Gas prospects in western Europe

Gas prospects in western Europe

Book reviews have too many, and they are wasting the time of graduate students who should be thinking about something else. What I cannot understand,...

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Book reviews

have too many, and they are wasting the time of graduate students who should be thinking about something else. What I cannot understand, however, is how anyone who writes a chapter on mineral taxation would find it possible to dwell on the work of Professor McDonald, while overlooking that of Harberger, Garnault and CluniesRoss, John Hartwick, and DasGupta and Heal. A similar complaint can be brought against the chapter on investment analysis: the reader can learn a few things about energy from this chapter, but very little of substance about investment theory or practice. What it comes down to is that a very

large part of the literature has been overlooked by Professor Gordon and, by the same token, the huge bibliography is filled with trivia and with material that is irrelevant to both the level and scope of Gordon's book. This book is good value when looked at in its entirety, and in the hands of a dedicated teacher it should fit very easily into the undergraduate curriculum; but when I looked at in terms of what it should and could have been, it is a disappointment.

Ferdinand E. Banks Nationalekonomiska Institutionen Of greatest weight in determining the The University of Uppsala, Sweden demand pattern (for the German gas

Natural gas in Western Europe GAS PROSPECTS IN WESTERN is likely to be rather familiar territory and in the fast moving world of interEUROPE national gas trade, the work has already been overtaken by events in a by Frank Frazer number of respects. Nevertheless, there are useful Financial Times Business Information, London, UK, 1981, 226pp, £97, $199 chapters on the economics of gas supply and on trends in gas pricing and NATURAL GAS AND ECONOMIC future markets for gas. The whole SECURITY question of gas prices and contracts has become much more controversial as Atlantic Paper No 43, The Atlantic the big push by exporters, led (in the Institute for International Affairs, Paris, West European market) by Algeria, France, 1981, 60 pp towards parity pricing with crude oil, got under way in 1980. It is unfortunate With the attention that natural gas that the work was completed before the trade is currently attracting, particu- pricing split between Algeria and the larly in Western Europe, two works USSR with the latter being prepared to that are exclusively devoted to the accept less than cif parity with crude oil development and future prospects for while the former holds out for fob the fuel are most welcome. parity. Frank Frazer's study draws a good Perhaps the weakest aspect of the deal of material together from a large work is the political chapter, where number of sources, but one feels that Frazer has not grasped the opportunity there is a mismatch of the information to evaluate the differing security of presented and the market at which it is supply problems which arise from aiming. At nearly £100, this excludes importing gas from Algeria and the all but the corporate readership, which USSR. As British Gas Corporation is a pity because the academic world noted with disgust, the Norwegians could greatly benefit from the chapters refused to export Statfjord gas to the on the nature of gas, its development as UK for political reasons, despite what an energy source in Western Europe was reported to be a more favourable (particularly the Netherlands, Norway price. and the UK), West European gas Likewise the Mitterand government imports, reserves, technology and has shown itself prepared to pay a large investment. For the private sector, this political price for improved economic

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and political relations with Algiers, represented by a gas price which nears fob parity with crude oil. But the big issue of West European gas security has been raised by the new UrengoyYamburg pipeline project with the Soviet Union. It is on the security side that Hans Maull's pamphlet comes into its own. This immensely useful paper sets the framework for discussion of security issues, focussing on the West German situation and the Soviet gas project. In very few pages, the essence of the problems are outlined, as in the judgement that,

market) in the near future should be the extent to which prices and availability make the large scale use of gas worthwhile in markets for which gas displays no particular advantages. (p 27) Maull points out that the decisive factor for the assessment of the Soviet gas deal is not the absolute security of planned deliveries, but the relative security of these supplies. He views the greatest risk in the Soviet case to be the prospect of a double crisis with Middle East oil, with Soviet involvement, backed by a Soviet gas embargo. This is certainly one possibility, but if the alternative to Soviet gas is Middle East o i l - as many maintain- then Soviet gas is a diversification of supplies which could be extremely useful. It is a pity that Maull does not go into the potential ramifications of a Soviet invasion of Poland (after which West European countries would be forced to abandon the project) and the split between Western Europe and the U S A on these subjects, more fully. These may be critical subjects for discussion in the future of this project. These two works fit very well together. Certainly, anybody concerned with energy security should have Maull's pamphlet on the shelf. If the Financial Times could be persuaded to discount Frazer's useful reference work for the less affluent sections of the community, it would reach the wider audience it certainly deserves.

Jonathan P. Stem Energy Consultant, London

ENERGY POLICY September 1982