RITA:
Storm May Be the Coup de Grace for the American Economy and Many
of Us As Well
by
Michael C. Ruppert
© Copyright 2005, From The Wilderness Publications,
www.fromthewilderness.com . All Rights Reserved. May be
reprinted, distributed or posted on an Internet web site for
non-profit purposes only.
September 21st, 2005 1530 PST (FTW) As I pack my bags to
head to Washington for Congressional Black Caucus hearings on
the September 11th attacks (to be conducted this Friday and
Saturday) my inbox is being progressively flooded with emails
from inside sources in the energy industry about what Hurricane
Rita is now likely to accomplish the near-complete
destruction of an already teetering US economy.
Fully 30% of all US refining capacity is in the target zone.
Perhaps most importantly, almost every refinery capable of
producing diesel fuel is in immediate danger. This promises
(especially in the wake of Katrina) a devastating and
irreplaceable shortage of the diesel fuel needed to power
America's harvest of grain and food crops this month and next.
Without diesel fuel to power the harvesters and combines, crops
may be left to rot in the ground presenting a double whammy:
food shortages (with prices that may treble or quadruple) and
export defaults negatively impacting the financial markets and
trade deficit.
Even before Rita strikes, fully 30% of all domestic natural gas
production is shut in. The US cannot import natural gas from
overseas like it can both crude and refined products. Repair
work on infrastructure damaged by Katrina has been halted as
crews have been evacuated. The remaining half of Gulf energy
production undamaged by Katrina is directly in Rita's
crosshairs. Natural gas prices are up over 110% and home heating
oil futures are up almost 70% before Rita even gets here. Since
Katrina, US domestic oil production is down one million barrels
per day (from 5Mbpd to 4 Mbpd). We were producing 9 Mbpd less
than a decade ago.
Peak Oil has made replacement of losses almost impossible even
as Saudi heavy-sour is being spurned as useless around the
world, even with discounts of up to $10 and $12 per barrel.
A Bloomberg article today contains a quotation from a Wall
Street energy expert as saying, ˜Rita is developing into
our worst-case scenario, said John Kilduff, vice president of
risk management at Fimat USA in New York.˜This is headed
right into our other major refining center just after all the
damage done to facilities in Louisiana. From an energy
perspective it doesn't get any worse than this.
The Chairman of Valero Energy agrees with the Bloomberg
assessment calling Rita a potentially national disaster. His
opinion is important because Valero operates more refineries in
the US than any other company.
CNN is now predicting $5 per gallon gasoline and this will not
likely go away with market manipulations. We had not yet
experienced the permanent spikes resulting from Katrina, and the
emergency reserves of the United States Strategic Petroleum
Reserve and the International Energy Agency have already been
tapped once and not refilled.
The South Texas Project nuclear plant one of the largest in
the country is being completely shut down in preparation for
Rita's landfall. It is only 12 miles from the Texas coast and
almost dead center in the hurricane's projected path. Texas
has its own power grid but catastrophic electricity shortages
could easily ripple throughout the country in a short time.
Electricity lost from that that facility will only be added to
what is lost from other facilities powered by now critically
short supplies of natural gas.
For those of you who expect FEMA to behave any differently in
Texas than it did in New Orleans you are in for a crude
awakening. FEMA will do what it must now do to preserve even a
functioning part of America's governing and economic
infrastructure. Saving lives will be one of the least important
functions in its mandate. While I had serious doubts about America's ability to recover from Katrina, I am certain that barring divine intervention the United States is
finished; not only as a superpower, but possibly even as a
single, unified nation with the arrival of Hurricane Rita.