India needs to move beyond old assumptions and respond with flexibility, writes Nitin Desai.
The first is the International Energy Agency's 2012 World Energy Outlook report, which requires a serious reconsideration of the geopolitics of the world oil economy.
The second is the disappointing outcome at the recent climate change conference in Doha, which heightens the risks of catastrophic climate change and requires a geopolitical response from countries like India that will be severely affected.
The key projection in the IEA report is about where additional oil will come from over the next few decades.
Saudi Arabia and Russia, the two largest producers of crude oil, pump out about 10 million barrels a day each, and are the dominant suppliers -- they are capable of adjusting production up or down.
By the 2020s their combined output was expected to go up by around 6 mbd. But now the current IEA projection suggests that it will remain more or less at the present level.
How, then, will rising demands be met? A big part of the answer lies in a dramatic transformation of the North American energy economy from growing import dependence to near self-sufficiency.
America's crude oil production is expected to rise by an additional 3.5 mbd or so by the mid-2020s.
In fact it will displace Saudi Arabia and Russia as the world's largest oil producer.
Its dependence on West Asian oil will be greatly reduced; and supply increases and higher fuel efficiency standards mean that by 2030 North America will become a net exporter.
This would be a massive switch-around in the world oil trade, since at present the US and Canada together are a net importer of about 7 mbd.
The scale at which shale gas exploitation is now contemplated in the US and Canada could reduce both coal and crude oil demand and bring about further reductions in import dependence.
The other big story in the IEA report is its projection of Iraqi oil production more than doubling, to over 8 mbd, by 2035.
This, according to the report, would place Iraq in the big league of potential game-changers.
In fact, the contracts already in the works imply an even bigger increase and an even shorter time frame.
These IEA projections imply that 45 per cent of the increase in global crude oil output will come from this one country, and it will emerge as the second largest crude oil exporter in the world, displacing Russia.
The big potential is in a giant field near Basra, which is in Shia-dominated southern Iraq.
The other big source is in northern Iraq where the Kurdistan Regional Government is in de facto control.
Therefore, a lot depends on the continued viability of the fragile federation that has been put in place after the overthrow of Saddam Hussein.
These two developments will alter the geostrategic landscape in West Asia.
The US will continue to police the region -- even though its dependence on its oil will come down -- because of its huge oil investments and its commitment
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