The USA must become
independent of foreign oil imports, the world must halt global warming, and
world economies must continue to grow.
Only
the US
can take the lead and can convince other nations that greenhouse gas emissions
can be stopped while economies become more prosperous. Without the leadership of the US, the world
will overheat irreversibly during the next fifty years. Only the US has the financial resources, the
technology background, and the management skills to embark on such an ambitious
program.
First
of all, we must be realistic and accept a few immutable facts. Implementing a comprehensive energy plan for
a large country like ours will take a long time. We must accept that the implementation of any
plan will at least take twenty to thirty years.
Secondly,
we must assume responsibility for the emissions we have sent into the
atmosphere during one century of burning prodigious amounts of fossil fuels and
of producing more than a quarter of all past greenhouse gas emissions.
Thirdly,
the plan must end our dependency on all fossil fuel imports from foreign
countries and must begin to terminate our indebtedness to countries that
manipulate markets.
Fourth,
we must demand that national energy suppliers learn to produce plentiful,
affordable, and secure amounts of energy from renewable resources in return for
financial support and loan guarantees.
And
last but not least, we need to install technologies and infrastructures that
will be capable of providing our country with abundant energy during the next several
centuries.
We
must understand that our efforts will require large amounts of capital. However, we will use these investments to create
long lasting, profitable revenues. We
will build and install plants that will, upon start-up, generate energy for as long
as fifty to eighty years. During this
long operating period, these plants will produce revenue streams that will pay
a fair amount of interest, will return the initial investment, and will
continue to generate investment income for decades to come. From engineering, to fabrication, to installation,
and to operation, these plants will put millions of people into well paying
jobs; jobs we will never have to export.
What
do we have to do? We must build
facilities that on one day in the future will allow us to end all fossil fuel
combustion in our own country. Fossil
fuels are mainly used in two applications; we generate electricity to light our
homes, to cool buildings, to power countless appliances, machinery, and communications
gear, and to produce a dazzling variety of consumer, commercial and industrial
products. We also use electricity to
power trains and may eventually power automobiles.
Most
transportation equipment cannot use electric power. Cars, trucks, trains, ships, and airplanes
most effectively use high quality, liquid fuels. Liquid fuels possess the highest energy
density and can be stored aboard ships and airplanes enabling them to cross
oceans.
In
the past, electric power generation has been based on coal, natural gas,
hydropower, and nuclear power. Coal and
natural gas combustion must be halted and fossil fuel energy must be replaced with
renewable energy from sunlight, wind power, marine power, and geothermal
power. These much needed technologies
are in their early stages of industrial introduction and will replace fossil
fuel based power generation in due time.
Replacing
imported petroleum with a “homegrown” substitute will be more difficult to
achieve. Because we must stop all fossil
fuel burning to prevent global overheating, we cannot convert coal, oil shale,
or natural gas to make gasoline or diesel, which is technically quite feasible.
Instead,
we must learn how to convert biomass energy into substitutes for
petroleum. There are several processes
that can accomplish this feat. However,
the job is made more complex by the recent realization that the world does not
possess sufficiently large, arable land areas for maintaining forests and for feeding
an ever increasing world population.
There
is only one single option for growing sufficient amounts of biologically
recirculated carbon; we must grow biomass with high energy yields in arid areas
with high solar irradiation, must apply novel, industrial agricultural
techniques for growing and harvesting, and must produce water for irrigation on
site.
These
industrial plantations must be huge and must be highly mechanized. Only then will it be possible to install chemical
conversion plants on site and produce a pumpable liquid feedstock for further
processing in advanced oil refineries continuously.
There
are huge benefits to this approach; we will have unlimited renewable fuels for
our fleets of cars, trucks, trains, ships, and airplanes. Oil refineries can keep working, and the huge
distribution systems for dispensing liquid fuels across the world will keep
operating without changes.
Best
of all, the US
has plenty of arid lands for the perpetual production of plentiful and
affordable liquid transportation fuels. It
seems entirely possible to produce renewable biofuels and convert them into a
petroleum substitute for roughly forty dollars per barrel. At that price we can continue to use our
existing transportation infrastructures.
We
must concentrate future energy development efforts in four technology areas;
novel electric storage technologies, breeding of high energy yield plants, chemical
conversion of biotic matter into petroleum substitutes, and refining of
petroleum substitutes into gasoline, diesel, and jet fuels.
The USA has the
means and the minds for succeeding in these endeavors. All we need is the political will to make the
US
more prosperous and more powerful again.