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ENERGY CRISIS
An energy crisis is any great bottleneck (or price rise) in the supply of energy resources to an
economy. It usually refers to the shortage of oil and additionally to electricity or other natural
resources. An energy crisis may be referred to as an oil crisis, petroleum crisis, energy
shortage, electricity shortage or electricity crisis.
[edit] Causes
Market failure is possible when monopoly manipulation of markets occurs. A crisis can
develop due to industrial actions like union organized strikes and government embargoes.
The cause may be over-consumption, ageing infrastructure, choke point disruption or
bottlenecks at oil refineries and port facilities that restrict fuel supply. An emergency may
emerge during unusually cold winters.this probabaly rises the depletion of energy.
Pipeline failures and other accidents may cause minor interruptions to energy supplies. A
crisis could possibly emerge after infrastructure damage from severe weather. Attacks by
terrorists or militia on important infrastructure are a possible problem for energy consumers,
with a successful strike on a Middle East facility potentially causing global shortages.
Political events, for example, when governments change due to regime change, monarchy
collapse, military occupation, and coup may disrupt oil and gas production and create
shortages.
[edit] Historical crises
• 1973 oil crisis - Cause: an OPEC oil export embargo by many of the major Arab oil-
producing states, in response to western support of Israel during the Yom Kippur War
• 1979 energy crisis - Cause: the Iranian revolution
• 1990 spike in the price of oil - Cause: the Gulf War
• The 2000–2001 California electricity crisis - Cause: failed deregulation, and business
corruption.
• The UK fuel protest of 2000 - Cause: Raise in the price of crude oil combined with
already relatively high taxation on road fuel in the UK.
• North American natural gas crisis
• Argentine energy crisis of 2004
• North Korea has had energy shortages for many years.
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• Zimbabwe has experienced a shortage of energy supplies for many years due to
financial mismanagement.
While not entering a full crisis, political riots that occurred during the 2007 Burmese anti-
government protests were initially sparked by rising energy prices. Likewise the Russia-
Ukraine gas dispute and the Russia-Belarus energy dispute have been mostly resolved before
entering a prolonged crisis stage.
[edit] Emerging shortages
Kuwait's Al Burqan Oil Field, the world's second largest oil field, will be depleted within 40
years.[1]
Crises that currently exist include:
• Oil price increases since 2003 - Caused by continued global increases in petroleum
demand coupled with production stagnation, the falling value of the U.S. dollar, and a
myriad of other secondary causes.
• 2008 Central Asia energy crisis, caused by abnormally cold temperatures and low
water levels in an area dependent on hydroelectric power. Despite having significant
hydrocarbon reserves, in February 2008 the President of Pakistan announced plans to
tackle energy shortages that were reaching crisis stage.[2] At the same time the South
African President was appeasing fears of a prolonged electricity crisis in South Africa.
[3]
• South African electrical crisis. The South African crisis, which may last to 2012, lead
to large price rises for platinum in February 2008[4] and reduced gold production.
• China experienced severe energy shortages towards the end of 2005 and again in early
2008. During the latter crisis they suffered severe damage to power networks along
with diesel and coal shortages.[5] Supplies of electricity in Guangdong province, the
manufacturing hub of China, are predicted to fall short by an estimated 10 GW.[6]
[edit] Social and economic effects
Main article: Energy economics
The macroeconomic implications of a supply shock-induced energy crisis are large, because
energy is the resource used to exploit all other resources. When energy markets fail, an
energy shortage develops. Electricity consumers may experience intentionally-engineered
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rolling blackouts which are released during periods of insufficient supply or unexpected
power outages, regardless of the cause.
Industrialized nations are dependent on oil, and efforts to restrict the supply of oil would have
an adverse effect on the economies of oil producers. For the consumer, the price of natural
gas, gasoline (petrol) and diesel for cars and other vehicles rises. An early response from
stakeholders is the call for reports, investigations and commissions into the price of fuels.
There are also movements towards the development of more sustainable urban infrastructure.
In 2006, US survey respondents were willing to pay more for a plug-in hybrid car
In the market, new technology and energy efficiency measures become desirable for
consumers seeking to decrease transport costs.[7] Examples include:
• In 1980 Briggs & Stratton developed the first gasoline hybrid electric automobile;
also are appearing plug-in hybrids.
• the growth of advanced biofuels.
• innovations like the Dahon, a folding bicycle
• modernized and electrifying passenger transport
• Railway electrification systems and new engines such as the Ganz-Mavag locomotive
• variable compression ratio for vehicles
Other responses include the development of non-conventional oil sources such as synthetic
fuel from places like the Athabasca Oil Sands, more renewable energy commercialization and
use of alternative propulsion. There may be a Relocation trend towards local foods and
possibly microgeneration, solar thermal collectors and other green energy sources.
Tourism trends change and ownership of gas-guzzlers vary, both because of increases to fuel
costs which are passed on to customers. Items which were not so popular gain favour, such as
nuclear power plants and the blanket sleeper, a garment to keep children warm. Building
construction techniques change to reduce heating costs, potentially through increased
insulation.
See also: Green building and Zero-energy building
[edit] Crisis management
An electricity shortage is felt most by those who depend on electricity for their heating,
cooking and water supply. In these circumstances a sustained energy crisis may become a
humanitarian crisis.
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Nuclear power in Germany and other countries is promoted under the banner of energy
security despite the likelihood of peak uranium.
Main article: Mitigation of peak oil
The Hirsch report made clear that an energy crisis is best averted by preparation. In 2008,
solutions such as the Pickens Plan and the satirical in origin Paris Hilton energy plan suggest
the growing public consciousness of the importance of mitigation.
Energy policy may be reformed leading to greater energy intensity, for example in Iran with
the 2007 Gas Rationing Plan in Iran, Canada and the National Energy Program and in the
USA with the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007. In Europe the oil phase-out in
Sweden is an initiative a government has taken to provide energy security. Another mitigation
measure is the setup of a cache of secure fuel reserves like the United States Strategic
Petroleum Reserve, in case of national emergency. Chinese energy policy includes specific
targets within their 5 year plans.
Andrew McKillop has been a proponent of a contract and converge model or capping
scheme, to mitigate both emissions of greenhouse gases and a peak oil crisis. The imposition
of a carbon tax would have mitigating effects on an oil crisis.[citation needed] The Oil Depletion
Protocol has been developed by Richard Heinberg to implement a powerdown during a peak
oil crisis. While many sustainable development and energy policy organisations have
advocated reforms to energy development from the 1970s, some cater to a specific crisis in
energy supply including Energy-Questand the International Association for Energy
Economics. The Oil Depletion Analysis Centre and the Association for the Study of Peak Oil
and Gas examine the timing and likely effects of peak oil.
Ecologist William Rees believes that
Biofuels
Biomass
Geothermal
Hydro power
Solar power
Tidal power
Wave power
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Wind power
In response to the petroleum crisis, the principles of green energy and sustainable living
movements gain popularity. This has led to increasing interest in alternate power/fuel
research such as fuel cell technology, liquid nitrogen economy, hydrogen fuel, biomethanol,
biodiesel, Karrick process, solar energy, geothermal energy, tidal energy, wave power, and
wind energy, and fusion power. To date, only hydroelectricity and nuclear power have been
significant alternatives to fossil fuel.
Hydrogen gas is currently produced at a net energy loss from natural gas, which is also
experiencing declining production in North America and elsewhere. When not produced from
natural gas, hydrogen still needs another source of energy to create it, also at a loss during the
process. This has led to hydrogen being regarded as a 'carrier' of energy, like electricity, rather
than a 'source'. The unproven dehydrogenating process has also been suggested for the use
water as an energy source.
Efficiency mechanisms such as Negawatt power can encourage significantly more effective
use of current generating capacity. It is a term used to describe the trading of increased
efficiency, using consumption efficiency to increase available market supply rather than by
increasing plant generation capacity. As such, it is a demand-side as opposed to a supply-side
measure.
See also: Strategic uranium reserves and Nuclear energy policy
[edit] Predictions
Although technology has made oil extraction more efficient, the world is having to struggle to
provide oil by using increasingly costly and less productive methods such as deep sea
drilling, and developing environmentally sensitive areas such as the Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge.
The world's population continues to grow at a quarter of a million people per day, increasing
the consumption of energy. Although far less from people in developing countries, especially
USA, the per capita energy consumption of China, India and other developing nations
continues to increase as the people living in these countries adopt more energy intensive
lifestyles. At present a small part of the world's population consumes a large part of its
resources, with the United States and its population of 300 million people consuming far
more oil than China with its population of 1.3 billion people.
William Catton has emphasised the link between population size and energy supply,
concluding that
The faster the present generation draws down the fossil energy legacy upon which
“ persistently exuberant lifestyles now depend, the less opportunity posterity will
have to live in anything like the same way or the same numbers. Yet most
contemporary political proposals for solving problems of economic stagnation or
inequity amount to plans for speeding up the rate of drawdown of non-renewable
resources. ”
David Pimentel professor of ecology and agriculture at Cornell University, has called for
massive reduction in world populations in order to avoid a permanent global energy crisis.
The implication is that cheap oil has created a human overshoot beyond Earth's carrying
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capacity which inevitably lead to an energy crisis. David Price postulates that population
growth occurs when a higher quality form of energy is commercialised. [10]
See also: Energy balance and Tragedy of the Commons
For nearly 60 years the US dependence on imported oil has grown significantly.
Matthew Simmons and Julian Darley amongst others, have examined the economic effects of
an energy crisis. Historian, and sociologist Franz Schurmann links an energy crisis with a
deflating American dollar. He has stated that
If a dollar free-fall should take place, Americans will confront an energy crisis that
“ will make the October 1973 oil shortage seem a mild nuisance. ”
According to Christopher Falvin, geopolitical factors has resulted in current energy system,
based on fossil fuels, to be a risk management issue that undermines global security.[citation needed]
Considering the significant source of greenhouse gas emissions accumulating in the
atmosphere, fossil fuel energy is being viewed as increasingly socially irresponsible. Joseph
Tainter is an expert on societal collapse and energy supply who draws attention to the
complexity of modern society and our ability to problem solve the wider issue of
environmental degradation.[11]
The decision to develop a biofuel industry through subsidies and tariffs in the USA has
increased food costs globally. Lester R. Brown states [12] that by converting grains into fuel
for cars
..the world is facing the most severe food price inflation in history as grain and
“ soybean prices climb to all-time highs, ”