In 2000 a new US administration
drafted a new energy plan. Two oilmen,
with secret advice of the oil industry, orchestrated and supervised the
plan. The results have been devastating. Gas and oil prices have escalated to more
than $4 per gallon and are forecast to hit $5 per gallon soon.
The problems our oilmen were trying
to solve were not of their doing. Their
decision, to solve the energy puzzle, was laudable. Regrettably, they were not equipped to handle
the consequences of their actions.
In November 2008 the US is reaching
another milestone in history. A new
president and a new Congress will be elected.
Energy is becoming one of the main issues of the hotly contested
election campaign. We already know one
outcome for sure. Neither candidate has
any idea about the seriousness of the energy problems confronting our country
and the world.
The US needs swift and effective
actions to stabilize world energy prices, to introduce measures for dealing
with global warming and climate change, and to turn around an economy that has
been looted by its financial sector. How
can the US
take the lead in fighting global warming?
How can the US
send the right signals to the rest of the world? How can the US convince the owners of the
world’s oil reserves that coercive price fixing is breeding resentment?
The US does not possess a single weapon
to force its intentions upon others. It
can do so only by the quality of her ideas.
Owners of coal, petroleum, and
natural gas reserves will only change, if they have to face risks. These new risks could be
- The near-future threat of a low priced petroleum
substitute
- The threat of subsidized renewable energies for the
generation of low cost electricity
- The threat of a treaty that will outlaw fossil fuel
burning across the world
When these threats become reality, we
will see a rush to sell as many energy reserves as quickly as possible. Without these threats the decision process is
much simpler. Sell as little energy as
possible and wait for prices to rise.
The longer you wait, the more money you make.
Obviously, it will take time to convert
fossil fuel fired power plants to plants that are powered by renewable energies
like solar power, hydropower, wind power, marine power, geothermal heat, and
nuclear heat.
Obviously, it will take time to
produce the first barrel of a high quality petroleum substitute from fast
growing plants that have no resemblance to food crops and can be grown on arid
lands.
Obviously, it will take even longer
to convince 200 countries to sign a treaty that forbids the use of fossil
fuels.
But what choices do the US and the
world have?
We cannot continue and emit huge
amounts of greenhouse gases much longer.
The environmental costs are beginning to escalate. Citizens across the world will demand actions
from governments.
Countries with large coastal areas
are already experiencing the accelerating rise of ocean levels. This rise will speed up in lockstep with
greenhouse gas emissions. Once carbon
dioxide, the major product of fossil fuel combustion, enters the atmosphere, it
cannot be recaptured. The accumulation of
carbon dioxide is irreversible and the accelerated melting of glaciers on
mountains and of ice sheets in the Polar Regions
is unstoppable.
Therefore, we must halt atmospheric
accumulation of greenhouse gases.
Temporarily, we can sequester about one third of all fossil fuel
generated emissions. The carbon dioxide
emitted by large smokestacks of coal fired power plants, oil refinery and
chemical plant chimneys, and from flues of manufacturing companies making
materials, industrial products, and consumer goods can be cleaned. The separated carbon dioxide gas must be
compressed and transported to suited geological underground cavities.
This method cannot be applied to
the exhausts of automobiles, trucks, trains, ships, and airplanes. Sequestration is unaffordable for homes,
commercial buildings, and small manufacturing and fabricating establishments.
The challenges for the new
administration and the new Congress to come up with a good, effective energy
plan will be intimidating. Drilling for
oil in the US,
energy conservation, and “Cap and Trade” schemes will not solve our energy problems. Conservation may be necessary to provide
temporary relief at the pump. Unavoidable
future environmental disasters may be delayed by a couple of years. None of the three concepts can stop global
overheating.
We must bite the bullet. We must replace all fossil fuels with renewable
energies and nuclear heat. To operate
our transportation sector, we need liquid fuels. We must learn to produce petroleum
substitutes. Petroleum reserves and
production capacities are getting tight and prices are skyrocketing. We must wake up. We cannot continue and let the present owners
of fossil fuels destroy the habitats of our grandchildren and their offspring.