
Purchase
Twilight in the Desert reveals a Saudi oil and production industry that could soon approach a serious, irreversible decline.
Wiley
June 2005
448 pages ISBN: 047173876X Hardcover
Add to Wish List
Non-Fiction Political
Saudi Arabia is the most important oil producing nation in
history. The secretive Saudi government repeatedly assures
the world that its oil fields are healthy beyond reproach,
and that they can maintain and even increase output at will
to meet skyrocketing global demand. But what if they can't? Twilight in the Desert looks behind the curtain to reveal a
Saudi oil and production industry that could soon approach a
serious, irreversible decline. In this exhaustively
researched book, veteran oil industry analyst Matthew
Simmons draws on his own three-plus decades of insider
experience and more than 200 independently produced reports
about Saudi petroleum resources and production operations.
What he uncovers is a story about Saudi Arabia's troubled
oil industry, not to mention its political and societal
instability, which differs sharply from the globally
accepted Saudi version. It's a story that is provocative and disturbing, based on
undeniable facts, but until now never told in its entirety.
Twilight in the Desert examines numerous aspects of Saudi
Arabia and its looming oil crisis, including: * The seventy-year history of modern Saudi Arabia, and
the truth behind its troubling mix of monarchy, conservative
Islam, severe social restrictions, and economic contradictions
* Why the geological phenomena that created Saudi oil
invincibility now threaten to bring it to an end, far sooner
than the world has been led to believe
* A field-by-field assessment of twelve key Saudi oil
fields, and how verified shortfalls in their production and
potential stand sharply at odds with unverifiable Saudi rhetoric
While Saudi officials promise to increase production from
current levels if necessary, Twilight in the Desert examines
the history of other major oil fields to determine that
Saudi Arabia is in fact overproducing its primary resources,
and couldn't possibly ramp up production for long. It calls
for long-overdue transparency on the part of the Saudis and
all significant global oil producers, along with urgently
needed energy data reform, and a global energy blueprint for
how the world will cope once Saudi oil output has peaked. Without question, Saudi Arabian oil fields provide the rest
of the world with its most plentiful, low-cost oil resource.
The question is how long can they continue to keep these
critical pipelines open. Twilight in the Desert answers that
question with keen examination instead of unsubstantiated
posturing, and takes its place as one of the most important
books of this still-young century.
No awards found for this book.
Comments
No comments posted.
Registered users may leave comments.
Log in or register now!
|