2009 Recession
Brian Bloom
Whilst most people are vaguely aware that oil is important to the world
economy, few understand the true impact of the recent rise in the oil price.
In 1998 the heads of state of the USA and Australia failed to ratify the
Kyoto protocols. They were trying to protect their country’s economies.
Ironically, they engineered a situation where not only is the US economy under
greater threat than it would have been had our leaders ratified the protocols,
the entire world economy is now seriously threatened.
It took a further nine years for the US government to finally understand
how serious an error of judgement the failure to ratify Kyoto was. The issue
had nothing to do with Carbon Dioxide emissions. It had to do with the fact
that their failure to take action at that time blocked the march to market of
alternative energy technologies. Finally, in June 2007, the Renewable Energy
and Energy Conservation Tax Act (H.R. 2776) was passed. But the damage
had been done. The sharp rise in the oil price – from around $65 a barrel in
June 2007 to around $135 a barrel in June 2008 – has been a direct consequence
of that original error of judgment.
H.R. 2776 put the following in place, and the associated costs
over 10 years are highlighted:
|
Tax concession
(Alternative Energies)
|
Cost $billions
|
|
Renewable energy
production tax credit
|
6.580
|
|
Solar Energy and Fuel Cell
Investment tax credit
|
0.563
|
|
Renewable clean energy
bonds for public providers and electric co-operatives
|
0.550
|
|
Sales of electric
transmission property
|
0.000
|
|
Residential energy
efficient equipment incentives
|
0.089
|
|
$4,000 tax credit for
plug-in hybrids
|
1.200
|
|
50 cents per gallon
production tax credit for cellulose alcohol for fuel
|
.024
|
|
Extension of biodiesel
production tax credit
|
.279
|
|
Tax credits for
alternative fuel dispensing equipment
|
.184
|
|
Fringe benefits for
bicycle commuters
|
.010
|
|
Modification of
depreciation allowances on certain vehicles
|
.786
|
|
Restructuring of New York
Liberty Zone tax credits
|
1.636
|
|
Total cost of tax
concessions for alternative energy and alternative energy infrastructure
|
$11.901
|
|
Tax concession revoked
(savings)
|
Income $billions
|
|
Denial of section 199
benefits for income attributable to domestic production(within the US) of
oil, natural gas or primary products thereof
|
(11.427)
|
|
Increased amortization
period for geological and geophysical expenditures from 5 years to7 years
|
(0.103)
|
|
Limitations on the ability
of oil and gas companies to claim foreign tax credits
|
(3.562)
|
|
Tightening of eligibility
for renewable diesel credits
|
(0.085)
|
|
Total Income from
elimination of oil and gas tax credits
|
($15.177)
|
The surplus of $3.276 billion ($15.177 - $11.901) will be allocated as
follows to encourage energy efficiencies within buildings:
|
Tax concession (to encourage energy savings and reduced CO2)
|
Income $billions
|
|
Tax credit bonds for green
community programs designed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
|
1.46
|
|
Tax credit bonds to
provide States with funds to encourage energy efficiency improvements to
domestic property
|
0.903
|
|
Energy efficiency
deductions for commercial buildings
|
.901
|
|
Energy efficiency credits
for appliances
|
.351
|
|
Depreciation by utilities
of smart electric meters over a five year period
|
1.315
|
|
Total cost of
encouraging energy conservation in buildings
|
$4.93
|
Total apparent incremental cost of H.R. 2776: $1.654 billion
($15.177b – $11.901b – $4.93b)
Apart from the fact that the bill is responding to lobby group pressures
in some areas – which may or may not solve the problems (and which responses
glaringly do not promote R&D in other areas, in particular over-unity
electromagnetic energy) – it is a sterling example of political sleight of hand
and the disingenuousness that accompanies lack of ethics in politics. It
“appears” that the US government has now put in place a series of
measures which will encourage that which Kyoto would have required it to do 10
years ago, and that the net cost will be around $1.7 billion over 10 years.
But let’s look at the additional cost of not ratifying
the Kyoto protocols and of not passing H.R. 2776 (or something similar) ten
years ago. Let’s look at the impact of the recent oil price rises – which would
likely not have occurred if the Kyoto protocols had been ratified.
Note: As an aside, there will be some critics who will argue that it’s
easy to talk like this in hindsight. The fact is that I started writing these
articles on November 30th, 1999. In that very first article the
following statement appeared: “Perhaps [the] most serious [error of
judgement] of all, the USA Government failed to ratify the Kyoto Protocols -
thereby sabotaging any lingering possibility that natural market forces would
ensure a timely emergence of the technological "drivers" of the next
[economic] up-wave.” Source: http://www.gold-eagle.com/editorials_02/bloom080502.html
. I ask the reader to bear this in mind when reading the
balance of this forward looking article which is, ultimately, attempting to
develop an approach to solutions.
For many years I have been trying to communicate that the people whom we
have appointed to positions of political power are typically not suited to
occupy those positions of trust. We cannot allow a situation to continue where
our supposedly democratically elected political leaders are responsive to lobby
groups which represent vested interests. We cannot continue to appoint
charismatic, silver tongued, persuasive salesman to positions of political power.
The issue does not devolve to which political system we use, or which political
party the candidate represents. It devolves to “eligibility” of politicians to
occupy positions of power. And eligibility goes beyond competence. It goes to
wisdom and ethical values.
Dear reader, it is a virtual certainty that, unless the oil price is
“managed” downwards, 2009 will be a year of recession. Arguably, for the
following reasons, the world economy is already in recession.
In 2004 I took a long term view of the world’s oil (and related) markets
and their impact on the world economy. This is what I found – in context that
world GDP in 2003 was $42.3 Trillion:
Table 1:
Summary oil related contributions to World GDP.
(2003 numbers)
|
Oil
|
2.84%
|
|
Motor Car Manufacture
|
2.80%
|
|
Road Building
|
0.50%
|
|
Value Add (Refineries,
Pipelines, Service stations)
|
2.00%
|
|
Aircraft Manufacture
|
0.58%
|
|
Air Travel, Road, Rail,
Sea Freight
|
0.74%
|
|
Subtotal
|
9.46%
|
|
Other assumed
(Plastics, pharmaceuticals, textiles)
|
1.00%
|
|
Total % of
World GDP
|
10.46%
|
In 2003, the weighted average savings rate of the industrialised world
was 4.39%.
The table below shows the impact on the economic multiplier of that
savings rate
Table 2:
Multiplier Effect after 12 cycles of spending
|
Savings
rate
|
|
4.39%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Time Period
|
Income
|
Save
|
Spend
|
|
|
1
|
$
100.00
|
$
4.39
|
$
95.61
|
|
|
2
|
$
95.61
|
$
4.20
|
$
91.41
|
|
|
3
|
$
91.41
|
$
4.01
|
$
87.40
|
|
|
4
|
$
87.40
|
$
3.84
|
$
83.56
|
|
|
5
|
$
83.56
|
$
3.67
|
$
79.89
|
|
|
6
|
$
79.89
|
$
3.51
|
$
76.39
|
|
|
7
|
$
76.39
|
$
3.35
|
$
73.03
|
|
|
8
|
$
73.03
|
$
3.21
|
$
69.83
|
|
|
9
|
$
69.83
|
$
3.07
|
$
66.76
|
|
|
10
|
$
66.76
|
$
2.93
|
$
63.83
|
|
|
11
|
$
63.83
|
$
2.80
|
$
61.03
|
|
|
12
|
$
61.03
|
$
2.68
|
$
58.35
|
|
Cumulative
Income
|
$
948.75
|
$
41.65
|
$
907.10
|
|
Multiplier
effect
|
9.49
|
X
|
|
Assuming one spending cycle occurs in one month (not realistic,
but done for the purposes of making the point in principle), then the
cumulative impact of the income that originally flowed from oil and related
industries – over 12 months – would be:
10.46% X 9.49 =
99.27%
Except for the items under “Other”, the numbers in Table 1 are accurate
(in that the dollar values were sourced from the internet), as was the weighted
average world savings rate used in Table 2. The only assumption that is
“rubbery” is how long it takes a spending cycle to complete. To my knowledge it
is impossible to measure this, but the point has been made in principle.
The reader should also be aware that this is a highly unorthodox way of
looking at this particular subject. Most economists (and I am not an economist)
talk in terms of Primary Industries (Farming, Fisheries, Forestry and Mining,)
being the initial drivers of the economy. However, without “energy” (also
sourced from coal) there would be no large scale Primary Industry activity.
There would be no broad-acre farming, no deep sea fishing, no forestry and no
deep level mining.
The bottom line is that oil is the ultimate driver of the world
economy and will continue to be so until an appropriate alternative is found –
which, in addition to providing a source of energy also needs to provide
multiple millions of downstream employment opportunities.
This latter requirement will eliminate nuclear, wind, geothermal,
hydro-electric and other similar ‘fixed’ location technologies from contention
– all of which will replace coal. It also brings into stark focus
that ‘farming’ for food will come into head-to-head competition with farming
for biofuels (intended to replace oil) unless we find an alternative energy
that is not dependant on food related agriculture. (Biofuels from cultivated
algae seems to offer a possible solution in this area).
The two (apparent) alternatives – which potentially offer comprehensive
solutions - are solar energy and environmental energy scavenging, because
neither generates CO2. Conceivably, in time, it may be
possible to introduce hydrogen into contention. Unfortunately, the minds of
physicists are typically programmed to block out environmental energy
scavenging on the grounds that this is a pipe dream which would defy the laws
of thermodynamics. I happen to think they are making a serious error of
judgment in closing their minds to this possibility; and I set out
comprehensive reasons in my factional novel, Beyond Neanderthal – which
can now be ordered over the internet from www.beyondneanderthal.com
So what do we do in the meantime? What do we do as oil supplies wane,
and as coal is being blocked from being a fall-back position by the IPCC
findings – because Carbon Dioxide is supposedly destroying our environment?
(with which I happen to also disagree). Do we just ignore the fact that
synthetic diesel can be made from coal at a cost of less than $50 a barrel, and
embrace nuclear – which is what the politicians have been positioning to
achieve ever since Margaret Thatcher’s days? Take another look at the two photographs
above. Do you see humility, compassion, Sage wisdom or Christian Love?
Well, even if you are prepared to accept nuclear (which won’t address
the Peak Oil problem) it will still take a few years to roll nuclear out. We
therefore have to take it on the chin and accept that 2009 will likely bring a
recession; and that the length and depth of that recession will depend on how
quickly we can mobilise alternative energy technologies that can also generate
downstream economic activity. As it happens, nuclear probably can’t do that and
neither can nuclear address the Peak Oil problem because cars can’t be nuclear
powered (yet). At present, nuclear is good for one thing only. It can generate
electricity for distribution to remote locations via overhead wires in
politically stable countries. Maybe, one day, it could be harnessed to produce
hydrogen from seawater for use in hydrogen fuel cells.
But here’s a thorny one: Who gets to decide which country will be
allowed to have nuclear power and which country won’t? Let’s think about that
for a while. Venezuela? Haiti? Zimbabwe? Iran? Syria? How about Turkey?
Hmm. That’s a really thorny one. Turkey will likely have 80 million
inhabitants by the end of the decade and, if it gets accepted into the EU, it
will have the largest population of any single member country of the EU. Oh,
and by the way, Turkey’s population is largely Muslim. Does that matter? If so,
why? Why should it matter? One of the issues in the modern day world is the
divisive attitude of some of more our egocentric leaders.
Which brings us back to Peak Oil and the 2009 recession.
As an aside, are you starting to get an idea of just how much economic
damage will be attributable to the IPCC’s findings if it turns out the
scientists are wrong about the role of CO2 in climate change –
which I happen to be convinced they are? (For the arguments, see my media
release dated June 4th, 2008, which can be accessed at http://www.beyondneanderthal.com/html/s01_home/home.asp?id=home
), and, while you’re reading that media release, bear in mind that the ice caps
on Mars are also melting. Are you starting to understand how much
economic damage the politicians have caused by not ratifying the Kyoto
protocols? Not yet? Well, then read on.
Table 3:
Calculation of wholesale value of oil in 2004
as
percentage of 2003 World GDP
2003 World GDP: $42.3
trillion
2003 World Oil Production
Capacity: 74 million Barrels per day
2004 Price per barrel: +-$45
Value of world oil market: 74
X 365 X $45 = $1.2 Trillion p.a.
Conclusion
Oil alone contributed 1.2/42.3 = 2.84%
of 2003 World GDP
Table 4:
Calculation of wholesale value of oil in 2008
as
percentage of 2008 World GDP (implied)
·
Total
2006 GDP: $48.4 Trillion (Source: World Bank)
·
Implied
annual growth rate (3 yrs since 2003): 4.59% p.a.
·
Implied
2008 GDP: $52.9 trillion (compounding at 4.59% p.a.)
·
Current
oil price (June 23rd, 2008): $137/bbl
·
Current
Oil Demand: 87.8 million bpd (Source: International Energy Agency)
·
Value
of Oil demand: $4.39 trillion
Conclusion:
Implied oil production has
risen from 2.84% of world GDP in 2003/4 to 9.1% in 2008
Now, to understand what this means, we have to
look at the part of the world economy which is not directly
related to oil.
Table
5: Implied annual growth rate of the
non-oil
element of the World Economy
·
2003:
97.16% (100% - 2.84%) of $42.3 Trillion = US$41.1 Trillion
·
2008:
91.9% (100% - 9.1%) of $52.9 trillion = US$48.6 trillion
·
Implied
Growth rate in current dollars: 3.4% p.a.
Overall Conclusion: Adjusting for price inflation, and assuming world
inflation has been rising at more than 3.4% p.a., the world economy is very
likely already in recession as at June 2008.
This observation is validated by the chart below – courtesy
Decisionpoint.com, which recently gave a sell signal as the index penetrated
its curved up-trend line on the downside.
Chart 1: 80
Year View of the Dow Jones Industrial Index
This sell signal can be interpreted as the market saying that there will
not be a hyperinflationary blow-off in share prices, and that the Fed will curb
its predilection to print its way out of economic problems
It should also be recognised that the very ability of the US Federal
Reserve System to continue creating money out of thin air is waning in any
event; because US Public Debt is now in excess of $9.4 trillion and the
interest burden on that debt is in excess of the so-called budget deficit, the
component numbers of which are probably not believable anyway because of likely
bookkeeping sleight of hand. Ignore the bookkeeping. Follow the cash trail.
Finally, we should not forget that the Federal Reserve System operates
in breach of Article 1, Section 8 of the United States Constitution. And we
should also not lose sight of the fact that it is currently dysfunctional. The
FOMC is supposed to have 13 members, 7 of whom are nominated by the US
President and ratified by the Senate; and six of whom are Presidents of the
regional Federal Reserve Banks – which are owned by Private Enterprise. At present,
there are two nominated seats vacant – and so voting at FOMC meetings is
weighted 6:5 in favour of Private Enterprise. The political system in the US
has also become dysfunctional because the Senate has been sitting on the
President’s nominations for the 2 vacant seats for months and has failed to
either ratify or reject them.
Way Forward
The time has come for us to face the future with a far more responsible
and mature approach. Yes, even Blind Freddy can see that there is climate
change. Its even happening on other planet/s as our sun has been moving to
complete its 26,000 cycle through the galaxy – and to begin yet another cycle
in its multi billion year life. We have to respect what the highly professional
scientists are saying, but we also have to stop treating them as if they were
omnipotent gods. We cannot allow them, with just a flick of the wrist, to
dictate what we may or may not do in respect of Carbon Dioxide; or, with a
flick of the other wrist, to accept or reject the possibility of over-unity
electromagnetic energy generation when they don’t even understand why the
Universe is expanding at an accelerating rate. What the world desperately needs
now is holistic thinking, calm discussion and sensible, non partisan decision
making by men and women of wisdom and integrity.
Fischer Tropsch technology – for converting coal to synthetic diesel –
has a place within the context of a much bigger strategic view of the future. One
such view is set out within the 440 pages of Beyond Neanderthal, which
took over 20 years to research. For various reasons, Nuclear Fission
technology is philosophically flawed as a concept and should be treated with
great circumspection. The possibility of Over-Unity electromagnetic energy
production should be investigated by the best minds in the field of Physics.
The circumstantial evidence suggests that there is more to this concept than
meets the eye. It should not be dismissed without in-depth investigation.
Let’s stop focussing on individual pieces of the jigsaw puzzle; and
let’s get some sensible Big Picture discussion going. You can purchase a copy
of Beyond Neanderthal , which is a factional novel, over the internet at
www.beyondneanderthal.com
The extremely powerful, non-chemical electricity storage technology is
described in my novel – which draws attention to two specific technologies,
patented in the 1980s, and which the world appears to have forgotten. The $300
million will come in handy because, by my calculations, the other of these two
technologies will require roughly that amount to be fully commercialised across
the planet within 7 years. In so doing, we can save the US Government the $16.8
billion tax credits provided for by H.R. 2776. Oh, and I almost forgot. The
$300 million can be repaid in full as part of the deal.
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