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Of Oil and Hot Air
source: LATimes
Editorial 2001.11.27
On Wednesday, Interior Secretary Gale A. Norton will chair a conference
of people who want to milk
more electricity from the wind, rivers, sun and Earth's own inner
furnace. She hopes her
renewable energy summit will demonstrate the Bush administration's
commitment to "promoting
conservation and diversifying our energy supply."
Dollars, however, speak louder than media events, and of the $34
billion in tax breaks in the House
energy bill that the Bush administration is backing, just $7 billion
is earmarked for energy efficiency
programs and for the solar, wind and geothermal industries. The
remaining $27 billion would be
handed over, no strings attached, to the usual objects of government
largess: the coal, oil, gas and
nuclear power industries.
If Norton and other administration officials are serious about
energy efficiency,
they should back a bill now being crafted by Senate Majority Leader
Tom
Daschle (D-S.D.) to raise fuel efficiency standards on sport-utility
vehicles and
use tax breaks to encourage the development and sales of "green"
technologies
such as hybrid cars, geothermal power and energy-efficient air conditioners.
In
addition, Daschle should be encouraged to adopt a reform long championed
by
Sen. James M. Jeffords (I-Vt.) that would require that 20% of utility-generated
power come from renewable resources by 2020. The talk about the
need to
"diversify" the nation's energy sources notwithstanding,
the administration's
actual energy strategy still focuses on prodding Congress to approve
fat tax
breaks for big oil and to let drillers punch holes in the Arctic
National Wildlife
Refuge.
Norton, playing to today's fears about national security, argues
that lifting
restrictions on oil drilling at the refuge would protect the nation
in case
anti-American sentiment one day prompts Saudi Arabia or other Middle
Eastern countries to turn off the oil spigots. But the entire United
States, from
the Alaskan wilderness to the petroleum fields off the Florida coast,
contains
only 3% of the world's oil reserves. Meanwhile, Americans consume
a quarter
of the oil produced worldwide.
The perplexing truth is that this nation now imports 60% of its
oil, up from 36%
back in 1973, when frustrated drivers snaked along in mile-long
lines to get
gasoline as an Arab oil embargo threatened to bring the United States
to a
standstill.
What's really needed is a national energy policy that goes beyond
increasing the
supply of fossil fuels and tries to reduce the demand for them as
well. At the
very least, the Bush administration should impose surcharges on
Americans
who insist on buying gas hogs, including SUVs, which on average
burn a gallon
of gasoline every 17 miles. And rather than simply forking over
unfettered tax
breaks to Detroit auto makers (General Motors alone would get $800
million
under the House's "economic stimulus" package), the administration
should
reward only auto makers that accelerate development of the sort
of hybrid cars
that Toyota and Honda have been selling briskly for years.
Vice President Dick Cheney has condescendingly opined that while
conservation "may be a sign of personal virtue ... it is not
a sufficient basis for a
sound, comprehensive energy policy." Daschle, on the other
hand, realizes that
conservation's virtue stems from the fact that it is an economic,
strategic and
environmental necessity.
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