Foreign Policy Blogs

T. Boone Pickens is half right on energy security

On Friday, T Boone Pickens entitled an article “Swimming in Natural Gas” playing off a similar quote from the Wall Street Journal. (It is also sounds similar to, er, my coulumn I wrote last month that the world is swimming in oil as stocks had increased driving down the price of oil.)

In his piece, he lays out part of the case for investing more heavily in natural gas. He believes the US now has the capability to tap trillions of cubic feet of natural gas, which could help reduce US reliance on imported energy and, therefore, bolster national security.

Natural gas is an important part of the United State’s future energy portfolio and could help offset our need for imported oil. But energy self-sufficiency by itself does not make us invulnerable to the demand of the international energy market. It is hard to imagine how the US would be secure in a world where we could meet our energy needs when many other nations could not — especially with the large role US companies play in the global energy market. Nations starved of energy would engage in a race for global resources that would likely lead to regional, if not global conflict. Security is more than ensuring the US can meet its needs; it’s also enabling a robust global energy market.

 

Author

David Abraham

David S Abraham has expertise in the analysis of geopolitical and economic risk as well in energy issues. At the White House Office of Management and Budget, his work included overseeing natural resource and foreign assistance programs, and serving on the interagency trade policy committee. In his previous role as a sovereign risk analyst with Lehman Brothers, subsequently, Barclays Capital, he advised the firm on geopolitical and economic risks in developing countries. He has also consulted for a variety of organizations including the United Nations Support Facility for Indonesian Recovery, RBS Sempra Commodities, ClearWater Initiative and a small German consultancy. David earned degrees from Boston College and The Fletcher School at Tufts University and proudly served as a Peace Corps Volunteer. His written work has appeared in a variety of publications, most recently in The New York Times, The Providence Journal, and CFR.org. He speaks Lithuanian and is a Term Member at the Council on Foreign Relations.

Area of Focus
Geopolitics; Economic Risk; Energy Issues

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