New technology and a little-known energy source suggest that fossil
fuels may not be finite. This would be a miracle—and a nightmare.
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Ralph Wilson/AP
As the great research ship Chikyu left
Shimizu in January to mine the explosive ice beneath the Philippine Sea,
chances are good that not one of the scientists aboard realized they might be
closing the door on Winston Churchill’s world. Their lack of knowledge is
unsurprising; beyond the ranks of petroleum-industry historians, Churchill’s
outsize role in the history of energy is insufficiently appreciated.
Winston Leonard
Spencer Churchill was appointed First Lord of the Admiralty in 1911. With
characteristic vigor and verve, he set about modernizing the Royal Navy, jewel
of the empire. The revamped fleet, he proclaimed, should be fueled with oil,
rather than coal—a decision that continues to reverberate in the present.
Burning a pound of fuel oil produces about twice as much energy as burning a
pound of coal. Because of this greater energy density, oil could push ships
faster and farther than coal could.
Churchill’s
proposal led to emphatic dispute. The United Kingdom had lots of coal but next
to no oil. At the time, the United States produced almost two-thirds of the
world’s petroleum; Russia produced another fifth. Both were allies of Great
Britain. Nonetheless, Whitehall was uneasy about the prospect of the Navy’s
falling under the thumb of foreign entities, even if friendly. The solution,
Churchill told Parliament in 1913, was for Britons to become “the owners, or at
any rate, the controllers at the source of at least a proportion of the supply
of natural oil which we require.” Spurred by the Admiralty, the U.K. soon
bought 51 percent of what is now British Petroleum, which had rights to
oil “at the source”: Iran (then known as Persia). The concessions’ terms were
so unpopular in Iran that they helped spark a revolution. London worked to
suppress it. Then, to prevent further disruptions, Britain enmeshed itself ever
more deeply in the Middle East, working to install new shahs in Iran and carve
Iraq out of the collapsing Ottoman Empire.
Churchill fired
the starting gun, but all of the Western powers joined the race to control
Middle Eastern oil. Britain clawed past France, Germany, and the Netherlands,
only to be overtaken by the United States, which secured oil concessions in
Turkey, Iraq, Bahrain, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia. The struggle created a
long-lasting intercontinental snarl of need and resentment. Even as
oil-consuming nations intervened in the affairs of oil-producing nations, they
seethed at their powerlessness; oil producers exacted huge sums from oil
consumers but chafed at having to submit to them. Decades of turmoil—oil shocks
in 1973 and 1979, failed programs for “energy independence,” two wars in
Iraq—have left unchanged this fundamental, Churchillian dynamic, a toxic mash
of anger and dependence that often seems as basic to global relations as the
rotation of the sun.
All of this was
called into question by the voyage of the Chikyu (“Earth”), a
$540 million Japanese deep-sea drilling vessel that looks like a
billionaire’s yacht with a 30-story oil derrick screwed into its back. The Chikyu,
a floating barrage of superlatives, is the biggest, glitziest, most
sophisticated research vessel ever constructed, and surely the only one with a
landing pad for a 30-person helicopter. The central derrick houses an enormous
floating drill with a six-mile “string” that has let the Chikyu delve
deeper beneath the ocean floor than any other ship.
The Chikyu,
which first set out in 2005, was initially intended to probe
earthquake-generating zones in the planet’s mantle, a subject of obvious
interest to seismically unstable Japan. Its present undertaking was, if
possible, of even greater importance: trying to develop an energy source that
could free not just Japan but much of the world from the dependence on Middle
Eastern oil that has bedeviled politicians since Churchill’s day.
In the 1970s,
geologists discovered crystalline natural gas—methane hydrate, in the
jargon—beneath the seafloor. Stored mostly in broad, shallow layers on
continental margins, methane hydrate exists in immense quantities; by some
estimates, it is twice as abundant as all other fossil fuels combined. Despite
its plenitude, gas hydrate was long subject to petroleum-industry skepticism.
These deposits—water molecules laced into frigid cages that trap “guest
molecules” of natural gas—are strikingly unlike conventional energy reserves.
Ice you can set on fire! Who could take it seriously? But as petroleum prices
soared, undersea-drilling technology improved, and geological surveys
accumulated, interest rose around the world. The U.S. Department of Energy has
been funding a methane-hydrate research program since 1982.
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