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Traveling to remote
corners of the world has long been a hobby of mine. I’ve visited
over 170 countries and lived in 10 of them.
I don’t limit myself to
the pretty spots. Wanderlust, together with my long-held belief
that before you can really understand a resource investment you
should put your boots on the ground, has led me to a fair
percentage of the world’s hell holes. Social, economic and
political backwardness can actually be a plus for mineral and
energy exploration companies looking for untapped resources. Rough
conditions scare off most of the potential competition, which
keeps prospective areas unexplored and opportunities cheap. And
the more primitive a place is, the better your chance of going
about your business without being swarmed by self-righteous NGOs
and nutbar environmentalists at every turn.
Africa, for example,
remains one of the world’s most mineral-rich areas. But its
giant deposits of every manner of mineral have been kept hidden
for centuries by tribalism, hostile religions and bungling
colonialism… and for millennia have been guarded by pestilence.
Yet there is such abundance that even the little that leaks out
around the chaotic edges are important to resource-starved world
markets.
In the article that
follows, David Galland, the Managing Editor here at Casey
Research, discusses the implications—good, bad and
profitable—of the world’s increasing and somewhat surprising
reliance on African oil.
Doug Casey
Uruguay,
May 2007
Last
year marked the first time ever that U.S. imports of African crude
oil surpassed shipments of oil from the Middle East. The trend is
continuing in 2007; so far, three African countries (Nigeria,
Angola, Algeria) account for 26% of crude oil imports, while three
Middle Eastern countries (Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait) account for
just 23%.
Our
drift toward dependence on African oil goes hand in hand with
dwindling production in Mexico, the U.S.’ number-two foreign
source… and with the continuing ugly business in Iraq, where oil
production is still off about 27% from its pre-war high.
Of
course, perpetually troubled as the Middle East is, Africa is no
shirker in the chaos derby. That it is now a leading source of oil
imports for the U.S. has far-ranging implications, above and
beyond providing regular content for the nightly mayhem shows… I
mean, news.
On
that front, you may have noted—but probably only in
passing—just a few of the back-page items related to Africa over
the past few weeks. For instance…
Nigeria
is in the process of transferring power through a “democratic”
election. While CNN et al. relate the tales of murder and
corruption that customarily accompany third-world voting, when
push comes to shove, all most of their viewers care about is cheap
fuel. In the case of Nigeria, the key to reliable production now
lies in the ability of the newly elected president, Umaru
Yar’Adua, to gain sufficient political control to strong-arm his
militant opponents.
Unfortunately,
while the prospects for law and order in Nigeria are dim, the
prospects for just plain order aren’t much brighter. So it’s
no wonder that oil prices jumped on the news of the election
outcome; a bookie’s odds, if you will, on the likelihood of a
coup or widespread unrest in the foreseeable future—either of
which would bring work stoppages and sabotage. And, because as
goes the fate of Nigeria, at 2.1 million barrels a day Africa’s
largest oil-producing nation, so goes the cost of your daily
commute.
Elsewhere
in Africa, we recently learned that the Ogaden National Liberation
Front (OGNF) attacked a Chinese-operated oil field in Ethiopia,
leaving 74 dead and taking as many as 5 Chinese hostages. The OGNF
is a separatist rebel movement operating along the border of
Ethiopia and Somalia. Although a representative of the group
claimed the Chinese dead had been “caught in the crossfire,”
the fact that guns were ablazing in the oil field—not to mention
the hostage taking—casts those claims in a suspicious
light.
And
in Algeria, the group formerly known as the Salafist Group for
Preaching and Combat (they like to do both at the same time), now
renamed as the more serious sounding “al-Qaeda in the Maghreb,”
recently set off a couple of bombs, killing 17 people who may have
been expecting a gentler sermon. The bombs suggest a return to the
bad old days in Algeria and a decided acceleration in violence
aimed at anyone the Islamists find offensive by their rather
strict religious standards. Invariably, the targets include all
infidel dogs… aka foreign oil executives and workers.
Regardless,
now that Africa’s importance to meeting U.S. energy needs has
risen to lofty levels, strife on that perennially troubled
continent will continue to trigger spikes in crude oil prices and,
between spikes, to keep a floor under the price.
With
the busy summer driving season looming and U.S. gasoline supplies
dropping for 12 straight weeks (see chart below), more of the same
turmoil—a certainty when it comes to Africa—will likely lead
to much higher gasoline prices coming to a pump near you soon. In
fact, talk on the street is now for consumers to pay over $3.50 a
gallon – and maybe as high as $4.00 -- once the summer driving
season kicks in.

And,
that, of course, adds further pressure on a U.S. economy being
squeezed by the deflating housing bubble. The good news, of
course, is that it also provides a steady wind to the sails of our
favorite energy companies.
Not
to appear callous, but just because the U.S. economy is leaking
and may be headed under water, doesn’t mean that we as
individuals have to go down with the ship.

© 2007 Doug Galland
Managing Director, Casey Research
Editorial Archive
David Galland
is the Managing Director of Casey Research, LLC., publishers of
Doug Casey’s International
Speculator, one of the nation’s oldest and
most respected publications dedicated to identifying rational
speculations with the very real potential to earn 100% or more in
a year or less.

www.caseyresearch.com
and www.kitcocasey.com
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