained wary about the utility company’s methods and its ability to keep the lights and air-conditioners running through a suffocating heat wave. Having endured the wrath of customers who suffered four years ago through that local blackout, which lasted more than a week, the dozens of Con Edison officials in the command center were intent on responding to signs of trouble as soon as they appeared on the giant charts projected on the wall.

As the number of equipment failures mounted by the hour, Con Edison turned to outside contractors for help. Unable to borrow crews from neighboring utilities that were coping with the regionwide swelter, the company brought in independent wire stringers who had been working in Massachusetts.

“No utilities are giving up their crews today,” said John Miksad, Con Edison’s senior vice president of electric operations.

Con Ed was using all available tools for suppressing demand for power throughout its service area. For a second day, it had put all of its emergency programs into effect, which combined to cut usage by about 400 megawatts, according to Mr. Miksad. With them, consumption peaked just below 13,000 megawatts on Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons. Without them, it would easily have surpassed the all-time high of 13,141 megawatts, he said.

One lesser-known contributor to the savings was a program that allows Con Ed to reprogram the thermostats in about 20,000 homes and businesses. Those customers are equipped with central air-conditioning systems controlled by thermostats with small antennas.

In times of unusually high demand for electricity, Con Ed tells Carrier, the maker of heating and cooling systems, to send a radio signal that causes those thermostats to cycle on and off every 30 minutes. Doing so shaved about 25 megawatts off the peak demand this week, Con Ed officials said.

“A megawatt here, a megawatt there can make a difference on a day like today,” Mr. Miksad said.

At the 311 help-line center in downtown Manhattan, the number of calls rose with the mercury. Calls came from seniors looking for the closest cooling center, and from parents looking to have nearby fire hydrants fitted with sprinkler caps. (In the last six days, 311 received 4,226 calls related to gushing fire hydrants — the highest category by far.)

Still, considering that fewer than 4,000 customers had no power at 4 p.m., when it was 100 degrees, New Yorkers as a group had little reason to complain. But they complained anyway.

At the Igloo Café in Astoria, the owner, Harry Panagiotopoulos, said he believed that Con Edison had reduced his power a few days ago. What else, he said, would explain why his thermostat read 86 degrees at noon, when he had it set to cool the place to 69?

“A lot of people walk in, they turn around, they walk right out,” Mr. Panagiotopoulos said. He said he had tried complaining to the utility but, he added, “When you’re a monopoly, a legal monopoly, you don’t care.”

Such bitter sentiments, whether accurate or not, are rampant in northern Queens, said Michael N. Gianaris, an assemblyman who happened to be having coffee in the Igloo when Mr. Panagiotopoulos was interviewed.

“The animus toward Con Edison is as raw as it was four years ago,” said Mr. Gianaris, who has been one of the company’s most vocal and unyielding critics.

Having reacted too slowly in 2006 as one overloaded cable led to another and another, Con Edison is now straining to prove that it has learned some lessons from the disaster in Astoria. Back then, the company failed to recognize the severity of the problem it faced and vastly understated its effects.

“We’re much more proactive with communications now,” Mr. Miksad said, adding that the company has developed a strong working relationship with the Fire Department and the city’s Office of Emergency Management. He also emphasized that Con Edison has spent more money rebuilding and upgrading its network in the last five years than it had in the previous decade or two.

But Mr. Gianaris said the company had still not pumped enough money into modernizing its infrastructure. He did, however, credit Con Edison with having learned from the 2006 blackout how to react faster to small failures that could rapidly lead to widespread losses of power.

“There are plenty of places that are as vulnerable as Queens was four years ago,” Mr. Gianaris said. “If they make it through this week without any major outages, it will be more a testament to the lessons they learned four years ago than the investment in infrastructure.”

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