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sport marketing : Phelps' power depends
on more than gold .Games' short span makes it tough for Olympians to reach
same heights as pros
Market
strategy for what resource wars?
By David G Victor found at National
Interest Online 11.12.2007
Rising energy prices and mounting concerns about environmental depletion have
animated fears that the world may be headed for a spate of "resource
wars" - hot conflicts triggered by a struggle to grab valuable
resources. Such fears come in many stripes, but the threat industry has
sounded the alarm bells especially loudly in three areas.
First is the rise of China, which is poorly endowed with many of the
resources it needs - such as oil, gas, timber and most minerals - and has
already "gone out" to the world with the goal of securing what it
wants. Violent conflicts may follow as the country shunts others aside. A
second potential path down the road to resource wars starts with all the
money now flowing into poorly governed but resource-rich countries. Money can
fund civil wars and other hostilities, even leaking into the hands of
terrorists. And third is global climate change, which could multiply stresses
on natural resources and trigger water wars, catalyze the spread of disease
or bring about mass migrations.
Most of this is bunk, and nearly all of it has focused on the wrong lessons
for policy. Classic resource wars are good material for Hollywood
screenwriters. They rarely occur in the real world. To be sure, resource
money can magnify and prolong some conflicts, but the root causes of those
hostilities usually lie elsewhere. Fixing them requires focusing on the
underlying institutions that govern how resources are used and largely
determine whether stress explodes into violence. When conflicts do arise, the
weak link isn't a dearth in resources but a dearth in governance.
Feeding the dragon strategy to the market
Resource wars are largely back in vogue within the US threat industry
because of China's spectacular rise. Brazil, India, Malaysia and many others
that used to sit on the periphery of the world economy are also arcing
upward. This growth is fueling a surge in world demand for raw materials.
Inevitably, these countries have looked overseas for what they need, which
has animated fears of a coming clash with China and other growing powers over
access to natural resources.
Within the next three years, China will be the world's largest consumer of
energy. Yet, it's not just oil wells that are working harder to fuel China,
so too are chainsaws. Chinese net imports of timber nearly doubled from 2000
to 2005. The country also uses about one-third of the world's steel (around
360 million tons), or three times its 2000 consumption.
Even in coal resources, in which China is famously well-endowed, China
became a net importer in 2007. Across the board, the combination of low
efficiency, rapid growth and an emphasis on heavy industry - typical in the
early stages of industrial growth - have combined to make the country a
voracious consumer and polluter of natural resources. America, England and
nearly every other industrialized country went through a similar pattern,
though with a human population that was much smaller than today's
resource-hungry developing world.
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Among the needed resources, oil has been most visible. Indeed, Chinese
state-owned oil companies are dotting Africa, Central Asia and the Persian Gulf
with projects aimed to export oil back home. The overseas arm of India's state
oil company has followed a similar strategy - unable to compete head-to-head
with the major Western companies, it focuses instead on areas where human-rights
abuses and bad governance keep the major oil companies at bay and where India's
foreign policy can open doors. To a lesser extent, Malaysia engages in the same
behavior. The American threat industry rarely sounds the alarm over Indian and
Malaysian efforts, though, in part because those firms have less capital to
splash around and mainly because their stories just don't compare with fear of
the rising dragon.
These efforts to lock up resources by going out fit well with the standard
narrative for resource wars - a zero-sum struggle for vital supplies. But will a
struggle over resources actually lead to war and conflict?
To be sure, the struggle over resources has yielded a wide array of commercial
conflicts as companies duel for contracts and ownership. State-owned China
National Offshore Oil Corporation's (CNOOC) failed bid to acquire US-based
Unocal - and with it Unocal's valuable oil and gas supplies in Asia - is a
recent example. But that is hardly unique to resources - similar conflicts with
tinges of national security arise in the control over ports, aircraft engines,
databases laden with private information and a growing array of advanced
technologies for which civilian and military functions are hard to distinguish.
These disputes win and lose some friendships and contracts, but they do not
unleash violence.
Most importantly, China's going-out strategy is unlikely to spur resource wars
because it simply does not work, a lesson the Chinese are learning. Oil is a
fungible commodity, and when it is sourced far from China it is better to sell
(and buy) the oil on the world market. The best estimates suggest that only
about one-tenth of the oil produced overseas by Chinese investments (so-called
"equity oil") actually makes it back to the country. So, thus far, the
largest beneficiaries of China's strategy are the rest of the world's oil
consumers - first and foremost the United States - who gain because China
subsidizes production.
Until recently, the strategy of going out for oil looked like a good bet for
China's interests. But, despite threat-industry fear-mongering, we need not
worry that it will continue over the long term because Chinese enterprises are
already poised to follow a new strategy that is less likely to engender
conflict. The past strategy rested on a trifecta of passing fads. One fad was
the special access that Chinese state enterprises had to cheap capital from the
government and by retaining their earnings.
The ability to direct that spigot to political projects is diminishing as China
engages in reforms that expose state enterprises to the real cost of capital and
as the Chinese state and its enterprises look for better commercial returns on
the money they invest. Second, nearly all the equity-oil investments overseas
have occurred since the late 1990s, as prices have been rising. Each has looked
much smarter than the last because of the surging value of oil in the ground.
But that trend is slowing in many places because the cost of discovering and
developing oil resources is rising.
And the third passing fad in China's going-out strategy is the fiction that
China can cut special deals - such as by channeling development assistance to
pliable host governments - to confer a durable advantage for Chinese companies.
While there is no question that the special deals are rampant - by some
measures, most of China's foreign assistance is actually tied to
natural-resources projects - the Chinese government and its overseas enterprises
are learning that it is best to avoid these places for the long haul. Among the
special havens where Chinese companies toil are Sudan, Nigeria, Chad, Iran and
Zimbabwe - all countries where even Chinese firms find it hard to assure
adequate stability to reliably extract natural resources.
As China grapples with these hard truths about going out, the strategy will come
unstuck. It won't happen overnight, but evidence in this direction is
encouraging. China already pursues the opposite strategy - seeking reliable
hosts, multiple commercial partners and market-oriented contracts - when it
secures natural resources that require technical sophistication. China's first
supplies of imported natural gas, which started last year at a liquefied natural
gas terminal in Shenzhen, came from blue-chip investments in Australia, governed
by contracts and investments with major Western companies.
With time, China will shift to such arrangements and away from the armpits of
governance. At best, badly governed countries are mediocre hosts for projects
that export bulk commodities, such as iron ore and raw crude oil. These
projects, however, are least likely to engender zero-sum conflicts over
resources because it is particularly difficult to corner the market for widely
traded commodities, as China has learned with its equity-oil projects. Resources
that require technical sophistication to develop tend to favor integration and
stability, rather than a zero-sum struggle.
Pernicious tents
The second surge in thinking about resource wars comes from all the money that
is pulsing into resource-rich countries. There is no question that the revenues
are huge. OPEC cashed US$650 billion for 11.7 billion barrels of the oil it sold
in 2006, compared with $110 billion in 1998, when it sold a similar quantity of
oil at much lower prices. Russia's Central Bank reports that the country earned
more than $300 billion selling oil and gas in 2006, about
four times its annual haul in the late 1990s. But will this flood in rents cause
conflict and war?
There is no question that large revenues - regardless of the source - can fund a
lot of mischievous behavior. Iran is building a nuclear-weapons program with the
revenues from its oil exports. Russia has funded trouble in Chechnya, Georgia
and other places with oil and gas rents. Hugo Chavez opened Venezuela's bulging
checkbook to help populists in Bolivia and to poke America in ways that could
rekindle smoldering conflicts. Islamic terrorists also have benefited, in part,
from oil revenues that leak out of oil-rich societies or are channeled directly
from sympathetic governments.
But resource-related conflicts are multi-causal. In no case would simply cutting
the resources avoid or halt conflict, even if the presence of natural resources
can shift the odds. Certainly, oil revenues have advanced Iran's nuclear
program, which is a potential source of hot conflict and could make future
conflicts a lot more dangerous. But a steep decline in oil probably wouldn't
strangle the program on its own. Indeed, while Iran still struggles to make a
bomb, resource-poor North Korea has already arrived at that goal by starving
itself and getting help from friends. Venezuela's checkbook allows Chavez to be
a bigger thorn in the sides of those he dislikes, but there are other thorns
that poke without oil money.
As we see, what matters is not just money but how it is used. While al-Qaeda
conjures images of an oil-funded network - because it hails from the
resource-rich Middle East and its seed capital has oily origins - other lethal
terror networks, such as Sri Lanka's Tamil Tigers and Ireland's Republican Army,
arose with funding from diasporas rather than oil or other natural resources.
Unlike modern state armies that require huge infusions of capital, terror
networks are usually organized to make the most of scant funds.
During the run-up in oil and gas prices, analysts have often claimed that these
revenues will go to fund terror networks; yet it is sobering to remember that
al-Qaeda came out in the late 1990s, when oil earnings were at their lowest in
recent history. Most of the tiny sums of money needed for the September 11
attacks came from that period. Al-Qaeda's daring attacks against the US
embassies in Kenya and Tanzania occurred when oil-rich patrons were fretting
about the inability to make ends meet at home because revenues were so low.
Ideology and organization trump money as driving forces for terrorism.
Most thinking about resource-lubed conflict has concentrated on the ways that
windfalls from resources cause violence by empowering belligerent states or
sub-state actors. But the chains of cause and effect are more varied. For states
with weak governance and resources that are easy to grab, resources tend to make
weak states even weaker and raise the odds of hot conflict. This was true for
Angolas diamonds and Nigerias oil, which in both cases have helped finance
civil war. For states with stable authoritarian governments - such as Kuwait,
Saudi Arabia, most of the rest in the western Gulf, and perhaps also Russia and
Venezuela - the problem may be the opposite. A sharp decline in resource
revenues can create dangerous vacuums where expectations are high and paltry
distributions discredit the established authorities.
On balance, the windfall in oil revenues over recent years is probably breeding
more conflict than would a crash in prices. However, while a few conflicts
partly trace themselves to resources, it is the other pernicious effects of
resource windfalls, such as the undermining of democratic transitions and the
failure of most resource-reliant societies to organize their economies around
investment and productivity, that matter much, much more. At best, resources
have indirect and mixed effects on conflict.
Climate dangers
The third avenue for concern about coming resource wars is through the dangers
of global climate change. The litany is now familiar. Sea levels will rise,
perhaps a lot; storms will probably become more intense; dry areas are prone to
parch further and wet zones are likely to soak longer. And on top of those
probable effects, unchecked climate change raises the odds of suffering nasty
surprises if the world's climate and ecosystems respond in abrupt ways. Adding
all that together, the scenarios are truly disturbing. Meaningful action to stem
the dangers is long overdue.
In the United States over the last year, the traditional security community has
become engaged on these issues. Politically, that conversion has been touted as
good news because the odds of meaningful policy are higher if hawks also favor
action. Their concerns are seen through the lens of resource wars, with fears
such as: water shortages that amplify grievances and trigger conflict;
migrations of "climate refugees", which could stress border controls
and also cause strife if the displaced don't fit well in their new societies;
and diseases such as malaria that could be harder to contain if tropical
conditions are more prevalent, which in turn could stress health-care systems
and lead to hot wars.
While there are many reasons to fear global warming, the risk that such dangers
could cause violent conflict ranks extremely low on the list because it is
highly unlikely to materialize. Despite decades of warnings about water wars,
what is striking is that water wars don't happen - usually because countries
that share water resources have a lot more at stake and armed conflict rarely
fixes the problem. Some analysts have pointed to conflicts over resources,
including water and valuable land, as a cause in the Rwandan genocide, for
example. Recently, the UN secretary-general suggested that climate change was
already exacerbating the conflicts in Sudan.
But none of these supposed causal chains stay linked under close scrutiny - the
conflicts over resources are usually symptomatic of deeper failures in
governance and other primal forces for conflicts, such as ethnic tensions,
income inequalities and other unsettled grievances. Climate is just one of many
factors that contribute to tension. The same is true for scenarios of climate
refugees, where the moniker "climate" conveniently obscures the deeper
causal forces.
The dangers of disease have caused particular alarm in the advanced
industrialized world, partly because microbial threats are good fodder for the
imagination. But none of these scenarios hold up because the scope of all
climate-sensitive diseases is mainly determined by the prevalence of
institutions to prevent and contain them rather than the raw climatic factors
that determine where a disease might theoretically exist. For example, the
threat industry has flagged the idea that a growing fraction of the United
States will be malarial with the higher temperatures and increased moisture that
are likely to come with global climate change.
Yet much of the American South is already climatically inviting for malaria, and
malaria was a serious problem as far north as Chicago until treatment and
eradication programs started in the 19th century licked the disease. Today,
malaria is rare in the industrialized world, regardless of climate, and whether
it spreads again will hinge on whether governments stay vigilant, not so much on
patterns in climate. If Western countries really cared about the spread of
tropical diseases and the stresses they put on already fragile societies in the
developing world, they would redouble their efforts to tame the diseases
directly (as some are now doing) rather than imagining that efforts to lessen
global warming will do the job. Eradication usually depends mainly on strong and
responsive governments, not the bugs and their physical climate.
Rethinking policy
If resource wars are actually rare - and when they do exist, they are part of a
complex of causal factors - then much of the conventional wisdom about resource
policies needs fresh scrutiny. A full-blown new strategy is beyond this modest
essay, but here in the United States, at least three lines of new thinking are
needed.
First, the United States needs to think differently about the demands that
countries with exploding growth are making on the world's resources. It must
keep their rise in perspective, as their need for resources is still, on a per
capita basis, much smaller than typical Western appetites. And what matters most
is that the United States must focus on how to accommodate these countries'
peaceful rise and their inevitable need for resources.
Applied to China, this means getting the Chinese government to view efficient
markets as the best way to obtain resources - not only because such an approach
leads to correct pricing (which
encourages energy efficiency as resources become more dear), but also because it
transforms all essential resources into commodities, which makes their
particular physical location less important than the overall functioning of the
commodity market. All that will, in turn, make resource wars even less likely
because it will create common interests among all the countries with the
greatest demand for resources. It will transform the resource
problem from a zero-sum struggle to the common task of managing markets.
Most policymakers agree with such general statements, but the actual practice of
US policy has largely undercut this goal. Saber-rattling about CNOOC's attempt
to buy Unocal - along with similar fear-mongering around foreign control of
ports and new rules that seem designed to trigger reviews by the Committee on
Foreign Investment in the United States when foreigners try to buy
American-owned assets - sends the signal that going out will also be the
American approach, rather than letting markets function freely.
Likewise, one of the most important actions in the oil market is to engage China
and other emerging countries fully in the International Energy Agency - which is
the world's only institution for managing the oil commodity markets in times of
crisis - yet despite wide bipartisan consensus on that goal, nearly nothing is
ever done to execute such a policy. Getting China to source commodities through
markets rather than mercantilism will be relatively easy because Chinese
policymakers, as well as the leadership of state enterprises that invest in
natural resource projects, already increasingly think that way.
The sweep of history points against classic resource wars. Whereas colonialism
created long, oppressive and often war-prone supply chains for resources such as
oil and rubber, most resources today are fungible commodities. That means it is
almost always cheaper and more reliable to buy them in markets.
At the same time, much higher expectations must be placed on China to tame the
pernicious effects of its recent efforts to secure special access to natural
resources. Sudan, Chad and Zimbabwe are three particularly acute examples where
Chinese (and in Sudan's case, Indian) government investments, sheltered under a
foreign-policy umbrella, have caused harm by rewarding abusive governments. That
list will grow the more insecure China feels about its ability to source vital
energy and mineral supplies. Some of what is needed is patience because these
troubles will abate as China itself realizes that going out is an expensive
strategy that buys little in security.
Chinese state oil companies are generally well-run organizations; as they are
forced to pay the real costs of capital and to compete in the marketplace, they
won't engage in these strategies. The best analog is Brazil's experience, where
its state-controlled oil company has become ever smarter - and more market
oriented - as the Brazilian government has forced it to operate at arm's length
without special favors. That has not only allowed Petrobras to perform better,
but it has also made Brazil's energy markets function better and with higher
security.
Beyond patience, the West can help by focusing the spotlight on dangerous
practices - clearly branding them the problem. There's some evidence that the
shaming already underway is having an effect - evident, for example, in China's
recent decision to no longer use its veto in the UN Security Council to shield
Sudan's government. At the same time, the West can work with its own companies
to make payments to governments (and officials) much more transparent and to
close havens for money siphoned from governments. Despite many initiatives in
this area, such as the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative and the
now-stalled attempt by some oil companies to "Publish What You Pay",
little has been accomplished. Actual support for such policies by the most
influential governments is strikingly rare. America is notably quiet on this
front.
With regard to the flow of resources to terrorists - who in turn cause conflicts
and are often seen as a circuitous route to resource wars - policymakers must
realize that this channel for oil money is good for speeches but perhaps the
least important reason to stem the outflow of money for buying imported
hydrocarbons. Much more consequential is that the US call on world oil resources
is not sustainable because a host of factors - such as nationalization of oil
resources and insecurity in many oil-producing regions - make it hard for supply
to keep pace with demand. This yields tight and jittery markets and still-higher
prices.
These problems will just get worse unless the United States and other big
consumers temper their demand. The goal should not be "independence"
from international markets but a sustainable path of consumption. When the
left-leaning wings in American politics and the industry-centered National
Petroleum Council both issue this same warning about energy supplies - as they
have over the last year - then there is an urgent need for the United States to
change course. Yet Congress and the administration have done little to alter the
fundamental policy incentives for efficiency. At this writing, the House and
Senate are attempting to reconcile two versions of energy bills, neither of
which, strikingly, will cause much fundamental change to the situation.
Cutting the flow of revenues to resource-rich governments and societies can be a
good policy goal, but success will require American policymakers to pursue
strategies that they will find politically toxic at home. One is to get serious
about taxation. The only durable way to rigorously cut the flow of resources is
to keep prices high (and thus encourage efficiency as well as changes in
behavior that reduce dependence on oil) while channeling the revenues into the
US government treasury rather than overseas.
In short, that means a tax on imported oil and a complementary tax on all fuels
sold in the United States so that a fuel import tax doesn't simply hand a
windfall to domestic producers. And if the United States (and other resource
consumers) made a serious effort to contain financial windfalls to
natural-resources exporters, it would need - at the same time - to confront a
more politically poisonous task: propping up regimes or easing the transition to
new systems of governance in places where vacuums are worse than
incumbents.
Given all the practical troubles for the midwives of regime change, serious
policy in this area would need to deal with many voids.
Finally, serious thinking about climate change must recognize that the
"hard" security threats that are supposedly lurking are mostly a ruse.
They are good for the threat industry - which needs danger for survival - and
they are good for the greens who find it easier to build a coalition for policy
when hawks are supportive. Building a policy on this house of cards is no way to
muster support for a problem that requires several decades of sustained effort.
One of the greatest hurdles in the climate debate - one that is just now being
cleared, but will reappear if policy advocates seize on false dangers - has been
to contain the entrepreneurial skeptics who have sown public doubt about the
integrity of the science on causes and effects of climate change.
The false logic now runs in both directions. Not only will climate change
multiply threats by putting stress on societies, but a flood of articles warns
of new territorial conflicts as warming opens the formerly ice-bound Arctic for
exploration. Russia recently planted a flag on the seabed at the North Pole. In
fact, the underlying causes of this exploration rush are ambiguous property
rights and advances in undersea drilling that are unrelated to climate change. A
similar pattern unfolded in the 1950s in Antarctica, which led to a standoff of
territorial claims and no real harm to the region, no production of usable
minerals and no resource wars.
The real dangers lie in the growing risk that climate change could be a lot
worse than the likely scenarios, which could create severe and direct harm to
societies that is much more worrisome than the indirect and remote risk of
climate-induced resource wars. Yet politicians give more attention to imagined
insecurities from climate change and rarely talk about climate as a game of odds
and risk management. They talk even less about the resource war that nobody
should want to win - mankind's domination of nature. For the real losers in
unchecked climate change will be natural ecosystems unable, unlike humans, to
look ahead and adapt.
David G Victor is a professor of law at Stanford Law School and the director of
the Program on Energy and Sustainable Development. He is also a senior fellow at
the Council on Foreign Relations, where he directed a task force on energy
security. A frequent writer on natural resources policy, he is the author of The
Collapse of the Kyoto Protocol and the Struggle to Slow Global Warming
(Princeton University Press, 2001) and the co-editor of Natural Gas and
Geopolitics.
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