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Archive for March 27th, 2007

The New Seven Sisters

Posted by Richard on March 27, 2007

In the latest issue of The Global Guru , Nicholas Vardy looked at today's powerhouses in the oil and gas industry. Financial Times recently christened them the "New Seven Sisters," and they're mostly — and unfortunately — government-owned enterprises. (The original Seven Sisters were the seven big international oil companies that dominated production after WWII.)

The New Seven Sisters are also largely from developing countries. Saudi Aramco is the big kid on the block, with a quarter of the world's reserves and three times the capacity of anyone else. But the others are growing in importance:

Although less powerful than the Saudis, the other sisters now dominate the familiar Western majors in terms of influence. Russia's Gazprom is the industry bad boy, never reluctant to flex its muscles on the battlefield of business. China's CNPC owns 88% of PetroChina and is active in about 20 countries from Azerbaijan to Ecuador. NIOC, Iran's national energy company, has partnerships with Italian, French, Dutch and Norwegian companies and collaborates with Chinese and Russian groups. PDVSA is Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez's political pawn. The company's profits are subsidizing London commuters. Brazil's Petrobras is a global leader in finding and producing oil from deep waters. Petronas is Malaysia's national oil company and may be the slickest and most commercial organization of the bunch

Aside from the moral and practical harm related to expropriation of private property, the growing "natural resources nationalism" has other bad consequences:

Some of the New Seven Sisters have become little more than their home country's bottomless piggybank, funding politically expedient social ventures. The poster child of irresponsible profligacy is President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela who spends two-thirds of PDVSA's profits on his populist social programs. The result? PDVSA's production capacity has fallen from 3.4 to 1.5 million barrels per day since 1999. In Iran, NIOC cannot boost its oil production or fix its refineries because its profits go toward keeping gas at 40 cents per gallon for Iranian consumers. In Russia, too, little of Gazprom's earnings go towards upgrading Russia's antiquated, leaking pipeline system.

This mismanagement has global consequences. The IEA estimates that the world is falling 20% short of making the investment needed to ensure adequate energy supplies for the next 25 years. And governments' unwillingness to allow their national oil companies to reinvest profits back into industry is the primary culprit.

Just what we need. Megalomaniacal socialist scum who would flunk Econ 101 are dragging down global energy production to satisfy their lust for power and indulge their redistributionist whims.

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Carnival of Principled Government

Posted by Richard on March 27, 2007

Check out Dana's second Carnival of Principled Government over at Principled Discovery. This edition has somewhat of a Jeffersonian theme, but there's certainly plenty of variety there — theology, economics, jurisprudence, and more.

Don't miss Rick Sincere's review of speeches by libertarian authors Brian Doherty and Neal Boortz. I've got Doherty's Radicals for Capitalism in my pile of books to read, and after reading Sincere's post, I may have to move it up a few places. Also, check out Joe's plan for getting a master's degree while playing with his guns.

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“The men of Munich”

Posted by Richard on March 27, 2007

Newt Gingrich's March 26 column is about the people historian William Manchester called "the men of Munich" and their modern-day counterparts:

The news report came about mid-week. Maybe you saw it.

The Associated Press reported that terrorists in Iraq have passed an unthinkable threshold: They used two children to disguise a car bomb.

The car was waved through a checkpoint by American soldiers who could not imagine that children would be in a car filled with explosives. When the terrorists got to their target, they got out of the car and ran. They left the children behind in the car, and then blew it up.

There is a word for people who put children in a car to be blown up. The word is evil.

When I travel around the country speaking to groups of Americans, I often tell the story of a couple arrested last year in Great Britain. They were arrested on the suspicion that they were going to use their eight-month-old baby to smuggle a bomb onto an airplane. They were apparently going to disguise the bomb as baby food. And they were perfectly happy to kill their baby just as long as they killed some Americans in the process.

There is a word for people like this. The word is evil.

It's important that we say this out loud and that we render this moral judgment. Because if we fail to understand that our enemy is evil, we have failed to understand what we are fighting.

We are not used to adversaries who will kill young children — even their own children — just to get a chance to kill us. But we had better get used to it, because this is the level of seriousness in the threat we face — this is the level of its ferocity.

And yet I wonder if some of us are still not prepared to recognize and confront the evil of our enemies.

The rest is about what Gingrich calls "a suicidal inability to come to grips with evil." Go. Read.

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