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Bolivian Gas Crisis
international |
anti-capitalism |
news report
Saturday October 04, 2003 18:25 by Sian Muldowney sianmuldowney at yahoo dot co dot uk Bolivia
Social and Political unrest escalates in Bolivia as a result of proposed plans to sell the country´s natural gas to US and Mexico. Protests and blockades continue and the government defends the use of military force. BOLIVIAN GAS CRISIS |
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Jump To Comment: 4 3 2 1we see global socialists (the south american sister organisations of Ireland's SP and SWM and CY, CPI etc.,) still writing and supporting and collecting money.
It may seem silly to remind everyone, but every time infrastructure is closed, food shortages begin, and the black market inflates, and everyone needs Ca$h.
At present money transfers are delayed for upto a week, but money is still getting home. Bolivians live throughout the spanish speaking world.
What is different now, is that Catholic aid agencies as well recognise that this crises is of proper concern to the Global church, if you are a "church-goer" why not suggest some way of helping.
UK imc have cobbled together lots of english links:
http://indymedia.org.uk/en/2003/10/278852.html
and The Washington Post has done something too:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A38155-2003Oct16.html
also: http://bolivia.indymedia.org/es/2003/10/3619.shtml
they cooky so Bolivia C&Pd all of it.
The Bolivian government is unlikely to back down, simply because the USA wants and needs this gas. Part of the reason is that historically the US was largely self sufficient in natural gas and over the past two decades has come to depend on Canadian and then Mexican gas. The problem is that all the large gas fields have been found and much of the existing supply is coming from the giant fields found years ago, but these are beginning to falter as they are depleted. Gas fields are unlike oil fields which fall a relatively smooth bell curve of production, with a peak in the middle. Instead gas fields can produce at quite a steady flat rate for years and then with little warning, production rapidly sags. In the industry it's often referred to as the gas cliff.
Anyway to make up for the faltering production from all the large fields, many thousands of small fields have been drilled. The trouble is that because they are so small (in relative terms), that they are being used up in just a few years, sometimes in as little as 3 to 4 years. And even though there are many small fields, those found are getting progressively smaller and it takes more money, investment and effort to find them and put in the infrastructure to tap them. This has to be ultimately reflected in the cost.
In the latter part of the 90s, there was a big push to get gas from Mexico too. But Mexican usage has been steadily rising, with the result that exports to the USA have declined.
So the hunt is on to maintain the vast quantities of gas and low prices to the US economy and Bolivia is part of that picture.
Taking gas from Bolivia probably means it is being liquefied and transported by specialised LNG ships to the USA. This is not really desirable for them, because in the overall picture 1) considerable energy is expended in liquefying the gas, in creating the infrastructure of special handling facilities and the ships and 2) the LNG ships can only transport limited supplies as opposed to natural gas pipelines.
But one thing is sure the USA will get this gas one way or another as things are becoming (behind the scenes) desperate for the USA. We should view this as a microcosm of things in the future, when all the cheap and easily accessible oil is largely used up. The problem then is not that there is necessarily a shortage of gas (or oil), it just that the giant, cheap, easily extractable and therefore profitable resources are being used up. Thus in this calculus, the people of Bolivia simply don't count and this is very much part and parcel of the so called War on Terror, or should we say War of Terror, because the beast which is heavily addicted to cheap and plentiful energy, is going to lash out to continue it's fix.
For a good background to the natural gas crisis, see the article in related link
But in fairness it's not "headline news" like the Kalifornia vote or the soccer rape sallegations.
It's stories like this - real news which usually doesn't get covered in the establishment media - that shows the value of indymedia.
I hadn't heard about this from RTE or the dailies, it took an indymdia supporter in Bolivia to to get the story out to us. Says a lot about our 'free press'.