Home | Industry Information | Business News | Browse by Publication | E | Environmental Law

Energy independence and global warming.

Publication: Environmental Law
Publication Date: 22-JUN-07
Format: Online
Delivery: Immediate Online Access

Article Excerpt
Policy making is often bedeviled by disconnects between public perceptions and reality. This problem is particularly acute today in the context of two public policy issues of central interest to readers of this journal: energy independence and global warming.

I. ENERGY INDEPENDENCE from I...

View more below

Read this article now - Try Goliath Business News - FREE!   
You can view this article PLUS...

  • Over 5 million business articles
  • Hundreds of the most trusted magazines, newswires, and journals (see list)
  • Premium business information that is timely and relevant
  • Unlimited Access

Now for a Limited Time, try Goliath Business News - Free for 7 Days!
Tell Me More   Terms and Conditions

Purchase this article for $4.95

Already a subscriber? Log in to view full article

...

Every President Richard Nixon through George W. Bush has urged the nation to achieve energy independence. (1) The United States has spent scores of billions of dollars pursuing various versions of "project independence," with no reduction in U.S. dependence on imported oil. (2) U.S. dependence on imported oil has increased steadily through each of the last eight administrations. (3) The pursuit of energy independence is one of the few national goals that attracts near unanimous support from politicians of both parties, as well as from virtually all journalists and members of the public. (4) Yet, know of no expert on energy policy who thinks that pursuit of energy independence makes any more sense than pursuit of automobile independence, tomato independence, or underwear independence.

Last summer, a Wall Street Journal reporter asked half a dozen energy experts of widely varying political stripes to give their views on energy independence. (5) The views expressed ranged from "crazy" to "rhetorical nonsense" to "bumper sticker" politics. (6) I want to add my voice to that chorus. If we actually were to attain energy independence, it would come at a cost of several trillion dollars per year in reduced Gross Domestic Product (GDP), and we would obtain little or no benefit from such a suicidal effort.

Many people believe energy independence would have favorable effects on our ability to implement a sound foreign policy and on the likelihood that we will have to use military force. That belief is based on a serious misunderstanding of the relationship between energy and foreign policy. To illustrate the point, consider that we are extremely concerned about Iran today even though we have not imported one drop of oil from Iran in over fifteen years. (7) There are links between energy and foreign policy, but they are largely unrelated to U.S. dependence on imported oil. All fuels are traded on global markets. If the global supply of oil declines, the price of oil and other fuels will increase, and the U.S. economy will be adversely affected. That is true, however, whether the reduction in supply has any effect on sources of U.S. oil imports or has effects instead on sources of oil imports to Japan or Europe. It is also true whether the reduction in global oil supply occurs as a result of the latest upheaval in the middle east, civil disturbances in Nigeria, incompetence in Venezuela, pipeline corrosion in Alaska, or a hurricane in the Gull of Mexico.

II. GLOBAL WARMING

While I would like to hear a lot less talk about energy independence, I would like to hear a lot more talk about global warming. Specifically, I would like to hear more meaningful discussion about what, if anything, we can, and should, do about global warming. There continues to be lively debate among politicians and in the general press about whether the anthropogenic global warming hypothesis is true, but little serious discussion of what the United States should do if it is true. I now rate the probability that the anthropogenic global warming hypothesis is true at around 90%--much higher than the probability I would have assigned it at the time of Kyoto. It is...

NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.



More articles from Environmental Law
Questionable authority: a recent CEQ guidance memorandum.(Council on E..., June 22, 2007
The quick and the dead: Earth Island v. Forest Service and the risk of..., June 22, 2007
Israeli-Palestinian water literature's misplaced dependence upon custo..., June 22, 2007
Defenders of Appalachia: the campaign to eliminate mountaintop removal..., June 22, 2007
2006 Ninth Circuit environmental review., June 22, 2007

Looking for additional articles?
Search our database of over 3 million articles.

Looking for more in-depth information on this industry?
Search our complete database of Industry & Market reports by text, subject, publication name or publication date.

About Goliath
Whether you're looking for sales prospects, competitive information, company analysis or best practices in managing your organization, Goliath can help you meet your business needs.

Our extensive business information databases empower business professionals with both the breadth and depth of credible, authoritative information they need to support their business goals. Whether it be strategic planning, sales prospecting, company research or defining management best practices - Goliath is your leading source for accurate information.