Month: August 2005


  • August 20, 2005

    Battered but Unbowed: Can Painkillers Recover?




    Cox-2 drugs are down. But they may not be out.


    By deciding yesterday that the Merck drug Vioxx contributed to the death of a Texas man, a jury dealt another punch to the battered class of arthritis painkillers known as cox-2′s. Merck withdrew Vioxx from the market last fall over safety concerns, and Pfizer did the same thing a few months later with one of its cox-2 drugs, Bextra.


    So why are some companies, including Merck and Pfizer, still betting on a big cox-2 comeback?


    For one thing some analysts have said that sales of Celebrex, another drug by Pfizer that is the only cox-2 remaining on the United States market, are already rebounding after a big slump last winter. Celebrex sales, they say, could reach as high as $2 billion this year, a decline of 39 percent from last year. The rebound comes despite warnings that Celebrex – like Vioxx and Bextra – can cause cardiovascular problems in some patients. Merck has another cox-2 drug, Arcoxia, that is already approved in 54 other countries and generated worldwide sales of $100 million in the first half of this year.


    Meantime, GlaxoSmithKline, Novartis and even Merck are investing millions in clinical research to prove the safety of new cox-2′s, which must clear newly raised hurdles to gain Food and Drug Administration approval, with submission of data to the F.D.A. still several years away.


    For all the clouds that hang over the class, cox-2′s are still valued by some physicians as a type of anti-inflammatory drug designed to be safer on the stomach than some more conventional painkillers, like aspirin. The drugs reduce the risk of gastrointestinal bleeding by selectively inhibiting a specific enzyme, cyclooxygenase-2.


    “There’s still quite a lot of potential with these drugs,” said Gustav Ando, an analyst for the business research firm Global Insight, in Waltham, Mass. “It’s just that the name has been tarnished and they need to rebrand the therapeutic area.”


    Mr. Ando said that the companies with cox-2′s in development would be closely watching yesterday’s jury verdict and its aftermath to gauge the potential risks of being associated with the class. But for many, the potential rewards may lure them forward.


    Many analysts and doctors predict that the dearth of effective painkillers and the growing ranks of baby boomers suffering from aching joints will drive growth in the market.


    The worldwide market for cox-2′s surpassed $7 billion in 2004, and had been projected to reach $9 billion by 2010, before the Vioxx and Bextra withdrawals sent the market tumbling. Mr. Ando predicts it will take the industry several years to define the drugs’ cardiovascular risks and benefits clearly and to sort through a potential regulatory thicket before the market begins to rebound.


    Dr. Stanley Cohen, a rheumatologist in Dallas, said that the withdrawal of Vioxx last September as well as Bextra in April had been devastating to some of his patients, even though he has tried to substitute with other drugs.


    “We’ve all been trying to come up with our own type of game plan until there’s better evidence-based medicine to guide us,” said Dr. Cohen, who has tried Mobic (a drug marketed jointly by Boehringer Ingelheim and Abbott Laboratories), analgesics and older anti-inflammatories combined with Tylenol on his patients. But not all users of those drugs find relief.


    Data compiled by Verispan, a company that tracks pharmaceutical prescribing, shows that a variety of generic anti-inflammatories and Mobic have been the big beneficiaries of the cox-2 controversy. Prescriptions of Mobic, which is similar in some ways to the cox-2′s, went from 277,569 in August 2004, before Vioxx’s withdrawal, to 698,145 this June.


    “I had a number of patients who only responded to Bextra or only responded to Vioxx,” Dr. Cohen said. “We had a terrible time giving them comfort when those drugs were removed from the market.”


    It is just those types of patients, suffering with pain, that Glaxo’s senior vice president for neuroscience medicines, Dr. Daniel J. Burch, cited when discussing his company’s as yet unnamed cox-2 drug, known currently as 406381.


    “There’s really not much out there to treat patients who have chronic pain,” Dr. Burch said. “The media has really scared a lot of people. A lot of people are not taking pain medications because they’re worried about the cardiovascular risk.”


    Glaxo, which is making a gigantic investment in drug 406381, announced in May that it would go forward with Phase 3 clinical studies – the last phase of patient trials before submitting a drug for F.D.A. approval. Dr. Burch said the test would probably involve more than 20,000 patients. The company is currently in talks with the F.D.A. to design the trial.


    The cost of such large trials is high, often exceeding several thousand dollars a patient. But in studying the cox-2′s, the sample size is extremely important. Because only 1 percent or 2 percent of patients might be susceptible to cardiovascular risks, smaller samples may not adequately reveal any risks.


    “Really what we’re talking about in our Phase 3 program is demonstrating a compelling benefit that this drug will have,” Dr. Burch said. “We’re going to measure the risk unlike anyone has ever done before.”


    Glaxo was late to the cox-2 party. But Mr. Ando said that could work to the company’s advantage. “It’s the only drug that’s completely disassociated from the crisis,” he said. “All the other drugs had brand names given to them.”


    Glaxo also says its drug is different from other cox-2′s because it works on the central nervous system in addition to peripheral nerves. But even if all goes well with the drug, it will very likely be three years before patients can use 406381.


    A drug that could potentially be closer to market in this country is Arcoxia from Merck. It is already the largest-selling painkiller in Brazil, where Mr. Ando said it was benefiting from the withdrawal of Vioxx and Bextra. Merck initially submitted Arcoxia for F.D.A. approval in 2001 and received a letter last year indicating that it could eventually be approved, with further data, the company said.


    The company now has under way a 23,000-person clinical trial, called Medal, to test Arcoxia’s cardiovascular safety compared with diclofenac, a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory that is one of the world’s largest-selling painkillers, sold under a variety of generic and brand names. The results of Medal, which will be available soon, are being combined with data from two other trials to get a sample size of more than 30,000 patients, according to Tracy Ogden, a Merck spokeswoman.


    “Of course, having Medal under way and continuing shows our commitment in exploring this product,” Ms. Ogden said.


    Still, an investment report in May by Friedman Billings Ramsey said Arcoxia’s future was unclear. The report noted that members of an F.D.A. panel were unenthusiastic in February about the design of the Medal trial and it also compared Arcoxia’s safety profile with that of Vioxx.


    Novartis, meanwhile, is pushing ahead with its cox-2 drug, Prexige, already approved in 22 countries and on the market in Brazil. The company submitted it for F.D.A. approval in November 2002, but the agency said the next year that it could not approve the drug because the company had submitted inadequate data. Novartis is continuing clinical studies and hopes to resubmit data to the F.D.A in 2007, with plans to request approval for patients with serious gastrointestinal problems.


    “Novartis believes that for the right patient, Prexige might prove the pain relief needed,” the company said in a statement yesterday.


    Dr. Garret A. FitzGerald of the University of Pennsylvania, who first noticed problems with the cox-2′s in 1998, said the new scrutiny the drugs are receiving could provide an opportunity for the pharmaceutical industry to develop an individualized approach to managing drug risks. Such an approach would involve identifying and locating the genetic biomarkers that make some people susceptible to cardiovascular risks from cox-2′s and, also, the markers that make some people’s pain respond to the drugs.


    “It’s a small risk,” Dr. FitzGerald said. “How do we detect that small number of people who are getting into trouble so we can stop the drug?”






  • Max Becherer/Polaris, for The New York Times

    In Erbil, Iraq, the Citadel is a layer cake of civilizations that may go back 100 centuries. Now, to begin digging without displacing those on top.

    August 23, 2005
    Under the Old Neighborhood: In Iraq, an Archaeologist’s Paradise
    By JAMES GLANZ

    ERBIL, Iraq – If a neighborhood is defined as a place where human beings move in and never leave, then the world’s oldest could be here at the Citadel, an ancient and teeming city within a city girded by stone walls.

    Resting on a layer cake of civilizations that have come and gone for an estimated 7,000 to 10,000 years, the Citadel looms over the apartment blocks of this otherwise rather gray metropolis in Iraqi Kurdistan.

    The settlement rivals Jericho and a handful of other famous towns for the title of the oldest continuously inhabited site in the world. The difference is that few people have heard of the Citadel outside Iraq. And political turmoil has prevented a full study of its archaeological treasures.

    While there may be confirmed traces of more ancient settlements in Iraq, said McGuire Gibson, a Mesopotamian archaeologist at the University of Chicago, the people have all vanished from those places.

    “The thing about Erbil is that it is, in fact, a living town,” Dr. Gibson said. “It goes back at least to 5,000 B.C.,” he said. “It might go back further.”

    Among the peoples that have lived in this neighborhood are the Hassuna, Akkadians, Sumerians, Assyrians, Medes, Persians, Greeks, Parthians and Abbasids.

    In 1964, when Kanaan Rashad Mufti and his prominent family were part of the neighborhood, a floor in his father’s house, near the mosque, collapsed during some renovations.

    Underneath was a whole series of rooms from some previous civilization, possibly the Abbasids, said Mr. Mufti, who is now director of antiquities in western Kurdistan. There is nothing that Iraqi archaeologists would like more than to begin systematic digs through those layers, said Donny George, director of the Baghdad Museum.

    “I have so much in mind,” Dr. George said, expressing scientific eagerness “to make such kinds of excavations to see what we might find.”

    For now, what sets the Citadel visibly apart are the contrasting rituals of an ancient neighborhood that is caught between war and peace. Although the Kurdish north of Iraq has remained comparatively calm, Erbil has had its share of insurgent violence lately, and before that Saddam Hussein’s campaigns to uproot and exterminate the Kurds left their mark everywhere here.

    The Citadel is no exception. Living in brick hovels amid the ruins of palatial houses are about 1,000 families displaced from Kurdish villages that Mr. Hussein destroyed in an infamous pogrom called Anfal. In a routine that resembles a fire drill, the families scramble to siphon water from sinuous pipes running through the Citadel that function for about 30 minutes, once a day.

    But in one of the intact great houses, a Frenchman with impeccably moussed hair has just opened a cultural institute that is displaying paintings of wildly misshapen human and bestial figures in a genre he calls postabstract. The institute, the Center Arthur Rimbaud, plans to sponsor a contest that will send a Kurd to France to study piano.

    Right next door is a financially desperate textile museum founded by Lolan Mustefa, a Kurdish native of Erbil who studied anthropology in St. Cloud, Minn., and is trying to preserve the brilliantly colored carpets woven by the old nomadic tribes of the Kurdish mountains. A trickle of tourists has even begun, along with the sense that all this could be the first hint of a Kurdish SoHo or Greenwich Village.

    “If they give them the means, it could become a place like Sacré Coeur in Paris,” said Suayip Adlig, a Kurdish filmmaker who was long exiled in France, referring to another historical and romantic district on a hill as he toured an old mosque next to an 18th-century bath.

    The people who actually live here, not surprisingly, take a more practical stance. Kadim Mustafa – a 39-year-old mother of three, whose brick and concrete shanty includes fragments of the grand home that was here before – stood on a fancy balcony overlooking Erbil and dismissed pretensions like Mr. Adlig’s.

    “We have a nice place with a view, but not the facilities of life,” Mrs. Mustafa said. “As soon as we start having lunch, the electricity will go off.”

    The direct evidence for what lies beneath Mrs. Mustafa’s house is scanty: Assyrian pottery that tumbled out of the side of the Citadel in a renovation of its walls, a dig that Mr. Mufti said he participated in around 1980, an electromagnetic probe that provided intriguing hints about the layered structure.

    What seems clear, said John Malcolm Russell of the Massachusetts College of Art, is that with its location in a rain-fed plain near the confluence of two rivers and the foothills of the Zagros Mountains, Erbil “could have been the site of one of the earliest villages in the world.” The first hunter-gatherer settlement could have started as early as 9300 B.C., followed by early pottery makers, the proto-Hassuna, by 7000 B.C.

    And unlike the arid regions to the south, the rain remained relatively steady in Erbil over the millennia, so there was no compelling reason to abandon a settlement. By 1400 B.C., as cultures came and went, Erbil became one of the most important cities of the Assyrian Empire, said Dr. Russell, who is an authority on the period.

    The Assyrian Empire collapsed after a siege in 612 B.C. The Persians took over and were defeated in turn by Alexander the Great at Gaugemala, west of Erbil, in 331 B.C. About a millennium later, the Ottomans swept through after sacking the Abbasids, a Sunni Muslim dynasty centered in Baghdad. And in 1918, as the Ottoman Empire was crumbling, the British Army entered the city without resistance, and finally the modern nation of Iraq was born, with all the consequences that the world is now facing.

    Crouching on top of all those layers of history around 10 a.m. on a recent day, Muhamad Amin, 31 and a member of the Kurdish Khoshnaw tribe, had more immediate things on his mind. The water was gurgling briefly through one of the pipes snaking along a path between the close-packed houses, and he was rushing to connect a translucent yellow hose to the pipe.

    As other families scampered around him hooking up their own hoses and turning on clattering little pumps, Mr. Amin intently wrapped black electrical tape around his own connection to keep it from leaking. “Those people who are near to the pipe are much better off than the ones who are far away,” said Mr. Amin, who came here in 1993, when his village was destroyed by Mr. Hussein’s troops.

    The half-hour of water did double duty as a social event, and children swarmed everywhere until the water stopped running at 10:35. Indeed, existence at the Citadel is not uniformly bleak. Many inhabitants here have at least laboring jobs in the city: there is a thriving watermelon stand with a wisecracking owner, an outdoor poultry shop where men cut the heads off chickens on the spot, and cars protected with striped cloth covers parked along the sole paved road.

    There is not much connection between the refugees and the Center Arthur Rimbaud, but the Frenchman with the moussed hair and black attire, Matthieu Saint-Dizier, said he did a little experiment to be sure he would be welcome after the center opened a few weeks ago. He opened an exhibition of modern paintings in an ancient bath next to the mosque. The paintings showed transvestites and men with multiple genitals.

    “I want to make a test,” he said. “The imam of the mosque come to this exhibition and he don’t make any problems. He said to me, ‘I don’t understand very well, but’ ” – and Mr. Saint-Dizier exhaled in a peculiarly French sound, approximately phhhhht.

    Mr. Mustefa, the Kurdish owner of the carpet museum, rolled his eyes and said that Mr. Saint-Dizier had no idea how much the exhibition had appalled the locals, who nevertheless wanted to be polite to a Westerner. As far as genuine interest in art goes, said Mr. Mustefa, Kurdistan has been so consumed with political turmoil that he has had a hard time drumming up local interest even in his own offerings.

    Still, visitors do trickle in. Mr. Mustefa said that after spending virtually his entire savings on the museum contents he was now having serious trouble paying for operating costs and upkeep. But he does have an interesting building, with ornate old pillars and an unroofed central court, right next to the cultural center. When the municipality granted him the building for his museum, “it was a dream for me,” Mr. Mustefa said.

    “And I knew the Kurds wouldn’t appreciate this,” he said with a long-suffering look. “Especially the intellectuals. They think this is a backward art.”

    So it goes at the Citadel. Mr. Mufti, the antiquities director, is also a member of the board that is supervising preliminary studies, financed by Unesco, for renovating the Citadel. The initial project, according to the Unesco Web site, “aims at identifying a building in the Citadel and at providing it with necessary supplies and equipment to serve as focal point for the rehabilitation of the Citadel at large.”

    Mr. Mufti is trying, so far without success, to secure financing for a new archaeological dig. But as uncertain as all of those plans are, Mr. Mufti said, there is one thing they all assume.

    The neighborhood will remain.

    Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company Home Privacy Policy Search Corrections XML Help Contact Us Work for Us Back to Top



    Georg Gensler (1973)/Photo Researchers, Inc.

    The Citadel, a city within a city in Erbil, Iraq, is girded by stone walls and is arguably among the world’s oldest neighborhoods.



    Max Becherer/Polaris, for The New York Times

    The 3,000 residents of the Citadel, mostly Kurdish, are the latest in a line of peoples living on what was probably an agricultural village up to 10,000 years ago



    Max Becherer/Polaris, for The New York Times

    Historians hope to excavate parts of the Citadel to find artifacts much older than this statue of the 12th-century historian Mabarek Ahmed Sharafaddin.



     


    Max Becherer/Polaris, for The New York Times

    The 100-foot-high Citadel at the center of Erbil was formed as ancient civilizations built on top of previous ones



    Max Becherer/Polaris, for The New York Times

    Women walk through the Citadel, a city built on top of itself for thousands of years.




    Max Becherer/Polaris, for The New York Times

    An aerial view of the Citadel



    Max Becherer/Polaris, for The New York Times

    The Kurdish Textile Museum is located just outside the city’s walls



    Max Becherer/Polaris, for The New York Times

    Residents of the Citadel carry home gas tanks for cooking



    Max Becherer/Polaris, for The New York Times

    A Kurdish man participates in Friday prayers at a mosque in the center of the Citadel.


  • August 23, 2005

    Practicing Medicine Without a Swagger




    It was hard not to feel entitled when working 36 hours straight as a medical resident. By the end of my shift, I found myself interrupting conversations and being rude to co-workers and even patients. After all, I had been up all night.


    But it was not only long call nights that allowed physicians to rule the roost. For decades, doctors enjoyed privileges and perquisites that made colleagues alternately envious and furious. But these days, doctors are less likely to be treated like royalty than – egads! – like employees. How are we dealing with this?


    Physicians actually enjoyed relatively little power until the early 20th century. Then, a series of scientific discoveries, most notably the germ theory of disease, enhanced what the sociologist Paul Starr called the “cultural authority” of the medical profession. With improved tools like insulin, penicillin and the polio vaccine, the reputation of doctors accelerated further over the coming decades.


    As communities and charitable agencies built hospitals, they rewarded their medical staffs. Doctors were given their own parking lots, replete with personalized nameplates. They ate separately in special doctors’ dining rooms. Nurses and other employees parked and ate in regular areas, often alongside the public.


    Rewarded in terms of money and prestige, some physicians became vain and arrogant, making extraordinary demands and openly misbehaving. Most notorious were certain surgeons who ran operating rooms like fiefs, screaming at staff members and even throwing surgical instruments to signify their discontent.


    Why was such behavior tolerated? To start with, physicians often ran hospitals and thus made exceptions for their peers, especially those who saved lives. Indeed, recalls Dr. Arthur H. Aufses Jr., professor of surgery at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, people who complained about surgeons were themselves at risk of being fired.


    One of the best depictions of surgical bravado occurs in the 1991 film “The Doctor,” in which William Hurt plays Dr. Jack McKee, an arrogant surgeon who eventually develops cancer. In one scene, Mr. Hurt’s character, accompanied by a crowd of overeager residents, brusquely dismisses a chaplain from a patient’s bedside with a shake of his head. The message is clear: the doctor trumps even God.


    It was not only surgeons strutting around the hospital halls. Internists and other physicians ignored or made fun of patients who annoyed them, behaviors best depicted in the 1978 novel “The House of God.”


    When I was a house officer in the 1980′s, certain residents explicitly modeled themselves after the book’s “Fat Man,” who was less interested in patient care than in giving patients derogatory nicknames and in entertaining his peers.


    How and why did things begin to change? For one thing, society changed. By the 1970′s, thanks to the civil rights movement and the Vietnam War, authority figures were under attack.


    Physicians were not immune, especially those who had participated in unethical activities, like the infamous Tuskegee syphilis experiment. Suddenly, things like doctors’ parking lots and dining rooms seemed to underscore medicine’s elitist nature.


    Women entering the profession also played a crucial role. Men, who constituted a vast majority of physicians, could act out, but women could not.


    When Dr. Bonnie L. Bermas, now on the Harvard faculty, was training in the 1980′s, she always felt she had to be on her best behavior, she said. As the percentage of women in medicine grew, fraternitylike behaviors became increasingly unacceptable.


    A more humane schedule is also a factor. New regulations have made the 36-hour shift a thing of the past. It is harder for doctors to expect favors when they are working shifts like everyone else.


    Most hospital employees, including physicians, believe that the humbling of doctors has been for the best. The “days of the giants” may have been fun, but humanistic patient care has become paramount.


    There are still occasional reminders of the past, however. For example, almost everyone involved in clinical care – nurses, social workers and nutritionists – is generally addressed by his or her first name. Yet physicians are still called “Dr. Smith” or “Dr. Jones,” even, I might add, when they ask to be called by their first names.


    And there are also the periodic perks. One morning last winter, I stopped by the employee health department to get a flu shot. Because of the earlier shortages, about a dozen employees were waiting ahead of me.


    Soon the nurse who was to administer the shots appeared. She had known me since I was a resident. When she spied me, she asked, “Doctor, what are you doing here?”


    Waiting for a flu shot, I explained.


    “You get in here right now,” she said.


    I paused for a moment, nervously glanced around the room, and quietly followed her into her office.


    Barron H. Lerner is an associate professor of medicine and public health at Columbia University.





  • August 23, 2005
    A Perilous Journey From Delivery Room to Bedroom
    By KEITH ABLOW, M.D.

    Josh was a man in his 40′s I’d been treating for depression. His wife had given birth to their first child, a girl, three days before.

    “Congratulations,” I said.

    “She’s beautiful. A miracle,” he responded.

    “Amazing, isn’t it?” I agreed, remembering the first time I held my own daughter.

    “Just incredible.” He shrugged, shook his head. His foot started tapping. “You were … there?” he asked me, tentatively. “I mean, for the delivery?”

    There. I could hear the other questions coming. I have heard them many times from men whose wives had given birth days or weeks before our sessions.

    Even when I had been treating these men for a year or more, they always seemed uncharacteristically hesitant to broach this topic.

    “I was,” I said. I waited.

    He nodded. “Incredible, isn’t it?”

    “It’s a lot of things,” I said, giving him permission to say more.

    He relaxed a bit. The tapping of his foot slowed. “Where were you? The head of the bed?”

    That was almost always the next question. “Just about the whole time,” I said.

    He winced. “I probably should have stayed up there, too.”

    “Why’s that?”

    “You know,” he said with a smile.

    He couldn’t bear to say it. “You saw more than you wanted to?” I asked.

    The smile left his face. “I just can’t get it out of my mind.”

    “What about it?”

    “Nothing.”

    I waited.

    “I mean,” he went on, “how are you supposed to go from seeing that to wanting to be with … ?” He stopped, but his eyes kept asking the question.

    “Right,” I said. “It gets easier with time, for just about everyone.”

    Although no one seems to talk publicly about the problem, Josh is only one of dozens of men who have confided to me that witnessing the births of their children has made it difficult for them to be attracted to their wives, at least in the short run.

    They seem to have trouble seeing them as sexual beings after seeing them make babies, trouble reverting to a mind-set in which their wives’ sexual anatomy is just that – not associated with images of new life emerging through the birth canal.

    In the age of the “new man,” very little consideration is given to the potentially negative side effects of togetherness in the delivery room. Every man I have spoken with over the past few years knows he is expected to be with his wife when his child comes into the world.

    How can anyone explain sitting out such a life-changing moment in the waiting room?

    The trouble is that the moment turns out to be both intensely beautiful and potentially traumatic.

    It is miraculous to see a baby’s head emerge, and it can also be shocking. It is riveting to see an umbilical cord connecting mother and baby, but it can also be very disturbing. It is exciting to be asked by a doctor to cut that umbilical cord, but also potentially very frightening, even for otherwise rather fearless men.

    And not every man gets over it. Several men have confessed to me that they never regained the same romantic view of their wives that they had before seeing them deliver children.

    “They ended up having to cut her open to get the baby,” one patient told me. “I saw it. I mean, how am I supposed to get that out of my head? Every time I look at the scar, it’s like I’m seeing it again.”

    In the most striking cases, the symptoms that men experience come close to post-traumatic stress disorder, with its roots in the witnessing of an event that involves a threat to the physical integrity of self or others and responding with intense fear, helplessness or horror.

    The symptoms, as my patients have reported, include recurrent and intrusive distressing recollections of the event and efforts to avoid recalling it.

    I do not believe that most men suffer these symptoms. But some do. And predicting which men will be vulnerable to them is nearly impossible in a social climate in which men who admit reticence about being present in the delivery room risk being labeled throwbacks.

    The fact that the subject is taboo also means that a man who is traumatized by the experience may be retraumatized again and again, with each child born to him.

    “Honestly,” one man, married for 12 years, told me, “I think one of the main reasons I don’t feel attracted to my wife is that I saw her give birth three times. It’s like I know too much about that part of her.”

    The mystery is gone. And while there are other contributing factors to the loss of passion in the man’s marriage, one of them does seem to be his presence in the delivery room, three times.

    And I’m not sure that the delivery is the only cause of men’s psychological struggles during their partners’ pregnancies.

    I myself recall feeling as if the clinical focus on childbirth during prenatal classes, including the detailed descriptions of the placenta and the meconium, took away from the wonder of the process, rather than adding to it.

    I don’t know what is gained by showing the cross-sectional anatomy of a woman’s torso to her lover.

    Whether the father is present in the delivery room is a couple’s personal decision, of course.

    But it is a decision that involves potential gains and potential losses, and too few couples realize that fact or are willing to talk about it.

    Women may want to consider the risks as they invite their partners to watch them bring new life into the world. For some of the passion that binds them together may leave their lives at the very same time.

    Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company Home Privacy Policy Search Corrections XML Help Contact Us Work for Us Back to Top


  • August 21, 2005

    Clemens Has Entered Another Zone in the Twilight of His Career




    In this season of steroids, every other baseball story has been pushed to the background. It is time for one of them to start getting some real attention.


    At age 43, Roger Clemens is having one of the best four or five seasons any pitcher has ever had. He has probably clinched the title of best pitcher since World War II, as well as earning a place in any serious conversation about the best ever.


    Even after his worst outing of the year, in which he gave up five runs against the Brewers on Thursday, Clemens’s earned run average is just 1.53. It is a mark reminiscent of Bob Gibson, Christy Mathewson and a time when mounds were higher and ballparks were bigger.


    In fact, Clemens has a chance to post the lowest E.R.A. in history relative to his peers. No pitcher – not Gibson, not Mathewson, not Dutch Leonard during his great 1914 campaign (19-5, 0.96) – has ever posted an E.R.A. less than a third as big as his league’s average. The National League E.R.A. is now 2.8 times greater than Clemens’s. To finish the season with the best ratio of all time, Clemens would need to reduce his E.R.A. below 1.50.


    “I think he’s the best pitcher that I’ve seen in the 40 years that I’ve been in the major leagues,” said Larry Dierker, a former Astros pitcher and manager who is now a television commentator for many of Clemens’s games. “It’s amazing. It’s been so much fun to watch.”


    The most striking part of it might be that this is the second age-defying renaissance of Clemens’s career. Almost a decade ago, the Red Sox did not re-sign him after two disappointing seasons, and their general manager, Dan Duquette, suggested that Clemens was entering “the twilight of his career.” Then, Clemens won the Cy Young award in Toronto in each of the next two seasons.


    Then came five up-and-down years with the Yankees, an announced retirement and an unretirement to join the Astros, who play a 15-minute drive from his house. He seemed to be making a kind of sentimental goodbye. Instead, he has re-emerged as the game’s top pitcher.


    Psychology certainly seems to play some role in the cycles of Clemens’s career. He made it clear that Duquette’s “twilight” line motivated him in Toronto. In Houston, the team allows him to skip some road games, and Clemens seems more relaxed as a result.


    But Tim Purpura, the Astros’ general manager, said Clemens was also better rested because of the unusual arrangement. Before the team signed him, Purpura asked Nolan Ryan – the Hall of Fame pitcher who is now a special assistant to the general manager for the Astros – whether less travel would have helped Ryan’s body when he was pitching in his 40′s. Ryan said it definitely would have. In an age of private planes, he encouraged the team to make the deal.


    “The freedoms we give him – he has used them to our advantage,” Purpura said. “Baseball can be somewhat monotonous, day after day, the same places, the same people. We get into a grind. I think to break up that grind may be a positive for him.”


    Purpura added, “He’s a very happy man, and it shows in his work.”


    The accumulated experience of 21 seasons probably helps, too. Clemens now uses the first couple of innings of a game to figure out which of his pitches are working that night, Dierker noted, then picks his spots with those pitches for the rest of the game.


    “He almost never throws a ball over the middle of the plate, and still doesn’t walk anyone,” Dierker said.


    Clemens is chasing Leonard of the 1914 Red Sox for the best season compared to his peers. The American League E.R.A. in 1914 was about 2.8 times higher than Leonard’s, according to numbers from baseball-reference.com, an online encyclopedia. The modern record holder is Pedro Martínez, who had a 1.74 E.R.A. in 2000 with a ratio just under Leonard’s. Clemens’s finest showing until this year was a ratio of 2.2 in 1997 (2.05 E.R.A.) one of the best 15 seasons ever.


    Still, Clemens might be denied the Cy Young award this year. The sportswriters who vote on it tend to focus on victories, and the Astros’ paltry offense has denied him a bunch this year.


    But that would not alter Clemens’s place in history. He already has seven Cy Youngs, two more than anybody else. At his peak – all three peaks, more precisely – he has been about as good as anyone. Over his career, he has been far more durable than Leonard, Gibson, Mathewson, Sandy Koufax, Lefty Grove and others who dominated as he has.


    Only Walter Johnson and Cy Young himself, who each pitched more than 20 seasons, can match Clemens for greatness and longevity. That is not bad company as it is, and Clemens might have another season or two – a twilight – left in him.


    Email: keepingscore@nytimes.com






  • Barry Dowsett/Photo Researcheers Inc.

    Advocates of design point to complicated bacteria as evidence

    August 22, 2005
    In Explaining Life’s Complexity, Darwinists and Doubters Clash
    By KENNETH CHANG

    At the heart of the debate over intelligent design is this question: Can a scientific explanation of the history of life include the actions of an unseen higher being?

    The proponents of intelligent design, a school of thought that some have argued should be taught alongside evolution in the nation’s schools, say that the complexity and diversity of life go beyond what evolution can explain.

    Biological marvels like the optical precision of an eye, the little spinning motors that propel bacteria and the cascade of proteins that cause blood to clot, they say, point to the hand of a higher being at work in the world.

    In one often-cited argument, Michael J. Behe, a professor of biochemistry at Lehigh University and a leading design theorist, compares complex biological phenomena like blood clotting to a mousetrap: Take away any one piece – the spring, the baseboard, the metal piece that snags the mouse – and the mousetrap stops being able to catch mice.

    Similarly, Dr. Behe argues, if any one of the more than 20 proteins involved in blood clotting is missing or deficient, as happens in hemophilia, for instance, clots will not form properly.

    Such all-or-none systems, Dr. Behe and other design proponents say, could not have arisen through the incremental changes that evolution says allowed life to progress to the big brains and the sophisticated abilities of humans from primitive bacteria.

    These complex systems are “always associated with design,” Dr. Behe, the author of the 1996 book “Darwin’s Black Box,” said in an interview. “We find such systems in biology, and since we know of no other way that these things can be produced, Darwinian claims notwithstanding, then we are rational to conclude they were indeed designed.”

    It is an argument that appeals to many Americans of faith.

    But mainstream scientists say that the claims of intelligent design run counter to a century of research supporting the explanatory and predictive power of Darwinian evolution, and that the design approach suffers from fundamental problems that place it outside the realm of science. For one thing, these scientists say, invoking a higher being as an explanation is unscientific.

    “One of the rules of science is, no miracles allowed,” said Douglas H. Erwin, a paleobiologist at the Smithsonian Institution. “That’s a fundamental presumption of what we do.”

    That does not mean that scientists do not believe in God. Many do. But they see science as an effort to find out how the material world works, with nothing to say about why we are here or how we should live.

    And in that quest, they say, there is no need to resort to otherworldly explanations. So much evidence has been provided by evolutionary studies that biologists are able to explain even the most complex natural phenomena and to fill in whatever blanks remain with solid theories.

    This is possible, in large part, because evolution leaves tracks like the fossil remains of early animals or the chemical footprints in DNA that have been revealed by genetic research.

    For example, while Dr. Behe and other leading design proponents see the blood clotting system as a product of design, mainstream scientists see it as a result of a coherent sequence of evolutionary events.

    Early vertebrates like jawless fish had a simple clotting system, scientists believe, involving a few proteins that made blood stick together, said Russell F. Doolittle, a professor of molecular biology at the University of California, San Diego.

    Scientists hypothesize that at some point, a mistake during the copying of DNA resulted in the duplication of a gene, increasing the amount of protein produced by cells.

    Most often, such a change would be useless. But in this case the extra protein helped blood clot, and animals with the extra protein were more likely to survive and reproduce. Over time, as higher-order species evolved, other proteins joined the clotting system. For instance, several proteins involved in the clotting of blood appear to have started as digestive enzymes.

    By studying the evolutionary tree and the genetics and biochemistry of living organisms, Dr. Doolittle said, scientists have largely been able to determine the order in which different proteins became involved in helping blood clot, eventually producing the sophisticated clotting mechanisms of humans and other higher animals. The sequencing of animal genomes has provided evidence to support this view.

    For example, scientists had predicted that more primitive animals such as fish would be missing certain blood-clotting proteins. In fact, the recent sequencing of the fish genome has shown just this.

    “The evidence is rock solid,” Dr. Doolittle said.

    Intelligent design proponents have advanced their views in books for popular audiences and in a few scientific articles. Some have developed mathematical formulas intended to tell whether something was designed or formed by natural processes.

    Mainstream scientists say that intelligent design represents a more sophisticated – and thus more seductive – attack on evolution. Unlike creationists, design proponents accept many of the conclusions of modern science. They agree with cosmologists that the age of the universe is 13.6 billion years, not fewer than 10,000 years, as a literal reading of the Bible would suggest. They accept that mutation and natural selection, the central mechanisms of evolution, have acted on the natural world in small ways, for example, leading to the decay of eyes in certain salamanders that live underground.

    Some intelligent design advocates even accept common descent, the notion that all species came from a common ancestor, a central tenet of evolution.

    Although a vast majority of scientists accept evolution, the Discovery Institute, a research group in Seattle that has emerged as a clearinghouse for the intelligent design movement, says that 404 scientists, including 70 biologists, have signed a petition saying they are skeptical of Darwinism.

    Nonetheless, many scientists regard intelligent design as little more than creationism dressed up in pseudoscientific clothing. Despite its use of scientific language and the fact that some design advocates are scientists, they say, the design approach has so far offered only philosophical objections to evolution, not any positive evidence for the intervention of a designer.

    ‘Truncated View of Reality’

    If Dr. Behe’s mousetrap is one of the most familiar arguments for design, another is the idea that intelligence is obvious in what it creates. Read a novel by Hemingway, gaze at the pyramids, and a designer’s hand is manifest, design proponents say.

    But mainstream scientists, design proponents say, are unwilling to look beyond the material world when it comes to explaining things like the construction of an eye or the spinning motors that propel bacteria. What is wrong, they ask, with entertaining the idea that what looks like it was designed was actually designed?

    “If we’ve defined science such that it cannot get to the true answer, we’ve got a pretty lame definition of science,” said Douglas D. Axe, a molecular biologist and the director of research at the Biologic Institute, a new research center in Seattle that looks at the organization of biological systems, including intelligent design issues. Dr. Axe said he had received “significant” financing from the Discovery Institute, but he declined to give any other details about the institute or its financing.

    Stephen C. Meyer, director of the Center for Science and Culture at the Discovery Institute, compares the design approach to the work of archaeologists investigating an ancient civilization.

    “Imagine you’re an archaeologist and you’re looking at an inscription, and you say, ‘Well, sorry, that looks like it’s intelligent but we can’t invoke an intelligent cause because, as a matter of method, we have to limit ourselves to materialistic processes,’ ” Dr. Meyer said. “That would be nuts.”

    He added, “Call it miracle, call it some other pejorative term, but the fact remains that the materialistic view is a truncated view of reality.”

    William Paley, an Anglican priest, made a similar argument in the early 19th century. Someone who finds a rock can easily imagine how wind and rain shaped it, he reasoned. But someone who finds a pocket watch lying on the ground instantly knows that it was not formed by natural processes.

    With living organisms so much more complicated than watches, he wrote, “The marks of design are too strong to be got over.”

    Mainstream scientists say that the scientific method is indeed restricted to the material world, because it is trying to find out how it works. Simply saying, “it must have been designed,” they say, is simply a way of not tackling the hardest problems.

    They say they have no disagreement with studying phenomena for which there are, as yet, no explanations.

    It is the presumption of a designer that mainstream scientists dispute, because there are no artifacts or biological signs – no scientific evidence, in other words – to suggest a designer’s presence.

    Darwin’s theory, in contrast, has over the last century yielded so many solid findings that no mainstream biologist today doubts its basic tenets, though they may argue about particulars.

    The theory has unlocked many of the mysteries of the natural world. For example, by studying the skeletons of whales, evolutionary scientists have been able to trace the history of their descent from small-hoofed land mammals. They made predictions about what the earliest water-dwelling whales might look like. And, in 1994, paleontologists reported discovering two such species, with many of the anatomical features that scientists had predicted.

    Darwin’s Finches

    Nowhere has evolution been more powerful than in its prediction that there must be a means to pass on information from one generation to another. Darwin did not know the biological mechanism of inheritance, but the theory of evolution required one.

    The discovery of DNA, the sequencing of the human genome, the pinpointing of genetic diseases and the discovery that a continuum of life from a single cell to a human brain can be detected in DNA are all a result of evolutionary theory.

    Darwin may have been the classic scientific observer. He observed that individuals in a given species varied considerably, variations now known to be caused by mutations in their genetic code. He also realized that constraints of food and habitat sharply limited population growth; not every individual could survive and reproduce.

    This competition, he hypothesized, meant that those individuals with helpful traits multiplied, passing on those traits to their numerous offspring. Negative or useless traits did not help individuals reproduce, and those traits faded away, a process that Darwin called natural selection.

    The finches that Darwin observed in the Galápagos Islands provide the most famous example of this process. The species of finch that originally found its way to the Galápagos from South America had a beak shaped in a way that was ideal for eating seeds. But once arrived on the islands, that finch eventually diversified into 13 species. The various Galápagos finches have differently shaped beaks, each fine-tuned to take advantage of a particular food, like fruit, grubs, buds or seeds.

    Such small adaptations can arise within a few generations. Darwin surmised that over millions of years, these small changes would accumulate, giving rise to the myriad of species seen today.

    The number of organisms that, in those long periods, ended up being preserved as fossils is infinitesimal. As a result, the evolutionary record – the fossils of long-extinct organisms found preserved in rock – is necessarily incomplete, and some species appear to burst out of nowhere.

    Some supporters of intelligent design have argued that such gaps undermine the evidence for evolution.

    For instance, during the Cambrian explosion a half a billion years ago, life diversified to shapes with limbs and shells from jellyfish-like blobs, over a geologically brief span of 30 million years.

    Dr. Meyer sees design at work in these large leaps, which signified the appearance of most modern forms of life. He argues that genetic mutations do not have the power to create new shapes of animals.

    But molecular biologists have found genes that control the function of other genes, switching them on and off. Small mutations in these controller genes could produce new species. In addition, new fossils are being found and scientists now know that many changes occurred in the era before the Cambrian – a period that may have lasted 100 million years – providing more time for change.

    The Cambrian explosion, said David J. Bottjer, a professor of earth sciences at the University of Southern California and president of the Paleontological Society, is “a wonderful mystery in that we don’t know everything yet.”

    “I think it will be just a matter of time before smart people will be able to figure a lot more of this out,” Dr. Bottjer said. “Like any good scientific problem.”

    Purposeful Patterns

    Intelligent design proponents have been stung by claims that, in contrast to mainstream scientists, they do not form their own theories or conduct original research. They say they are doing the mathematical work and biological experiments needed to put their ideas on firm scientific ground.

    For example, William A. Dembski, a mathematician who drew attention when he headed a short-lived intelligent design institute at Baylor University, has worked on mathematical algorithms that purport to tell the difference between objects that were designed and those that occurred naturally.

    Dr. Dembski says designed objects, like Mount Rushmore, show complex, purposeful patterns that evince the existence of intelligence. Mathematical calculations like those he has developed, he argues, could detect those patterns, for example, distinguishing Mount Rushmore from Mount St. Helens.

    But other mathematicians have said that Dr. Dembski’s calculations do not work and cannot be applied in the real world.

    Other studies that intelligent design theorists cite in support of their views have been done by Dr. Axe of the Biologic Institute.

    In one such study, Dr. Axe looked at a protein, called penicillinase, that gives bacteria the ability to survive treatment with the antibiotic penicillin. Dr. Meyer, of the Discovery Institute, has referred to Dr. Axe’s work in arguing that working proteins are so rare that evolution cannot by chance discover them.

    What was the probability, Dr. Axe asked in his study, of a protein with this ability existing in the universe of all possible proteins?

    Penicillinase is made up of a strand of chemicals called amino acids folded into a shape that binds to penicillin and thus disables it. Whether the protein folds up in the right way determines whether it works or not.

    Dr. Axe calculated that of the plausible amino acid sequences, only one in 100,000 trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion – a number written as 1 followed by 77 zeroes – would provide resistance to penicillin.

    In other words, the probability was essentially zero.

    Dr. Axe’s research appeared last year in The Journal of Molecular Biology, a peer-reviewed scientific publication.

    Dr. Kenneth R. Miller, a professor of biology at Brown University and a frequent sparring partner of design proponents, said that in his study, Dr. Axe did not look at penicillinase “the way evolution looks at the protein.”

    Natural selection, he said, is not random. A small number of mutations, sometimes just one, can change the function of a protein, allowing it to diverge along new evolutionary paths and eventually form a new shape or fold.

    One Shot or a Continual Act

    Intelligent design proponents are careful to say that they cannot identify the designer at work in the world, although most readily concede that God is the most likely possibility. And they offer varied opinions on when and how often a designer intervened.

    Dr. Behe, for example, said he could imagine that, like an elaborate billiards shot, the design was set up when the Big Bang occurred 13.6 billion years ago. “It could have all been programmed into the universe as far as I’m concerned,” he said.

    But it was also possible, Dr. Behe added, that a designer acted continually throughout the history of life.

    Mainstream scientists say this fuzziness about when and how design supposedly occurred makes the claims impossible to disprove. It is unreasonable, they say, for design advocates to demand that every detail of evolution be filled in.

    Dr. Behe, however, said he might find it compelling if scientists were to observe evolutionary leaps in the laboratory. He pointed to an experiment by Richard E. Lenski, a professor of microbial ecology at Michigan State University, who has been observing the evolution of E. coli bacteria for more than 15 years. “If anything cool came out of that,” Dr. Behe said, “that would be one way to convince me.”

    Dr. Behe said that if he was correct, then the E. coli in Dr. Lenski’s lab would evolve in small ways but never change in such a way that the bacteria would develop entirely new abilities.

    In fact, such an ability seems to have developed. Dr. Lenski said his experiment was not intended to explore this aspect of evolution, but nonetheless, “We have recently discovered a pretty dramatic exception, one where a new and surprising function has evolved,” he said.

    Dr. Lenski declined to give any details until the research is published. But, he said, “If anyone is resting his or her faith in God on the outcome that our experiment will not produce some major biological innovation, then I humbly suggest they should rethink the distinction between science and religion.”

    Dr. Behe said, “I’ll wait and see.”

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  • Roland Weihrauch/European Pressphoto Agency

    Michael Schumacher drove his Ferrari at the Istanbul Otodrom on Friday in preparation for today’s inaugural Turkish Grand Prix. He will start near the back of the pack.

    August 21, 2005
    Formula One Takes Its Turn in Turkey
    By BRAD SPURGEON

    ISTANBUL, Aug. 20 – For Formula One, it may be just another move eastward into a country with no motor-racing heritage but with money to spend. But the inaugural Turkish Grand Prix on Sunday is adding a few new twists and turns of its own that could make it the finest addition to the calendar in years.

    Unlike the other new races in the East (Malaysia in 1999 and Bahrain and China last year), the Turkish race is not financed by the government but by local businesses. The goals are to increase tourism and foreign investment and to show that Turkey is like any country in the European Union, which it is trying to join.

    And if it has no racing tradition, Turkey is playing on its cultural and geographical heritage. Banners and posters scattered among the old walls, minarets and domes of Istanbul bear the image of the checkered flag and the words, “Welcome to Istanbul – One Lap, Two Continents.”

    But that also expresses one of the only downsides to a Grand Prix weekend in Istanbul. The track is located on the Asian side of the Bosphorus, in Kurtkoy, 30 miles east of Istanbul, while most of the tourism happens on the European side. The traffic jams across the Bosphorus Bridge linking Europe and Asia, and on the highways leading to the track, can take hours.

    There is also the fear of terrorism, as bombings of tourist sites over the summer prompted the race organizers to call on 2,000 paramilitary police officers and to use metal detectors and other precautions. So, the government has gone out of its way to welcome the expected 75,000 spectators, most of whom come from elsewhere in Europe. Simplified customs procedures at a special Formula One booth at the airport provide a free visa stamped: “Purpose of Entry: Formula One.”

    Although the government donated the land for the track, the race and the track are being paid for by the Istanbul Chamber of Commerce and by the National Union of Chambers of Commerce. Although the cost of the track was at first estimated to be $60 million, the local news media reported that it had cost $150 million.

    The Istanbul chamber hopes the race will produce $120 million in tourism revenue.

    “The track itself doesn’t make a lot of money off Formula One,” said Can Guclu, deputy managing director of the track, the Istanbul Otodrom. “But the city itself, the country, the surrounding businesses, they make a lot of money out of this.”

    In a month normally slow for tourism in Istanbul because many people head to the beaches, Guclu said, “The hotels are full.”

    But the race has its detractors, with some people objecting that it is a luxury in a country as poor as Turkey. Although tickets for seats are 25 percent less expensive than for any other Grand Prix, the cheapest tickets, at $85, cost about a week’s average salary.

    “We’ve actually really kept the prices low, comparatively,” Guclu said. “But it’s one of the most expensive events to take place in Turkey in terms of ticket prices.”

    The race is also part of a push to increase Turkey’s presence on the world sporting scene. Turkey staged the Champions League final soccer match in Istanbul in May. It has held a round of the World Rally Championship for the past three years, and this year the track will also hold the world touring car championship and the world motorcycling series, MotoGP.

    “We’re trying to offer something for everybody,” Guclu said.

    Although the buildings and grandstands are not as sublime as those at other new tracks, the buildings are beautifully shaped to look like the tents used by Ottoman sultans. And the course itself could become a Formula One favorite.

    The Turkish designers have moved away from the Formula One design trend toward flat, safe but boring new tracks. The 3.3-mile Istanbul circuit is located on hilly woodland, and it undulates and bends about daringly, with sweeping blind corners as in Spa, Belgium, or Suzuka, Japan. Michael Schumacher slid off the track in qualifying and will start near the back of the pack Sunday. Kimi Raikkonen will start from the pole.

    It is bound to produce fabulous racing, and the tight, downward sloping first turn, resembling that at Interlagos in São Paulo, Brazil, should provide a great race start.

    “It’s the corner where you’re always going to tell yourself you can brake later and later,” Rubens Barrichello, a Brazilian driver at Ferrari, said Thursday. “But there will be times that you just overdo it.”

    It is also one of only three counterclockwise tracks, along with Interlagos and Imola, Italy, and that will challenge the drivers’ necks.

    Felipe Massa of the Sauber team said: “It is a very complete circuit. You find everything: quick corners, slow corners, changes of direction, heavy braking.”

    Turkey has only two notable drivers in European formula racing, and both will make an appearance this weekend. Can Artam races in the GP2 support series on Formula One weekends, and Jason Tahincioglu races in the British Formula Renault and is the son of the Turkish federation president.

    “When I started racing four years ago,” Artam said, “I was dreaming that one day I would be in Formula One and race in front of my own people. And now everything is becoming real, and it’s really exciting.”

    Guclu is equally proud.

    “What is Formula One going to bring to Turkey?” he said, parroting a question. “That’s the wrong way to look at it. I think you should ask, ‘What’s Turkey bringing to Formula One?’ “

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  •  



    George Steinmetz

    Oil Runs Through It…for Now: Shaybah, one of Saudi Arabia’s oil fields, which all told can produce 10.5 million barrels of oil a day. The Saudis say they can boost production to 12.5 million barrels a day, or 15 million, or more. But there is a limit to how much you can ask of the earth, and it is fast approaching, some experts say.



    August 21, 2005
    The Breaking Point
    By PETER MAASS

    The largest oil terminal in the world, Ras Tanura, is located on the eastern coast of Saudi Arabia, along the Persian Gulf. From Ras Tanura’s control tower, you can see the classic totems of oil’s dominion — supertankers coming and going, row upon row of storage tanks and miles and miles of pipes. Ras Tanura, which I visited in June, is the funnel through which nearly 10 percent of the world’s daily supply of petroleum flows. Standing in the control tower, you are surrounded by more than 50 million barrels of oil, yet not a drop can be seen.

    The oil is there, of course. In a technological sleight of hand, oil can be extracted from the deserts of Arabia, processed to get rid of water and gas, sent through pipelines to a terminal on the gulf, loaded onto a supertanker and shipped to a port thousands of miles away, then run through a refinery and poured into a tanker truck that delivers it to a suburban gas station, where it is pumped into an S.U.V. — all without anyone’s actually glimpsing the stuff. So long as there is enough oil to fuel the global economy, it is not only out of sight but also out of mind, at least for consumers.

    I visited Ras Tanura because oil is no longer out of mind, thanks to record prices caused by refinery shortages and surging demand — most notably in the United States and China — which has strained the capacity of oil producers and especially Saudi Arabia, the largest exporter of all. Unlike the 1973 crisis, when the embargo by the Arab members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries created an artificial shortfall, today’s shortage, or near-shortage, is real. If demand surges even more, or if a producer goes offline because of unrest or terrorism, there may suddenly not be enough oil to go around.

    As Aref al-Ali, my escort from Saudi Aramco, the giant state-owned oil company, pointed out, ”One mistake at Ras Tanura today, and the price of oil will go up.” This has turned the port into a fortress; its entrances have an array of gates and bomb barriers to prevent terrorists from cutting off the black oxygen that the modern world depends on. Yet the problem is far greater than the brief havoc that could be wrought by a speeding zealot with 50 pounds of TNT in the trunk of his car. Concerns are being voiced by some oil experts that Saudi Arabia and other producers may, in the near future, be unable to meet rising world demand. The producers are not running out of oil, not yet, but their decades-old reservoirs are not as full and geologically spry as they used to be, and they may be incapable of producing, on a daily basis, the increasing volumes of oil that the world requires. ”One thing is clear,” warns Chevron, the second-largest American oil company, in a series of new advertisements, ”the era of easy oil is over.”

    In the past several years, the gap between demand and supply, once considerable, has steadily narrowed, and today is almost negligible. The consequences of an actual shortfall of supply would be immense. If consumption begins to exceed production by even a small amount, the price of a barrel of oil could soar to triple-digit levels. This, in turn, could bring on a global recession, a result of exorbitant prices for transport fuels and for products that rely on petrochemicals — which is to say, almost every product on the market. The impact on the American way of life would be profound: cars cannot be propelled by roof-borne windmills. The suburban and exurban lifestyles, hinged to two-car families and constant trips to work, school and Wal-Mart, might become unaffordable or, if gas rationing is imposed, impossible. Carpools would be the least imposing of many inconveniences; the cost of home heating would soar — assuming, of course, that climate-controlled habitats do not become just a fond memory.

    But will such a situation really come to pass? That depends on Saudi Arabia. To know the answer, you need to know whether the Saudis, who possess 22 percent of the world’s oil reserves, can increase their country’s output beyond its current limit of 10.5 million barrels a day, and even beyond the 12.5-million-barrel target it has set for 2009. (World consumption is about 84 million barrels a day.) Saudi Arabia is the sole oil superpower. No other producer possesses reserves close to its 263 billion barrels, which is almost twice as much as the runner-up, Iran, with 133 billion barrels. New fields in other countries are discovered now and then, but they tend to offer only small increments. For example, the much-contested and as-yet-unexploited reserves in the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge are believed to amount to about 10 billion barrels, or just a fraction of what the Saudis possess.

    But the truth about Saudi oil is hard to figure out. Oil reservoirs cannot be inventoried like wood in a wilderness: the oil is underground, unseen by geologists and engineers, who can, at best, make highly educated guesses about how much is underfoot and how much can be extracted in the future. And there is a further obstacle: the Saudis will not let outsiders audit their confidential data on reserves and production. Oil is an industry in which not only is the product hidden from sight but so is reliable information about it. And because we do not know when a supply-demand shortfall might arrive, we do not know when to begin preparing for it, so as to soften its impact; the economic blow may come as a sledgehammer from the darkness.

    Of course the Saudis do have something to say about this prospect. Before journeying to the kingdom, I went to Washington to hear the Saudi oil minister, Ali al-Naimi, speak at an energy conference in the mammoth Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, not far from the White House. Naimi was the star attraction at a gathering of the American petro-political nexus. Samuel Bodman, the U.S. energy secretary, was on the dais next to him. David O’Reilly, chairman and C.E.O. of Chevron, was waiting in the wings. The moderator was an éminence grise of the oil world, James Schlesinger, a former energy secretary, defense secretary and C.I.A. director.

    ”I want to assure you here today that Saudi Arabia’s reserves are plentiful, and we stand ready to increase output as the market dictates,” said Naimi, dressed in a gray business suit and speaking with only a slight Arabic accent. He addressed skeptics who contend that Saudi reservoirs cannot be tapped for larger amounts of oil. ”I am quite bullish on technology as the key to our energy future,” he said. ”Technological innovation will allow us to find and extract more oil around the world.” He described the task of increasing output as just ”a question of investment” in new wells and pipelines, and he noted that consuming nations urgently need to build new refineries to process increased supplies of crude. ”There is absolutely no lack of resources worldwide,” he repeated.

    His assurances did not assure. A barrel of oil cost $55 at the time of his speech; less than three months later, the price had jumped by 20 percent. The truth of the matter — whether the world will really have enough petroleum in the years ahead — was as well concealed as the millions of barrels of oil I couldn’t see at Ras Tanura.

    For 31 years, Matthew Simmons has prospered as the head of his own firm, Simmons & Company International, which advises energy companies on mergers and acquisitions. A member of the Council on Foreign Relations, a graduate of the Harvard Business School and an unpaid adviser on energy policy to the 2000 presidential campaign of George W. Bush, he would be a card-carrying member of the global oil nomenclatura, if cards were issued for such things. Yet he is one of the principal reasons the oil world is beginning to ask hard questions of itself.

    Two years ago, Simmons went to Saudi Arabia on a government tour for business executives. The group was presented with the usual dog-and-pony show, but instead of being impressed, as most visitors tend to be, with the size and expertise of the Saudi oil industry, Simmons became perplexed. As he recalls in his somewhat heretical new book, ”Twilight in the Desert: The Coming Saudi Oil Shock and the World Economy,” a senior manager at Aramco told the visitors that ”fuzzy logic” would be used to estimate the amount of oil that could be recovered. Simmons had never heard of fuzzy logic. What could be fuzzy about an oil reservoir? He suspected that Aramco, despite its promises of endless supplies, might in fact not know how much oil remained to be recovered.

    Simmons returned home with an itch to scratch. Saudi Arabia was one of the charter members of OPEC, founded in 1960 in Baghdad to coordinate the policies of oil producers. Like every OPEC country, Saudi Arabia provides only general numbers about its output and reserves; it does not release details about how much oil is extracted from each reservoir and what methods are used to extract that oil, and it does not permit audits by outsiders. The condition of Saudi fields, and those of other OPEC nations, is a closely guarded secret. That’s largely because OPEC quotas, which were first imposed in 1983 to limit the output of member countries, were based on overall reserves; the higher an OPEC member’s reserves, the higher its quota. It is widely believed that most, if not all, OPEC members exaggerated the sizes of their reserves in order to have the largest possible quota — and thus the largest possible revenue stream.

    In the days of excess supply, bankers like Simmons did not know, or care, about the fudging; whether or not reserves were hyped, there was plenty of oil coming out of the ground. Through the 1970′s, 80′s and 90′s, the capacity of OPEC and non-OPEC countries exceeded demand, and that’s why OPEC imposed a quota system — to keep some product off the market (although many OPEC members, seeking as much revenue as possible, quietly sold more oil than they were supposed to). Until quite recently, the only reason to fear a shortage was if a boycott, war or strike were to halt supplies. Few people imagined a time when supply would dry up because of demand alone. But a steady surge in demand in recent years — led by China’s emergence as a voracious importer of oil — has changed that.

    This demand-driven scarcity has prompted the emergence of a cottage industry of experts who predict an impending crisis that will dwarf anything seen before. Their point is not that we are running out of oil, per se; although as much as half of the world’s recoverable reserves are estimated to have been consumed, about a trillion barrels remain underground. Rather, they are concerned with what is called ”capacity” — the amount of oil that can be pumped to the surface on a daily basis. These experts — still a minority in the oil world — contend that because of the peculiarities of geology and the limits of modern technology, it will soon be impossible for the world’s reservoirs to surrender enough oil to meet daily demand.

    One of the starkest warnings came in a February report commissioned by the United States Department of Energy’s National Energy Technology Laboratory. ”Because oil prices have been relatively high for the past decade, oil companies have conducted extensive exploration over that period, but their results have been disappointing,” stated the report, assembled by Science Applications International, a research company that works on security and energy issues. ”If recent trends hold, there is little reason to expect that exploration success will dramatically improve in the future. . . . The image is one of a world moving from a long period in which reserves additions were much greater than consumption to an era in which annual additions are falling increasingly short of annual consumption. This is but one of a number of trends that suggest the world is fast approaching the inevitable peaking of conventional world oil production.”

    The reference to ”peaking” is not a haphazard word choice — ”peaking” is a term used in oil geology to define the critical point at which reservoirs can no longer produce increasing amounts of oil. (This tends to happen when reservoirs are about half-empty.) ”Peak oil” is the point at which maximum production is reached; afterward, no matter how many wells are drilled in a country, production begins to decline. Saudi Arabia and other OPEC members may have enough oil to last for generations, but that is no longer the issue. The eventual and painful shift to different sources of energy — the start of the post-oil age — does not begin when the last drop of oil is sucked from under the Arabian desert. It begins when producers are unable to continue increasing their output to meet rising demand. Crunch time comes long before the last drop.

    ”The world has never faced a problem like this,” the report for the Energy Department concluded. ”Without massive mitigation more than a decade before the fact, the problem will be pervasive and will not be temporary. Previous energy transitions (wood to coal and coal to oil) were gradual and evolutionary; oil peaking will be abrupt and revolutionary.”

    Most experts do not share Simmons’s concerns about the imminence of peak oil. One of the industry’s most prominent consultants, Daniel Yergin, author of a Pulitzer Prize-winning book about petroleum, dismisses the doomsday visions. ”This is not the first time that the world has ‘run out of oil,”’ he wrote in a recent Washington Post opinion essay. ”It’s more like the fifth. Cycles of shortage and surplus characterize the entire history of the oil industry.” Yergin says that a number of oil projects that are under construction will increase the supply by 20 percent in five years and that technological advances will increase the amount of oil that can be recovered from existing reservoirs. (Typically, with today’s technology, only about 40 percent of a reservoir’s oil can be pumped to the surface.)

    Yergin’s bullish view has something in common with the views of the pessimists — it rests on unknowns. Will the new projects that are under way yield as much oil as their financial backers hope? Will new technologies increase recovery rates as much as he expects? These questions are next to impossible to answer because coaxing oil out of the ground is an extraordinarily complex undertaking. The popular notion of reservoirs as underground lakes, from which wells extract oil like straws sucking a milkshake from a glass, is incorrect. Oil exists in drops between and inside porous rocks. A new reservoir may contain sufficient pressure to make these drops of oil flow to the surface in a gusher, but after a while — usually within a few years and often sooner than that — natural pressure lets up and is no longer sufficient to push oil to the surface. At that point, ”secondary” recovery efforts are begun, like pumping water or gas into the reservoirs to increase the pressure.

    This process is unpredictable; reservoirs are extremely temperamental. If too much oil is extracted too quickly or if the wrong types or amounts of secondary efforts are employed, the amount of oil that can be recovered from a field can be greatly reduced; this is known in the oil world as ”damaging a reservoir.” A widely cited example is Oman: in 2001, its daily production reached more than 960,000 barrels, but then suddenly declined, despite the use of advanced technologies. Today, Oman produces 785,000 barrels of oil a day. Herman Franssen, a consultant who worked in Oman for a decade, sees that country’s experience as a possible lesson in the limits of technology for other producers that try to increase or maintain high levels of output. ”They reached a million barrels a day, and then a few years later production collapsed,” Franssen said in a phone interview. ”They used all these new technologies, but they haven’t been able to stop the decline yet.”


    The vague production and reserve data that gets published does not begin to tell the whole story of an oil field’s health, production potential or even its size. For a clear-as-possible picture of a country’s oil situation, you need to know what is happening in each field — how many wells it has, how much oil each well is producing, what recovery methods are being used and how long they’ve been used and the trend line since the field went into production. Data of that sort are typically not released by state-owned companies like Saudi Aramco.

    As Matthew Simmons searched for clues to the truth of the Saudi situation, he immersed himself in the minutiae of oil geology. He realized that data about Saudi fields might be found in the files of the Society of Petroleum Engineers. Oil engineers, like most professional groups, have regular conferences at which they discuss papers that delve into the work they do. The papers, which focus on particular wells that highlight a problem or a solution to a problem, are presented and debated at the conferences and published by the S.P.E. — and then forgotten.

    Before Simmons poked around, no one had taken the time to pull together the S.P.E. papers that involved Saudi oil fields and review them en masse. Simmons found more than 200 such papers and studied them carefully. Although the papers cover only a portion of the kingdom’s wells and date back, in some cases, several decades, they constitute perhaps the best public data about the condition and prospects of Saudi reservoirs.

    Ghawar is the treasure of the Saudi treasure chest. It is the largest oil field in the world and has produced, in the past 50 years, about 55 billion barrels of oil, which amounts to more than half of Saudi production in that period. The field currently produces more than five million barrels a day, which is about half of the kingdom’s output. If Ghawar is facing problems, then so is Saudi Arabia and, indeed, the entire world.

    Simmons found that the Saudis are using increasingly large amounts of water to force oil out of Ghawar. Most of the wells are concentrated in the northern portion of the 174-mile-long field. That might seem like good news — when the north runs low, the Saudis need only to drill wells in the south. But in fact it is bad news, Simmons concluded, because the southern portions of Ghawar are geologically more difficult to draw oil from. ”Someday (and perhaps that day will be soon), the remarkably high well flow rates at Ghawar’s northern end will fade, as reservoir pressures finally plummet,” Simmons writes in his book. ”Then, Saudi Arabian oil output will clearly have peaked. The death of this great king” — meaning Ghawar — ”leaves no field of vaguely comparable stature in the line of succession. Twilight at Ghawar is fast approaching.” He goes on: ”The geological phenomena and natural driving forces that created the Saudi oil miracle are conspiring now in normal and predictable ways to bring it to its conclusion, in a time frame potentially far shorter than officialdom would have us believe.” Simmons concludes, ”Saudi Arabia clearly seems to be nearing or at its peak output and cannot materially grow its oil production.”


    Saudi officials belittle Simmons’s work. Nansen Saleri, a senior Aramco official, has described Simmons as a banker ”trying to come across as a scientist.” In a speech last year, Saleri wryly said, ”I can read 200 papers on neurology, but you wouldn’t want me to operate on your relatives.” I caught up with Simmons in June, during a trip he made to Manhattan to talk with a group of oil-shipping executives. The impression he gives is of an enthusiastic inventor sharing a discovery that took him by surprise. He has a certain wide-eyed wonder in his regard, as if a bit of mystery can be found in everything that catches his eye. And he has a rumpled aspect — thinning hair slightly askew, shirt sleeves a fraction too long. Though he delivers a bracing message, his discourse can wander. He is a successful businessman, and it is clear that he did not achieve his position by being a man of impeccable convention. He certainly has not lost sight of the rule that people who shout ”the end is nigh” do not tend to be favorably reviewed by historians, let alone by their peers. He notes in his book that way back in 1979, The New York Times published an investigative story by Seymour Hersh under the headline ”Saudi Oil Capacity Questioned.” He knows that in past decades the Cassandras failed to foresee new technologies, like deep-water and horizontal drilling, that provided new sources of oil and raised the amount of oil that can be recovered from reservoirs.

    But Simmons says that there are only so many rabbits technology can pull out of its petro-hat. He impishly notes that if the Saudis really wanted to, they could easily prove him wrong. ”If they want to satisfy people, they should issue field-by-field production reports and reserve data and have it audited,” he told me. ”It would then take anybody less than a week to say, ‘Gosh, Matt is totally wrong,’ or ‘Matt actually might be too optimistic.”’

    Simmons has a lot riding on his campaign — not only his name but also his business, which would not be rewarded if he is proved to be a fool. What, I asked, if the data show that the Saudis will be able to sustain production of not only 12.5 million barrels a day — their target for 2009 — but 15 million barrels, which global demand is expected to require of them in the not-too-distant future? ”The odds of them sustaining 12 million barrels a day is very low,” Simmons replied. ”The odds of them getting to 15 million for 50 years — there’s a better chance of me having Bill Gates’s net worth, and I wouldn’t bet a dime on that forecast.”

    The gathering of executives took place in a restaurant at Chelsea Piers; about 35 men sat around a set of tables as the host introduced Simmons. He rambled a bit but hit his talking points, and the executives listened raptly; at one point, the man on my right broke into a soft whistle, of the sort that means ”Holy cow.”

    Simmons didn’t let up. ”We’re going to look back at history and say $55 a barrel was cheap,” he said, recalling a TV interview in which he predicted that a barrel might hit triple digits.

    He said that the anchor scoffed, in disbelief, ”A hundred dollars?”

    Simmons replied, ”I wasn’t talking about low triple digits.”

    The onset of triple-digit prices might seem a blessing for the Saudis — they would receive greater amounts of money for their increasingly scarce oil. But one popular misunderstanding about the Saudis — and about OPEC in general — is that high prices, no matter how high, are to their benefit.

    Although oil costing more than $60 a barrel hasn’t caused a global recession, that could still happen: it can take a while for high prices to have their ruinous impact. And the higher above $60 that prices rise, the more likely a recession will become. High oil prices are inflationary; they raise the cost of virtually everything — from gasoline to jet fuel to plastics and fertilizers — and that means people buy less and travel less, which means a drop-off in economic activity. So after a brief windfall for producers, oil prices would slide as recession sets in and once-voracious economies slow down, using less oil. Prices have collapsed before, and not so long ago: in 1998, oil fell to $10 a barrel after an untimely increase in OPEC production and a reduction in demand from Asia, which was suffering through a financial crash. Saudi Arabia and the other members of OPEC entered crisis mode back then; adjusted for inflation, oil was at its lowest price since the cartel’s creation, threatening to feed unrest among the ranks of jobless citizens in OPEC states.

    ”The Saudis are very happy with oil at $55 per barrel, but they’re also nervous,” a Western diplomat in Riyadh told me in May, referring to the price that prevailed then. (Like all the diplomats I spoke to, he insisted on speaking anonymously because of the sensitivities of relations with Saudi Arabia.) ”They don’t know where this magic line has moved to. Is it now $65? Is it $75? Is it $80? They don’t want to find out, because if you did have oil move that far north . . . the chain reaction can come back to a price collapse again.”

    High prices can have another unfortunate effect for producers. When crude costs $10 a barrel or even $30 a barrel, alternative fuels are prohibitively expensive. For example, Canada has vast amounts of tar sands that can be rendered into heavy oil, but the cost of doing so is quite high. Yet those tar sands and other alternatives, like bioethanol, hydrogen fuel cells and liquid fuel from natural gas or coal, become economically viable as the going rate for a barrel rises past, say, $40 or more, especially if consuming governments choose to offer their own incentives or subsidies. So even if high prices don’t cause a recession, the Saudis risk losing market share to rivals into whose nonfundamentalist hands Americans would much prefer to channel their energy dollars. A concerted push for greater energy conservation in the United States, which consumes one-quarter of the world’s oil (mostly to fuel our cars, as gasoline), would hurt producing nations, too. Basically, any significant reduction in the demand for oil would be ruinous for OPEC members, who have little to offer the world but oil; if a substitute can be found, their future is bleak. Another Western diplomat explained the problem facing the Saudis: ”You want to have the price as high as possible without sending the consuming nations into a recession and at the same time not have the price so high that it encourages alternative technologies.”

    From the American standpoint, one argument in favor of conservation and a switch to alternative fuels is that by limiting oil imports, the United States and its Western allies would reduce their dependence on a potentially unstable region. (In fact, in an effort to offset the risks of relying on the Saudis, America’s top oil suppliers are Canada and Mexico.) In addition, sending less money to Saudi Arabia would mean less money in the hands of a regime that has spent the past few decades doling out huge amounts of its oil revenue to mosques, madrassas and other institutions that have fanned the fires of Islamic radicalism. The oil money has been dispensed not just by the Saudi royal family but by private individuals who benefited from the oil boom — like Osama bin Laden, whose ample funds, probably eroded now, came from his father, a construction magnate. Without its oil windfall, Saudi Arabia would have had a hard time financing radical Islamists across the globe.

    For the Saudis, the political ramifications of reduced demand for its oil would not be negligible. The royal family has amassed vast personal wealth from the country’s oil revenues. If, suddenly, Saudis became aware that the royal family had also failed to protect the value of the country’s treasured resource, the response could be severe. The mere admission that Saudi reserves are not as impressively inexhaustible as the royal family has claimed could lead to hard questions about why the country, and the world, had been misled. With the death earlier this month of the long-ailing King Fahd, the royal family is undergoing another period of scrutiny; the new king, Abdullah, is in his 80′s, and the crown prince, his half-brother Sultan, is in his 70′s, so the issue of generational change remains to be settled. As long as the country is swimming in petro-dollars — even as it is paying off debt accrued during its lean years — everyone is relatively happy, but that can change. One diplomat I spoke to recalled a comment from Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani, the larger-than-life Saudi oil minister during the 1970′s: ”The Stone Age didn’t end for lack of stone, and the oil age will end long before the world runs out of oil.”


    Until now, the Saudis had an excess of production capacity that allowed them, when necessary, to flood the market to drive prices down. They did that in 1990, when the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait eliminated not only Kuwait’s supply of oil but also Iraq’s. The Saudis functioned, as they always had, as the central bank of oil, releasing supply to the market when it was needed and withdrawing supply to keep prices from going lower than the cartel would have liked. In other words, they controlled not only the price of oil but their own destiny as well.

    ”That is what the world has called on them to do before — turn on the taps to produce more and get prices down,” a senior Western diplomat in Riyadh told me recently. ”Decreasing prices used to keep out alternative fuels. I don’t see how they’re able to do that anymore. This is a huge change, and it is a big step in the move to whatever is coming next. That’s what’s really happening.”

    Without the ability to flood the markets with oil, the Saudis are resorting to flooding the market with promises; it is a sort of petro-jawboning. That’s why Ali al-Naimi, the oil minister, told his Washington audience that Saudi Arabia has embarked on a crash program to raise its capacity to 12.5 million barrels a day by 2009 and even higher in the years after that. Naimi is not unlike a factory manager who needs to promise the moon to his valuable clients, for fear of losing or alarming them. He has no choice. The moment he says anything bracing, the touchy energy markets will probably panic, pushing prices even higher and thereby hastening the onset of recession, a switch to alternative fuels or new conservation efforts — or all three. Just a few words of honest caution could move the markets; Naimi’s speeches are followed nearly as closely in the financial world as those of Alan Greenspan.

    I journeyed to Saudi Arabia to interview Naimi and other senior officials, to get as far beyond their prepared remarks as might be possible. Although I was allowed to see Ras Tanura, my interview requests were denied. I was invited to visit Aramco’s oil museum in Dhahran, but that is something a Saudi schoolchild can do on a field trip. It was a ”show but don’t tell” policy. I was able to speak about production issues only with Ibrahim al-Muhanna, the oil ministry spokesman, who reluctantly met me over coffee in the lobby of my hotel in Riyadh. He defended Saudi Arabia’s refusal to share more data, noting that the Saudis are no different from most oil producers.

    ”They will not tell you,” he said. ”Nobody will. And that is not going to change.” Referring to the fact that Saudi Arabia is often called the central bank of oil, he added: ”If an outsider goes to the Fed and asks, ‘How much money do you have?’ they will tell you. If you say, ‘Can I come and count it?’ they will not let you. This applies to oil companies and oil countries.” I mentioned to Muhanna that many people think his government’s ”trust us” stance is not convincing in light of the cheating that has gone on within OPEC and in the industry as a whole; even Royal Dutch/Shell, a publicly listed oil company that undergoes regular audits, has admitted that it overstated its 2002 reserves by 23 percent.

    ”There is no reason for any country or company to lie,” Muhanna replied. ”There is a lot of oil around.” I didn’t need to ask about Simmons and his peak-oil theory; when I met Muhanna at the conference in Washington, he nearly broke off our conversation at the mention of Simmons’s name. ”He does not know anything,” Muhanna said. ”The only thing he has is a big mouth. We should not pay attention to him. Either you believe us or you don’t.”

    So whom to believe? Before leaving New York for Saudi Arabia, I was advised by several oil experts to try to interview Sadad al-Husseini, who retired last year after serving as Aramco’s top executive for exploration and production. I faxed him in Dhahran and received a surprisingly quick reply; he agreed to meet me. A week later, after I arrived in Riyadh, Husseini e-mailed me, asking when I would come to Dhahran; in a follow-up phone call, he offered to pick me up at the airport. He was, it seemed, eager to talk.

    It can be argued that in a nation devoted to oil, Husseini knows more about it than anyone else. Born in Syria, Husseini was raised in Saudi Arabia, where his father was a government official whose family took on Saudi citizenship. Husseini earned a Ph.D. in geological sciences from Brown University in 1973 and went to work in Aramco’s exploration department, eventually rising to the highest position. Until his retirement last year — said to have been caused by a top-level dispute, the nature of which is the source of many rumors — Husseini was a member of the company’s board and its management committee. He is one of the most respected and accomplished oilmen in the world.

    After meeting me at the cavernous airport that serves Dhahran, he drove me in his luxury sedan to the villa that houses his private office. As we entered, he pointed to an armoire that displayed a dozen or so vials of black liquid. ”These are samples from oil fields I discovered,” he explained. Upstairs, there were even more vials, and he would have possessed more than that except, as he said, laughing, ”I didn’t start collecting early enough.”

    We spoke for several hours. The message he delivered was clear: the world is heading for an oil shortage. His warning is quite different from the calming speeches that Naimi and other Saudis, along with senior American officials, deliver on an almost daily basis. Husseini explained that the need to produce more oil is coming from two directions. Most obviously, demand is rising; in recent years, global demand has increased by two million barrels a day. (Current daily consumption, remember, is about 84 million barrels a day.) Less obviously, oil producers deplete their reserves every time they pump out a barrel of oil. This means that merely to maintain their reserve base, they have to replace the oil they extract from declining fields. It’s the geological equivalent of running to stay in place. Husseini acknowledged that new fields are coming online, like offshore West Africa and the Caspian basin, but he said that their output isn’t big enough to offset this growing need.

    ”You look at the globe and ask, ‘Where are the big increments?’ and there’s hardly anything but Saudi Arabia,” he said. ”The kingdom and Ghawar field are not the problem. That misses the whole point. The problem is that you go from 79 million barrels a day in 2002 to 82.5 in 2003 to 84.5 in 2004. You’re leaping by two million to three million a year, and if you have to cover declines, that’s another four to five million.” In other words, if demand and depletion patterns continue, every year the world will need to open enough fields or wells to pump an additional six to eight million barrels a day — at least two million new barrels a day to meet the rising demand and at least four million to compensate for the declining production of existing fields. ”That’s like a whole new Saudi Arabia every couple of years,” Husseini said. ”It can’t be done indefinitely. It’s not sustainable.”

    Husseini speaks patiently, like a teacher who hopes someone is listening. He is in the enviable position of knowing what he talks about while having the freedom to speak openly about it. He did not disclose precise information about Saudi reserves or production — which remain the equivalent of state secrets — but he felt free to speak in generalities that were forthright, even when they conflicted with the reassuring statements of current Aramco officials. When I asked why he was willing to be so frank, he said it was because he sees a shortage ahead and wants to do what he can to avert it. I assumed that he would not be particularly distressed if his rivals in the Saudi oil establishment were embarrassed by his frankness.

    Although Matthew Simmons says it is unlikely that the Saudis will be able to produce 12.5 million barrels a day or sustain output at that level for a significant period of time, Husseini says the target is realistic; he says that Simmons is wrong to state that Saudi Arabia has reached its peak. But 12.5 million is just an interim marker, as far as consuming nations are concerned, on the way to 15 million barrels a day and beyond — and that is the point at which Husseini says problems will arise.

    At the conference in Washington in May, James Schlesinger, the moderator, conducted a question-and-answer session with Naimi at the conclusion of the minister’s speech. One of the first questions involved peak oil: might it be true that Saudi Arabia, which has relied on the same reservoirs, and especially Ghawar, for more than five decades, is nearing the geological limit of its output?

    Naimi wouldn’t hear of it.

    ”I can assure you that we haven’t peaked,” he responded. ”If we peaked, we would not be going to 12.5 and we would not be visualizing a 15-million-barrel-per-day production capacity. . . . We can maintain 12.5 or 15 million for the next 30 to 50 years.”

    Experts like Husseini are very concerned by the prospect of trying to produce 15 million barrels a day. Even if production can be ramped up that high, geology may not be forgiving. Fields that are overproduced can drop off, in terms of output, quite sharply and suddenly, leaving behind large amounts of oil that cannot be coaxed out with existing technology. This is called trapped oil, because the rocks or sediment around it prevent it from escaping to the surface. Unless new technologies are developed, that oil will never be extracted. In other words, the haste to recover oil can lead to less oil being recovered.

    ”You could go to 15, but that’s when the questions of depletion rate, reservoir management and damaging the fields come into play,” says Nawaf Obaid, a Saudi oil and security analyst who is regarded as being exceptionally well connected to key Saudi leaders. ”There is an understanding across the board within the kingdom, in the highest spheres, that if you’re going to 15, you’ll hit 15, but there will be considerable risks . . . of a steep decline curve that Aramco will not be able to do anything about.”

    Even if the Saudis are willing to risk damaging their fields, or even if the risk is overstated, Husseini points out a practical problem. To produce and sustain 15 million barrels a day, Saudi Arabia will have to drill a lot more wells and build a lot more pipelines and processing facilities. Currently, the global oil industry suffers a deficit of qualified engineers to oversee such projects and the equipment and the raw materials — for example, rigs and steel — to build them. These things cannot be wished from thin air or developed quickly enough to meet the demand.

    ”If we had two dozen Texas A&M’s producing a thousand new engineers a year and the industrial infrastructure in the kingdom, with the drilling rigs and power plants, we would have a better chance, but you cannot put that into place overnight,” Husseini said. ”Capacity is not just a function of reserves. It is a function of reserves plus know-how plus a commercial economic system that is designed to increase the resource exploitation. For example, in the U.S. you have infrastructure — there must be tens of thousands of miles of pipelines. If we, in Saudi Arabia, evolve to that level of commercial maturity, we could probably produce a heck of a lot more oil. But to get there is a very tedious, slow process.”

    He worries that the rising global demand for oil will lead to the petroleum equivalent of running an engine at ever-increasing speeds without stopping to cool it down or change the oil. Husseini does not want to see the fragile and irreplaceable reservoirs of the Middle East become damaged through wanton overproduction.

    ”If you are ramping up production so fast and jump from high to higher to highest, and you’re not having enough time to do what needs to be done, to understand what needs to be done, then you can damage reservoirs,” he said. ”Systematic development is not just a matter of money. It’s a matter of reservoir dynamics, understanding what’s there, analyzing and understanding information. That’s where people come in, experience comes in. These are not universally available resources.”

    The most worrisome part of the crisis ahead revolves around a set of statistics from the Energy Information Administration, which is part of the U.S. Department of Energy. The E.I.A. forecast in 2004 that by 2020 Saudi Arabia would produce 18.2 million barrels of oil a day, and that by 2025 it would produce 22.5 million barrels a day. Those estimates were unusual, though. They were not based on secret information about Saudi capacity, but on the projected needs of energy consumers. The figures simply assumed that Saudi Arabia would be able to produce whatever the United States needed it to produce. Just last month, the E.I.A. suddenly revised those figures downward — not because of startling new information about world demand or Saudi supply but because the figures had given so much ammunition to critics. Husseini, for example, described the 2004 forecast as unrealistic.

    ”That’s not how you would manage a national, let alone an international, economy,” he explained. ”That’s the part that is scary. You draw some assumptions and then say, ‘O.K., based on these assumptions, let’s go forward and consume like hell and burn like hell.”’ When I asked whether the kingdom could produce 20 million barrels a day — about twice what it is producing today from fields that may be past their prime — Husseini paused for a second or two. It wasn’t clear if he was taking a moment to figure out the answer or if he needed a moment to decide if he should utter it. He finally replied with a single word: No.

    ”It’s becoming unrealistic,” he said. ”The expectations are beyond what is achievable. This is a global problem . . . that is not going to be solved by tinkering with the Saudi industry.”


    It would be unfair to blame the Saudis alone for failing to warn of whatever shortages or catastrophes might lie ahead.

    In the political and corporate realms of the oil world, there are few incentives to be forthright. Executives of major oil companies have been reluctant to raise alarms; the mere mention of scarce supplies could alienate the governments that hand out lucrative exploration contracts and also send a message to investors that oil companies, though wildly profitable at the moment, have a Malthusian long-term future. Fortunately, that attitude seems to be beginning to change. Chevron’s ”easy oil is over” advertising campaign is an indication that even the boosters of an oil-drenched future are not as bullish as they once were.

    Politicians remain in the dark. During the 2004 presidential campaign, which occurred as gas prices were rising to record levels, the debate on energy policy was all but nonexistent. The Bush campaign produced an advertisement that concluded: ”Some people have wacky ideas. Like taxing gasoline more so people drive less. That’s John Kerry.” Although many environmentalists would have been delighted if Kerry had proposed that during the campaign, in fact the ad was referring to a 50-cents-a-gallon tax that Kerry supported 11 years ago as part of a package of measures to reduce the deficit. (The gas tax never made it to a vote in the Senate.) Kerry made no mention of taxing gasoline during the campaign; his proposal for doing something about high gas prices was to pressure OPEC to increase supplies.

    Husseini, for one, doesn’t buy that approach. ”Everybody is looking at the producers to pull the chestnuts out of the fire, as if it’s our job to fix everybody’s problems,” he told me. ”It’s not our problem to tell a democratically elected government that you have to do something about your runaway consumers. If your government can’t do the job, you can’t expect other governments to do it for them.” Back in the 70′s, President Carter called for the moral equivalent of war to reduce our dependence on foreign oil; he was not re-elected. Since then, few politicians have spoken of an energy crisis or suggested that major policy changes are necessary to avert one. The energy bill signed earlier this month by President Bush did not even raise fuel-efficiency standards for passenger cars. When a crisis comes — whether in a year or 2 or 10 — it will be all the more painful because we will have done little or nothing to prepare for it.

    Peter Maass is a contributing writer. He is writing a book about oil.

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  • Robert Caplin/The New York Times

    Mick Jagger, left, Ronnie Wood and Keith Richards performed their hits to an audience of 36,000 at Fenway

    August 23, 2005
    Swaggering Past 60, Unrepentant
    By JON PARELES

    BOSTON, Aug. 22 – Four decades ago, the Rolling Stones made their name by defying propriety. Now they are defying age. They opened their latest tour Sunday night at Fenway Park with an audience of 36,000 filling the stands, the outfield and balconies overhanging the stage for the first of two shows here. Mick Jagger is 62, Keith Richards 61, Charlie Watts 64 and Ronnie Wood a spry 58. Age can be cruel to musicians, eroding voices and stamina. But yes, the Stones can still do it.

    Through decades of selling out arenas and stadiums, the Stones have remained more a band than a spectacle. The flashpots, strobing video and inflatable lips-and-tongue logo are still only a sideshow to the physical presence of the band members, playing their instruments and romping across the stage. There are Mr. Watts’s indomitable beat, the improvisational tangle of Mr. Richards and Mr. Wood on guitars, and of course Mr. Jagger’s hip-swinging, finger-pointing, shoulder-shaking, ever-changing shimmy and strut – necessities that no production values could replace.

    A Stones concert is as solid a brand-name product as rock has to offer, and a luxury product at that: some tickets topped $450. To keep up the brand value, the Stones need to deliver hits: there’s no buyer satisfaction without “Satisfaction.”

    The Stones are also content with their sound; it may be classic, but it still rocks. The album being promoted by this tour, “A Bigger Bang” (Virgin), doesn’t try to reinvent the wheel just to roll it one more time with panache. Yet the band also tours to please itself, pulling lesser-known songs out of its catalog (among them, on Sunday night, “She’s So Cold” from “Emotional Rescue” and “The Worst” from “Voodoo Lounge”) and still trying to rediscover each one.

    The Stones have ups and downs, decent shows and stellar ones; they miss notes and laugh it off. They meticulously plot costume changes and special effects – like a smaller stage that moved into the middle of the audience – but they let the music change with every performance. In “Honky Tonk Women,” Mr. Jagger bent the melody into an unmistakable blues; Mr. Richards answered him with a solo that was almost pure country. And when Mr. Jagger sang “Brown Sugar” here, it was not a young girl but “a young man” who tasted so good. The set also included four songs from “A Bigger Bang” that weren’t eclipsed by the oldies.

    The Stones aren’t pretending to be youthful. They’re proud to remember earlier eras. “Back of My Hand,” from the new album, reaches back to Delta blues for a spiky guitar riff, and the set also included “The Night Time Is the Right Time” as a tribute to Ray Charles, who kept performing even longer than the Stones have. The band also played “Out of Control,” a jazz-tinged song from the 1997 album “Bridges to Babylon,” in which Mr. Jagger looks back at his younger self – foolish, angry, vain, charming, lucky – and taunts, “Tell me, how have I changed?”

    He has changed, of course. He can’t shock the world with a song; even when performed in front of digital video hellfire, “Sympathy for the Devil” no longer comes across as blasphemous or demonic. He did have a joke for the governor of California, Arnold Schwarzenegger, who used concert tickets as a fund-raiser; after saying he was “honored and proud” to have the governor here, Mr. Jagger added that the fund-raising efforts included standing “out in the front scalping tickets and selling T-shirts.”

    Yet he can still merge humor and heartbreak when he sings “She’s So Cold” or “Beast of Burden,” still swagger through “Tumblin’ Dice.” After a two-hour set, he can still run – not stroll or skip, run – end to end on a stage that stretches nearly across a stadium while he sings “It’s Only Rock ‘n’ Roll.” The band still prods him and enfolds him; Mr. Richards and Mr. Wood look casual, grinning and ambling around the stage, but somehow the right guitar chord always plugs every rhythmic hole. After decades, the Rolling Stones are too dependable to seem dangerous. But long after the Stones could have retired, it’s not so bad to stand for sheer tenacity.

    The Rolling Stones tour returns to Fenway Park tonight and continues at Rentschler Field in Hartford on Friday. It arrives at Madison Square Garden in New York City on Sept. 13 and Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., on Sept. 15.

    Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company Home Privacy Policy Search Corrections XML Help Contact Us Work for Us Back to Top


  • Rolling Stones, from left, Keith Richards, Mick Jagger and Charlie Watts perform at Fenway Park in Boston Sunday, Aug. 21, 2005, where the group opened their “A Bigger Bang” world tour.
    (AP Photo / Winslow Townson)

    BOSTON (AP) — Fenway Park is to baseball what The Rolling Stones are to rock ‘n’ roll: Part icon, part relic, part survivor. So it was perfectly fitting that the ageless rockers would launch their latest North American tour on what Keith Richards himself called “hallowed ground.”

    Hallowed ground was in fact the Fenway outfield, filled by a gargantuan stage that stretched from the famed “Green Monster” in left field to the bullpens in right field, and rose some three stories into the air.

    “It’s great to be back here in Boston,” chirped Mick Jagger, moments after the Stones opened the show on a hot, steamy night by ripping through the classic “Start Me Up.” It was the second time in a row the band had opened a major tour in Boston, having kicked off “Forty Licks” in 2002 indoors at the FleetCenter.

    After “You Got Me Rocking,” from 1993′s Voodoo Lounge, the Stones belted out “Shattered,” the first of three songs from the 1978 album “Some Girls.” There was the staple “Tumblin’ Dice,” from 1972′s Exile on Main Street, followed by “Rough Justice,” the first single off “A Bigger Bang,” which, set for release next month, is their first new studio album in eight years.

    The Stones, however, did not perform “Sweet Neo-Con,” an overtly political song from the new album that seems to take aim at the Bush administration in everything but name.

    To use another baseball metaphor, the Stones may have lost a little off their fastball. But like a veteran pitcher who makes up for it with great location and command of his pitches, the Stones more than compensate with great timing and an uncanny ability to connect with their audience.

    There was Jagger, 62, strutting, swiveling his hips, clapping his hands above his head, racing from one end of the giant stage to another – in short, doing everything that one expects from Jagger, regardless of age. There was Richards, 61, knees bent, kicking one leg into the air as he delivered one driving guitar riff after another.

    The other core members of the Stones, drummer Charlie Watts and guitarist Ron Wood, were equally sharp throughout the roughly two-hour, 22-song show.

    But there were also moments when the band seemed rushed as well as moments when the show seemed to drag, if ever slightly. And there were moments when the massive stage almost seemed to work against the band, causing the players to be too spread out and resulting in a loss of spontaneity and give and take between the band.

    Fortunately, that changed about midway through the show, when one small section of the stage lifted up hydraulically and carried the entire band about 50 feet or so into the heart of the crowd seated in the Fenway outfield. The ensuing set would be the most intimate and energetic of the show, beginning with “Beast of Burden,” from “Some Girls,” followed by “Oh No, Not You Again,” from “A Bigger Bang,” and a pair of classics: “Satisfaction,” and “Honky Tonk Woman.”

    “Satisfaction,” now more than 40 years old, came off surprisingly fresh, and the crowd’s response was jubilant.

    The kickoff show ended with a flurry of tried and true favorites, including “Jumpin’ Jack Flash,” “Sympathy for the Devil” – punctuated by bursts of flames from the top of the stage – and finally “Brown Sugar.”

    The encore included the 1970s ballad “You Can’t Always Get What You Want,” with the crowd only too eager to join in the refrain, “but if you try sometimes, you get what you need.” Truly, the Stones delivered a show that, if not perfect, was pretty much what their legions of graying baby boomer fans needed.

    The Stones will play another show at Fenway Park on Tuesday, before continuing on with what is currently a 42-show, 37-city