Fearing Peak Oil, Saudi Arabia Seeks To Diversify Its Economy
By Nicole Belle - Mar 16, 2010
  [saudi oil fields_9c00a_0.jpg]

Well, sort of
<http://industry.bnet.com/energy/10003063/saudi-arabias-peak-oil-demand-\
fears-lead-to-clean-energy-embrace/> :

Concerns over peak oil — that moment when oil demand exceeds global
oil supply — has produced little more than a disdainful eye roll
from Saudi Arabia
<http://www.marketwatch.com/story/petroleum-still-king-oil-chiefs-tell-d\
avos-2010-01-28?reflink=MW_news_stmp> . After all,  the largest oil
producer in the world has far more pressing problems —  like peak
demand, for example.

In fact, Saudi leaders are so worried that demand for oil could peak in
the next  decade
<http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-02-15/saudi-arabia-says-peak-dema\
nd-for-oil-is-an-alarm-update1-.html>  they've done the unexpected
— and slightly ironic — by calling for an economy that includes
renewable energy. It's an interesting reversal coming from a country
that has poo-pooed investments in renewable energy in the past.

Let's not forget Saudi Arabia — along with OPEC, the oil cartel
it's a member of — was a major opponent of greenhouse-gas
reduction proposals during the climate summit in Copenhagen last year.
At the time, OPEC's chief said oil-producing countries should be
compensated for lost  revenues
<http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=111881&sectionid=3510213>  if any
agreement coming out of Copenhagen leads to cuts in  the use of oil. No,
really.

Earlier this month, OPEC producers had the gall to ask the world to 
give them more clarity and certainty about long-term oil demand
<http://www.petroleum-economist.com/default.asp?Page=14&PUB=279&SID=7245\
35&ISS=25570>   in order to justify additional investment in new
production capacity,  according to the Petroleum Economist. As Robert 
Rapier over at R-Squared <http://i-r-squared.blogspot.com/>  notes,
that's simply not the way the world works. The best any business can
do is try and estimate where demand will end up and then make decisions
from there.

Now, the renewable energy that so worried  Saudi Arabia before has 
suddenly become a worthy investment. The country is starting  its first
carbon-capture project
<http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-02-15/saudi-arabia-says-peak-dema\
nd-for-oil-is-an-alarm-update1-.html>  and is investing in other
industries including aluminum and steel in an effort to diversify its
heavily crude-focused economy, according to a Bloomberg report. Mohammad
al-Sabban, oil minister adviser and the lead negotiator at the climate
talks, said the country is working to become the top exporter of energy,
including alternative forms such as solar power.

Saudi Arabia is growing annually at about 4.2%, and needs jobs for the
influx of foreign workers (estimated at about 7.5 million currently).
They are reaching out to the private sector to provide those jobs
<http://www.thenational.ae/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100302/FOREIGN/7\
03019856/1135> , both through alternative energy and tourism.

Oh, the irony that Saudi Arabia is recognizing the need
<http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/king-abdullah-shares-vision-for\
-future-of-saudi-arabia-in-keynote-address-87005162.html>  for
alternative forms of energy more readily than our Republican Party.

http://crooksandliars.com/nicole-belle/fearing-peak-oil-saudi-arabia-see\
ks-d






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