Independent - Shocked! How The Oil Crisis Has Hit The World - Money | Britons living in Bulgaria. Guide to Bulgaria, Sofia and Varna

6/2/08

Independent - Shocked! How The Oil Crisis Has Hit The World - Money


Shocked! How the oil crisis has hit the world - Independent


Shocked! How the oil crisis has hit the world
Independent, UK - May 30, 2008
The number of Britons in "fuel poverty" – 10 per cent of their income goes on energy – is thought to have reached four million. The average annual household ...
Shocked! How the oil crisis has hit the world - Independent
Africa remains the largest area of Red Cross spending, accounting for 45 per cent of the field budget in 2007. Africa Africa is at the sharp end of the oil shock and the inter-related surge in food prices. Airlines, which are struggling to break even, are reluctant to raise the price of tickets and are introducing fees for baggage handling instead. Alistair Darling, the Chancellor, said the energy suppliers had agreed to increase "social assistance" from £50m a year to £150m by 2011. American Airlines has slapped a $16 fee on the first piece of baggage checked in by economy-class passengers. Americans asked to go down to a four-day week. An increasing number of employers, anxious to keep their staff, are offering them the option of working longer but fewer days, to cut out journeys to work. And insurance companies report a sharp drop in road accidents. Arctic With the threat of the world's oil reserves one day running out, energy-hungry nations are frantically looking towards the more inaccessible areas of the world for new sources. Asia Daily protests have erupted across Indonesia this week after the government removed subsidies on fuel, leading to an overnight price jump of 30 per cent. At the same time, airlines across the Asia-Pacific region are scrambling to cut flights and increase surcharges to boost their haemorrhaging cashflow. Australasia As Kevin Rudd's newly elected government tries to stem a wave of discontent over prices at the petrol pumps, the airline Qantas announced this week that it was intending to slash hundreds of jobs, freeze executive pay and shut down some domestic rural routes. Badly scarred by the oil crises of the 1970s, many Latin American nations have since diversified their energy mix by encouraging the use of biofuels. But in an indication of how the country is struggling to import enough fuel, at least three major Chinese cities brought in diesel rationing yesterday. But Indonesia's poor have been left reeling by the removal of fuel subsidies and have taken to the streets. But Southwest Airlines, in California, is laughing, because it took a gamble at the start of the year and bought 70 per cent of the fuel it estimated it will need in a full year for a paltry $51 a barrel – two-fifths of the current price. But the changing travelling habits have created problems for America's bus and subway systems, which are having to cope with a sudden increase in passengers at the same time that they are paying more for fuel. But those figures look less impressive when expressed as percentages. But those most vulnerable to the price of oil have been driven on to the streets in angry protests, which raise a fundamental question: what can we do to survive in a world where a barrel of oil costs $127 (£64)? But while biofuels have kept petrol prices down, food prices – particularly in Central American countries such as Mexico and Haiti – have shot up as vast tracts of arable land are switched from producing food to fuel. Chip pan fat is worth more than four times what it was a few years ago, making that haul worth more than £3,000. Despite being south-east Asia's largest oil producer, Indonesia has struggled to meet even domestic demand due to aging wells and declining investment. Environmental campaigners, who were not allowed to attend the summit, are concerned that a new scramble for the Arctic has begun and are worried that future exploration can damage the area's sensitive ecosystems. European hauliers and fishermen whose livelihoods are under threat. For the lucky ones, it is simply a matter of changing their lifestyle. Great BritainThe rise in the oil price can not come at a worse time for Gordon Brown. He was spotted rummaging around in the garbage behind a Burger King, with a tube and a storage bin. How the oil crisis has hit the world"; Shocked! In an indication of just how much pressure the world's airline operators are under, Qantas estimated that this year's fuel bill will be £500m more than last year. In August, Russia upped the stakes by planting a flag under the North Pole. In Brazil, the world's largest ethanol producer, biofuels account for more than half of transport needs. In Bulgaria, lorry and bus drivers launched a joint protest. In Egypt, petrol prices have risen by as much as 40 per cent in a year. In Eugene, Oregon, 16 per cent more people took the bus this month than in April, but the town's main bus company, Lane Transit District, is losing money and cannot afford to expand. In fact soaring oil prices have bulked up budgets to record levels in countries such as Venezuela. In Gaza this week, where fuel shortages have long been a major source of seething discontent due to rationing by Israel and Hamas, Palestinians were forced to fill their cars with olive oil instead of diesel. In March this year, the number of miles driven by American motorists was 11 billion fewer than in March 2007, according to the Transportation Department. In Northern California, one man thought he had found a way to profit from the crisis. In the Netherlands, the protests caused less inconvenience, but made more noise when, at 11.45am on Thursday, lorry drivers across the country simultaneously blew their horns in protest at diesel prices. Iran is acutely vulnerable to rises in fuel prices because, despite being the world's second largest producer, it is still forced to import about 40 per cent of its petrol because of a lack of refining facilities. It consists mainly of advice on coping with the cost of heating rather than extra money. It is probably the only US airline that will be able to make a profit without increasing charges. Its low-budget offshoot, Jetstar, announced it will cut the number of routes it flew by 5 per cent angering many of those living in Australia's vast interior who rely on the low budget airlines. Kate Jopling, the head of public affairs at the charity Help the Aged, described the measures as a "sticking plaster to hold back a catastrophe". Lorry drivers blockaded roads into London and in Wales to demand that a planned 2p rise in fuel tax be scrapped and that "essential users" should be granted a rebate. M. Sarkozy suggested capping fuel taxes if the oil price rose further. Malaysia has told petrol stations to stop selling fuel to Singapore-registered cars. Meanwhile, the Newcastle to Scandinavia ferry route is being cut by the Danish company DFDS Seaways, who said it was a loss-making service incapable of being turned around. Middle EastNot even the region with the world's largest oil reserves has escaped the pressures. Much of the regional strain placed on Asia's oil reserves comes from China's near-insatiable consumption of energy. Oil prospectors believe it can be home to a quarter of the world's undiscovered hydrocarbon reserves. On Wednesday, Jakarta announced it will quit Opec because it was unhappy with the way the international oil cartel was dealing with the crisis. Outside Seattle, the owner of a pizza restaurant is thinking of installing a CCTV camera over its 50-gallon cooking-oil barrel to keep rustlers away. Palestinians forced to fill up their cars with olive oil. Passers-by pushed and shoved to get their hands on the free hake. Petrol prices in Melbourne this week hit an all-time high of 164.9 cents [80p] a litre on Wednesday. Protests last year over fuel prices brought in rationing, which is still in place in Tehran and other major Iranian cities. Singaporeans often take advantage of cheaper oil prices in Malaysia by driving over the border and filling up there. Some handed out free fish to underline their point that, with the current cost of fuel, they are practically giving their catches away. That is the sharpest drop year on year that the department has ever recorded, and the first fall of any kind recorded in the month of March since 1979. The Government plans to reform data protection laws so that low-income families can be contacted directly by the companies and offered help. The aim is to ensure that the "social tariffs" get to the people that need them most. The average annual household bill for heat and light is now more than £1,000. The biggest demonstrations were in Spain and Portugal where 10,000 protesters converged on Madrid. The company blamed "dramatically increasing oil prices, over-capacity in the travel marketplace and the economic slowdown". The five countries at the summit agreed to let the UN rule on conflicting territorial claims for the region's seabed. The number of Britons in "fuel poverty" – 10 per cent of their income goes on energy – is thought to have reached four million. The Prime Minister's attempt to ease the pain felt by pensioners and low-income families from rising fuel bills was dismissed as a "sticking plaster to hold back a catastrophe". The protest spread to the seas yesterday, as fishermen across Europe went on a one-day strike, blocking ports. The summit was a bid to stop the Arctic becoming a flashpoint between the nations because of the natural resources it is thought to contain. The United StatesThere are signs that the fuel crisis is persuading Americans to think about leaving the car in the garage. The US Energy Department projects that this year, domestic gas consumption will drop by 190,000 barrels a day and overall petroleum use by 330,000 barrels a day, the first annual fall since 1991. There are also growing fears that rapidly increasing fuel prices can have a knock-on effect for aid agencies in countries such as Ethiopia, which are struggling to pay for fuel. There is a plan to offer public employees on New York's Long Island the opportunity to work four 10-hour days, instead of five eight-hour days – a move which, it is reckoned, will save more than 30 barrels of oil a day. They have called for a similar treaty to that which currently regulates the Antarctic, which bans all military activity and mineral exploitation. This brings the increase in petrol prices so far this year to 33 per cent, while the price of diesel, used extensively in farming and heavy industry, has leapt 49 per cent. This week Hong Kong's Cathay Pacific and Taiwan's China Airlines announced they were considering scaling back some long-haul routes whilst Korean Air said it will temporarily cut flights on 12 international routes over the summer. This week the Red Cross said in its annual report that rising oil and food costs will mean it now needs much more money than last year just to keep the same level of aid distribution. This week, the five main powers bordering the Arctic – Canada, Denmark, Norway, Russia and the United States – met in Greenland for a two-day summit to discuss their various claims of sovereignty over the Arctic Ocean seabed. When police caught up with him, they found that he had 2,500 gallons of used fryer grease stolen from various restaurants. With millions living on the tiny margin between subsistence and starvation, fuel costs can quickly become a matter of life and death. Yemen has been rocked by riots in the south, which is home to only a fifth of its 22 million population but produces 80 per cent of the country's oil. Young men and separatists, angry that very little of the nation's oil wealth has trickled down to ordinary people in the south, have been protesting since April, raising concerns that Islamic militants can exploit the unrest in the notoriously fractious country.

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