What
"Drill, Baby, Drill" Means in the South China Sea
By Pepe Escobar
August 01,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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There’s a blue
hole in the South China Sea. Longdong («Dragon
Hole») is an astonishing 300,89 meters deep, in deep
blue waters around Yongle, a major coral reef in the
Paracel islands (or Xisha, in their Chinese
denomination).
Cynics may argue that after the
recent ruling in The Hague largely against China’s
«nine-dash line», the whole South China Sea would be
more like a black – not blue – geopolitical hole,
where serious turbulence is all but inevitable.
I have examined
before how the South China Sea’s history is now
colliding with imperatives derived from the
Westphalian system, and how the US’s «pivot to Asia»
is accelerating conflict. I have also examined how
the US Navy’s obsession with «access» actually
tramples which sovereign nation is entitled to
profit from the surrounding waters of a bunch of
islands or «rocks».
And then, there’s that inescapable
logic that envelops all energy wars: «It’s the oil,
stupid».
Into the deep blue
The current territorial dispute
centered between China and the Philippines – much
more than between China and ASEAN – and revolving
around what is prescribed by the UN Convention on
the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), will be ultimately
solved by a straightforward decision. Manila will
have to decide between following The Hague’s ruling
to the letter; or to back down, de facto, on
sovereignty to the benefit of making gains, sooner
rather than later, on energy security – and in
partnership with the Chinese. Filipino President
Duterte has already given signs that he will opt for
pragmatism.
CNOOC and other Chinese oil majors
are going no holds barred to exploit oil and gas in
the South China Sea. But there’s a huge catch. The
absolute majority of geoscientists – for instance,
Singapore-based members of the Southeast Asia
Petroleum Exploration Society (SEAPEX)
– agree that most of the energy resources are
actually outside of China’s «nine-dash line», thus
nowhere near those disputed rocks, reefs, and «low
tide-elevations».
Only a few places in the Spratly
islands would qualify as a good deal. Essentially,
in the deep, deep water – much deeper, at 6,000
meters, than the «Dragon Hole» – what exists is
oceanic crust; no source rock for oil and gas; and
worse, no reservoirs in which oil and gas could
accumulate.
The US Energy Information
Administration estimated three years ago that the
South China Sea contains only 11 billion barrels of
oil and 190 trillion cubic feet of gas as
«commercially viable» reserves.
As a comparison, that would be
similar to all the oil that exits in Mexico. Or in
Western Europe (without considering Russia, of
course). And this applies to the whole South China
Sea – including areas that undisputedly belong to
some of the littoral nations’ Exclusive Economic
Zones (EEZs).
For the Philippines – or even Vietnam
– that could be a game-changer. But not for China.
Even if all that energy would be shipped in bulk to
China in the near future, it would be good enough
for only a few years of consumption.
The South China Sea is actually more
crucial as privileged transit sea lanes for over a
third of global oil and half of global liquefied
natural gas (LNG). At least 10% – and rising – of
China’s total energy consumption travels the South
China Sea.
But why the obsession with underwater
energy exploitation remains?
Got HYSY 981, will travel
Once again we need to go back to the
Chinese concept of «mobile sovereignty». Enter the
Haiyang Shiyou 981 (HYSY
981) deepwater oil-drilling rig. HYSY 981 has
been famously described by none other than the head
of CNOOC, Wang Yilin, as a «strategic weapon» part
of China’s «mobile national sovereignty».
Arguably hard-boiled Pentagon analysts would
appreciate the concept.
So when CNOOC uses HYSY 981, there’s
no need to «occupy» an island, a rock, a reef,
surrounding waters, whichever way UNCLOS may choose
to describe them. You move your «strategic
weapon» to a disputed patch of the sea; do your
deep sea exploring; extract what you can; and then
move back to international waters. The only thing
you need is a hand from the Chinese Navy to protect
you for a short period of time – for instance, from
the Vietnamese Navy. And if the going gets tough,
you can always pull back as a gesture of goodwill.
Few in the West may know it, but
China now is building and deploying way more HYSY
981s than military hardware. Welcome to the Asian,
underwater version of «Drill, baby, Drill».
As far as the energy equation is
concerned, China’s relentless island-building in
what UNCLOS defined as «rocks», and the «Drill,
baby, Drill» offensive point to the Holy Grail of
China’s energy security: escape from Malacca, the
imperative that a crucial choke point controlled by
the US Navy must be progressively avoided.
It does not matter that not a whole
lot of oil and gas will be found in the South China
Sea. What matters that it is part of a very long
term web strategy – through which Beijing invests in
setting up chains/infrastructure all the way from
the Indian Ocean to the Western Pacific to
guarantee/protect its trade/energy supply.
And that’s what the Sun Tzu-like
concept of «mobile sovereignty» is all about.
Pepe
Escobar, Independent geopolitical analyst, writer
and journalist
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