Monday, May 24, 2010

How To Kick The Oil Habit

The conventional wisdom that we must depend on fossil fuels until we “transition to a new energy future” is a favorite of our political and media betters; problem is, they’ve been saying it for the past 30 years while doing absolutely nothing to further said “transition.” Now we face one crisis after another, after another.


Thanks a lot, assholes.

Never mind. I’ve said all along that this piece of conventional wisdom is false, a lie we’ve been told to make us feel better about our lack of action. Don’t worry, be happy. But sorry, peeps. Time to grow up. Time to call bullshit where we see it and demand some action, some leadership and some honesty.

Here’s a great place to start:
The last time lawmakers truly freaked out about the problem of our oil dependence--when gas prices topped $4 a gallon in the summer of 2008--the Senate Energy Committee called in Skip Laitner, director of economic analysis at the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE).

The committee asked Laitner what efficiency--the famously unglamorous energy strategy--could do to relieve gas prices. He gave them an astonishing figure: It could save 46 billion barrels of oil. If the U.S. made an all-out investment in energy efficiency-cutting energy waste out of vehicles, buildings, the electrical grid, and elsewhere in the economy--Laitner believes it could save the energy equivalent of 46 billion barrels by 2030.

Domestic offshore drilling produced 537 million barrels a year over the last nine years, according to the Minerals Management Service. A full-bore efficiency plan would save the equivalent of 85 years of offshore drilling.

Let me repeat what I’ve said before: the oil companies are cutting back on refinery production, even shutting some refineries down permanently, in an effort to keep gas prices high. So I don’t believe conservation will lower gas prices significantly. But that’s not my concern. My concern is ecology, safety, and other areas of the economy that depend on our coastal areas. And it looks like conservation will give us that so-called “breathing room” we’ve been told we need offshore drilling to provide to fuel our transition to renewables.

Most of Laitner's “10 solutions” look fairly painless and easy to implement, but they require will, leadership, and commitment. We need to decide that we really do want to transition to renewables, not just use the words to justify our wasteful ways while we steep ourselves in denial.

There are tons more ideas from folks like Amory Lovins of the Rocky Mountain Institute, whose commentary Freeing America From Its Addiction To oil provides tons more pro-business, capitalistic solutions. But, as he notes, we need “real carrots, not just sticks painted orange.”

We can do this. It’s not hard. We have the motivation. We have the tecnology. We simply need to demand it of our leadership.

1 comment:

  1. Do we really need to live an hour or two from our jobs and commute by automobile?

    Do we need large houses in the suburbs/exurbs with AC/Climate Control and lawns which suck up various fertilizers, insecticides and herbicides?

    Do we need private aircraft?

    Do we really need power boats, motorcycles, ATVs and an automobile for each family member?

    Does business really need tens of thousands of employees flying 100K or 200K or more per year?

    Do we absolutely, positively have to have it overnight?

    Do we need fresh produce flown in from the southern hemisphere?

    Do we need McDonalds, Starbucks, Wendys and Doritos and a host of processed foods which use huge amounts of energy in their manufacture generate millions of tons of litter?

    A few weekends ago Qwest Field here in Seattle was turned into a motocross track for a weekend. Hundreds of truckloads of soil brought in, carved into a track then removed. Motorcycles screamed in their high pitched voices for three days and folks came from points near and far in vast SUVs and pick up trucks you'd swear needed a rope ladder for access.

    What, me worry?

    Leadership is unquestionable lacking in working to prepare our world for some inevitable changes but the person in the mirror could start yesterday.

    Cheers!

    ReplyDelete

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