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Sunday, June 07 2009

Achieving energy independence has become a common refrain for both parties in recent elections.  And it is a worthy objective.  One needn't look too far into the history of the Middle East to recognize that having our nation's lifeblood dependent upon such an unstable part of the world is not wise or prudent.  First, it gives these oil-producing countries excellent leverage to wield economic blackmail over us.  Second, and far more important, we constantly run the risk of having to send young Americans to die in conflicts to preserve our national interests.  It's all needless and unnecessary if the United States would get serious about energy independence - meaning we actually pursue policies that bring us to that result rather than just talk about them during election season.

 

Our current president said on the campaign trail, "I will set a clear goal as president. In 10 years, we will finally end our dependence on oil in the Middle East."  That's a wonderful idea - if only he meant it.

 

There are at least four common sense steps we could take immediately to ensure meeting President Obama's stated goal.  The major obstacle in taking them, unfortunately, is President Obama and his party.

 

Perhaps that's not fair.  Pursuing alternative energies like solar and wind power are excellent ideas, and Obama embraces them.  These two sources of energy should be utilized to their fullest.  But it does us absolutely no good to ignore that solar power is incredibly expensive, and that the cumulative benefits of both it and wind power are modest.  Simply put, we won't be powering cities off of either.

 

President Obama has also called to rebuild the nation's energy grid to save wasted energy.  I'm with him.  And when he asks Americans to do a better job conserving energy, we shouldn't bristle in response.  Conservation is a good thing - whether it's carpooling when we can, turning off the lights when we leave a room, recycling, or turning our thermostats down when we go on vacation.

 

On those objectives (wind, solar, conservation, and electrical grid), Mr. Obama has my unwavering support.  But pretending like that alone will bring us to energy independence in 100 years, much less a decade, is silly.  True energy independence will only be achieved when we start putting it as a higher priority than allegiance to outdated ecological concerns and unreasonable environmental alarmism...something that to this point, Democrats like Mr. Obama have been unwilling to do.

 

First, the United States must greatly expand our own domestic drilling.  The outer continental shelf and Gulf of Mexico hold incredibly rich supplies of oil and natural gas.  The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) is a massive piece of land with some pristine and beautiful areas that should be left alone.  But the tiny portion of ANWR proposed for drilling is far removed from these gorgeous regions and is a barren wasteland.  Drill now.

 

Secondly, we should begin seriously mining oil shale from mountains in the United States.  We have more oil shale in our mountains than the Middle East has oil in their reserves.

 

Third, we could be the Saudi Arabia of the world when it comes to coal if we so desired.  We have the ability to burn coal cleanly, and we're sitting on massive supplies of it.

 

Fourth and finally, anyone who is truly serious about energy independence has no choice but to demand the expansion of nuclear power.  Any environmentalist who frets over man-made global warming, yet opposes nuclear power, has absolutely no credibility.  Even the waste from nuclear energy can be properly stored and reused for more energy later.  Moreover, it is the only non-fossil fuel based energy that can legitimately power cities.  And when alarmists warn that it can't be done safely, remind them that our Navy has been powering submarines with it for decades just fine.  Also, even the French are building nuke plants.  Enough said.

 

These four steps should be embraced by all Americans.  Yet President Obama is committed to an "environmental alarmist-based," not "energy independence-based" agenda.  He plans to force Americans off fossil fuels by causing their price to soar.  In a pre-election interview with the San Francisco Chronicle, Obama said, "Under my plan of a cap and trade system, electricity rates will necessarily skyrocket."  This is the worst possible policy for the United States when it comes to energy, as it will inevitably gut the American economy. 

 

Destroying jobs is not the way to make America energy independent, Mr. President.  The answer is to pursue four obvious solutions that your party doesn't seem to be interested in at all.

Posted by: Peter Heck AT 03:30 pm   |  Permalink   |  9 Comments  |  Email
Comments:
Good article Pete. I agree with everything except the offshore drilling and the expected Obama-bashing. While I agree solar is currently expensive and inefficient, I think that's all the more reason to invest in solar R&D, developing more salient solar technology. There exist several renewable resources, but the sun is the only ubiquitous and *perpetual* resource that we have. We need to get serious about cutting our umbilical cord in the Middle East. Depending on one's worst enemies for fuel is a horrible position to be in. On that note, apparently China controls 90% (!!!) of the world's rare earth metals. This could be a problem.
Posted by N. Gavelis on 06/07/2009 18:13:39
OFF THE MARK! Getting nuclear power plants, clean coal, solar, wind, etc going will NEVER end our dependence on OIL! Power plants make ELECTRIC power and there are < 1% of the vehicles on the road in the world that use electricity as their driving force. How will we drive is the question which needs to be answered. Get off the electric generation and stick to the subject!
Posted by James Sandidge on 06/12/2009 14:51:34
Come on James, think through this a bit. Oil and fossil fuels powers more than just cars right now, does it not? If that energy was replaced by nuclear power, our fossil fuels (generated from domestic sources) could continue fueling our transportation without mid east oil.
Posted by Terry M. on 06/12/2009 15:12:03
No, oil imported to the US is not used to power electrical generating stations. Do a search of any power plant in the US and see what it's source of fuel is. Over 50% is domestic coal. A smaller % is natural gas, then there's nuclear, hydro, and a very small percentage of wind and solar. Gasoline and diesel in this country comes from crude oil. The only way changing the electrical generation could help would be in utilizaion of the Pickens Plan which has been squelched since the price of imported oil dropped below $100 per barrel. Thinking about something doesn't change facts.
Posted by James Sandidge on 06/12/2009 16:27:55
http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/epa/epat1p1.html#_ftn2 This site tells you how we produce electric power in this country. There is a fraction of a percent of power coming from some type of oil, but that oil is a waste product and not able to be refined into auto fuel, it's a waste product of the refining industry. It would be great if we decided to use electric cars, my power plant job would be safe forever, but that is still a dream which no administration since Gerald Ford has brought to fruition. 32 years of rising imports and no alternative.
Posted by James Sandidge on 06/12/2009 16:43:02
I not only think about this, I work for the electric power industry. There is less than 2% of the US electric power produced coming from any type of oil. The majority of that is waste oil which cannot be refined to auto fuel. All of those plants can be taken off line and never fuel a vehicle in the US. Check out HYDRAULIC HYBRID vehicles. Ford was supposed to have one in show rooms last year. Cheaper than electric hybrids, more efficient, environmentally cleaner, can be utilized as a conversion on existing vehicles, etc. The US government, Ford, GM, Parker, many others have proven these work but don't expect to see one in your driveway, the government makes too much money for road taxes on burning gasoline and diesel.
Posted by James Sandidge on 06/12/2009 20:36:32
Think through this a bit Terry. James is right. What does imported oil have to do with power plants? Nothing, really. Power plants run on coal, natural gas, nuclear, hydro, waste oil (un-usable for vehicle fuel) and then there is a very small amount from wind and solar. Imported oil is used for vehicle fuel and industrial uses. The Pickens Plan spells out a viable alternative which will work.
Posted by JL on 06/12/2009 22:54:40
If we are going to achieve Energy Independence in this country of ours we need Nuclear, Solar, Wind, Domestic Oil, Domestic Coal, and anything else we can produce. In order to do all of these, we need a return to the principles that made this country great. Hard work, less government, conservative values, a belief in the PEOPLE to do the right thing.
Posted by Bob Pilkinton on 06/13/2009 00:45:07
Terry M, Check out this site and "think through it a bit more than you have. http://www.setamericafree.org/solution.html
Posted by James Sandidge on 06/13/2009 08:58:13

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