I. INTRODUCTION--THE IMPORTANCE OF ENERGY
SECURITY, RESOURCE DIPLOMACY, AND THE MAIN
CHANGES IN NEARLY HALF A CENTURY OF OPEC'S
FORMATION
A. Energy Dependency, Foreign Policy, and
the U.S. Example
B. Some of the Major Changes in the Oil and Gas
Industry Since OPEC's Formation
C. Oil and Gas Will Be the Dominant Energy Sources
for at Least Two More Generations
D. A New OPEC in an International Environment in
Which the End of the Hydrocarbon Era Is in Sight.
II. ARE OPEC's GOALS AND STRUCTURE OUTDATED IN
VIEW OF THE EMERGENT TRENDS IN THE
INTERNATIONAL ENERGY INDUSTRY?
A. OPEC's Formation and Goals
B. Significant International Developments Since
OPEC's Formation
1. Permanent Sovereignty Over Natural Resources
and a New International Economic Order
2. Environmental Obligations and
Climate Change
3. International Integration Models Such as the
European Union Experience
4. Transparency and the Fight Against
Corruption
5. Resource Wars
6. International Law
7. Fuel Poverty and Hydrocarbon Development in
Countries Affected by Trade Sanctions
8. United States Based Litigation Against OPEC
9. Consolidation of Saudi Arabia as Most
Important Producer and Country with the Most
Reserves and Its Foreign Policy Challenges
10. Russia's Energy Power
III. CHALLENGES OF AMENDING OPEC AND ITS STATUTE
A. Should OPEC's Objectives and Scope Go Beyond
Playing a Role in Determining the International
Price of Oil?
B. Is OPEC Still Relevant in Determining the Price of
Oil and Will this Continue in the Future?
C. Some of the Challenges of Reforming OPEC
D. Energy Security and a Potential OPEC Role
IV. To WHAT EXTENT DO THE PROPOSED AMENDMENTS TO
THE U.N. SYSTEM AND THE ECONOMIC REALITIES OF
THE 21ST CENTURY JUSTIFY A RETHINKING OF OPEC,
ITS NATURE, OBJECTIVES AND ROLE?
A. The U.N. Example
B. The Millennium Summit and the Millennium
Development Goals
C. OPEC's Formation, Structure, and Statute
D. Amendments to the OPEC Statute
V. THE COMPARATIVE APPROACH
A. The Texas Railroad Commission
B. OECD and IEA
C. The Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA)
D. Committee on Energy in the U.N. Economic
and Social Commission
E. International Energy Forum (IEF)
F. World Energy Council
G. Latin America Energy Organization (OLADE)
H. International Association of Oil and
Gas Producers (OGP)
I. Organization of Arab Pertoleum Exporting
Countries (OAPEC)
J. Latin American Reciprocal State Petroleum
Assistance Association (ARPEL)
VI. HOW CAN OPEC'S SECRETARIAT MEET THE
CHALLENGES OF THE INTERNATIONAL OIL INDUSTRY IN
THE 21ST CENTURY?
A. OPEC's Secretariat, Its Mandate and Limitations
B. Some Areas in Which a New OPEC Could
Strengthen Its International Role
C. Specific Recommendations Regarding Amendments
to the OPEC Statute
VII. CONCLUSION
"When the rules of law and the rules of equity are in
conflict, the rules of equity must prevail." (1)
"[W]e are Arab Muslims, and our religion and civilization
enjoin us to cooperate with other peoples and to meet good with good.
The world today is divided into one part with the soul, that is the
Arabs, and one with the body, the West. We have the energy and you have
the industries, and without a meeting of the soul and the body there is
no life. Any separation of the two will only result in death. We want to
give to the West and to take from it, and there is no taking without
giving." (2)
I. INTRODUCTION--THE IMPORTANCE OF ENERGY SECURITY, RESOURCE
DIPLOMACY, AND THE MAIN CHANGES IN NEARLY HALF A CENTURY OF OPEC'S
FORMATION
The expression "mid-life" crisis is associated with that
time when individuals reach their forties and ask themselves many
questions about what they have done with their lives and what they want
to do with whatever existence they think they may have left. (3) It is a
time of crisis, reflection, and sometimes, profound change. Although
institutions do not necessarily suffer from these same symptoms, OPEC is
now forty-six years old (4) and may be going through such process in its
institutional history. This document analyzes the main challenges of
transforming OPEC so that it may successfully live through the end of
the hydrocarbon era.
Forty-six years after the creation of the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC), in Baghdad in 1960, while petroleum crude is
still a strategic and critical commodity for the world economy, (5) the
international petroleum industry has changed substantially and many of
the challenges that lie ahead are complex and may require different and
creative international institutions and effective cooperation. Borrowing
the words of Robert Schumann in 1950, when proposing the creation of the
European Coal and Steel Community, "[w]orld peace cannot be
safeguarded without the making of creative efforts proportionate to the
dangers which threaten it." (6)
The price of oil and hydrocarbon reserves are not the only
important economic issues. Crude oil prices and inflation, the impact of
the Chinese and Indian economic growth, and excessive liquidity in the
international capital markets partially caused by higher oil prices are
some of the "risk factors for the international economy." (7)
Crude oil prices and production distribution have also become
foreign policy and energy security issues and sensitive matters directly
related with war and peace. (8) Those prices will determine the futures
of many single commodity producing countries, and of an entire region,
the Middle East. The economic growth and stability of the main energy
consumers--the United States, Japan, China, and the European
Union--depend on reliable and stable oil and gas sources. (9) Control of
energy sources by the United States through military action has
challenged the legitimacy of the United Nations, international law, and
international institutions. Undoubtedly, energy security is a major
concern for all countries and many have designed and are pursuing true
"resource diplomacy."
So far, competition for limited resources has not prompted a major
confrontation between the largest consuming nations. The U.S.-led
invasion of Iraq, a founding member of OPEC, has substantially
deteriorated international relations and international law. (10) Others
have questioned U.S. legitimacy to act as a leader of international
relations and the world's lack of effective instruments to prevent
breaches of the peace and of the U.N. charter. (11) It would seem that
the United Nations is not capable of thinking or acting when the world
leader does not think or act. The very purpose of "united
nations"--to prevent war (12)--failed in Iraq and offers an
opportunity to question whether international organizations like OPEC
should reconsider their mandate and role. The invasion has also shown
the many limitations and weaknesses of the "mighty power" and
its system. The Chinese attempt to purchase Unocal, (13) the
Sudan-Darfur debate, (14) potential different interpretations of
Iran's nuclear program, (15) and Russia's decision to supply
gas to Europe as opposed to the United States indicate that the
difference between competition and confrontation could be very small.
Politically, the loss of faith in most institutions prevails in
many countries and "nationalism," understood as a struggle to
control resources or prevent imperial impositions from the North, is
growing. (16) Movements from the left that understand the concerns of
the working man, the problems of the poor and which more than anything
else provide hope, are extending their influence. Thus, many of the
issues that challenged the international economy when a New
International Economic Order was proposed in the 1970s maintain their
validity, and once more we realize that resources are scarce and endless
economic growth is not possible.
At the sunset of the hydrocarbon era, countries dependent on oil
and gas resources have a last opportunity to use their competitive
advantage to prepare for the time when their resources will no longer be
desired nor valued. This critical moment could also be perceived as the
opportunity for oil revenues to benefit not regimes and politicians but
individuals, the people of the resource rich nations.
Environmental degradation, military interventions, disruptions
created by natural disasters, terrorist threats to key industry
facilities, poverty, and massive immigration problems are some of the
most important issues that must be addressed by the international
community.
The United Nations has revealed its limitations and its very life
may depend on whether the United States believes that it may profit from
using its membership in said organization as a more effective tool to
pursue its foreign policy interests. (17)
COPYRIGHT 2008 Houston Journal of International
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