Stories tagged with "infrastructure protection"
Algeria & Morocco: Natural Gas Cartels, Fertilizer Mercantilism, and Rising Tensions
Posted by jeffvail on July 14, 2008 - 9:00am
Topic: Policy/Politics
Tags: algeria, fertilizer, infrastructure protection, infrastructure targeting, lng, mercantilism, morocco, natural gas, natural gas cartel, original, peak oil, phosphate [list all tags]
| Algeria is one of the world’s most important oil and gas exporters. Morocco has no significant oil and gas production, but has about 2/3 of the world’s rock phosphate reserves, a critical component in global fertilizer supply that increased 300% in price in the past year (.pdf) and may peak alongside global oil production. The two nations have historically been at odds, especially over the phosphate-rich territory of Western Sahara. Now, more than ever, their exports are critical to the energy and food supplies of the world. Alongside increasing importance, tensions between the two are on the rise as the US and Russia provoke the situation with massive opposing arms deals and bi-lateral trade agreements. This article will look at the forces behind these rising tensions and consider issues of fertilizer mercantilism, infrastructure vulnerability, and the potential formation of a natural gas cartel. |

Will Demand for Gas & Fertilizer Bring New Conflict to Morocco & Algeria?
Nigeria: Energy Infrastructure Firestorm
Posted by jeffvail on July 8, 2007 - 9:44am
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: energy insurgency, free-market insurgency, guerrilla entrepreneurs, ijaw, infrastructure attacks, infrastructure protection, infrastructure targeting, mend, niger delta, nigeria, oil, oil insurgency, oil wars, terror premium [list all tags]
When a fire becomes sufficiently intense, its heat creates a rising column of air so strong that surrounding air is drawn into the void, creating a draft that sustains and intensifies the fire. It becomes a self-sustaining, self-intensifying organism: a firestorm. The violence in Nigeria’s delta region has become a firestorm, and the consequences of this transformation will fundamentally impact that nation’s ability to export oil. Recent events in the delta region have transitioned the violence there from a negative-feedback loop where there was a disincentive to militants to shut in too high a portion of Nigeria’s oil exports to a positive-feedback loop where militants will compete to completely destroy Nigeria’s capacity to export oil.

Figure 1: Nigerian Militants in a Speedboat
Nigeria: Energy Infrastructure Firestorm
Posted by jeffvail on March 11, 2007 - 10:10am
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: energy insurgency, free-market insurgency, guerrilla entrepreneurs, ijaw, infrastructure attacks, infrastructure protection, infrastructure targeting, mend, niger delta, nigeria, oil, oil insurgency, oil wars, terror premium [list all tags]

Figure 1: Nigerian Militants in a Speedboat

k Nation (Jim Kunstler)


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