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Mile by Mile, Into the Oil Trap:Right on by Fareed Zakaria

Discussion in 'Political Debate & Discussion' started by ASLANSPAL, Aug 25, 2005.

  1. ASLANSPAL

    ASLANSPAL New Member

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    [​IMG]

    Tuesday, August 23, 2005

    If I could change one thing about American foreign policy, what would it be? The answer is easy, but it's not something most of us think of as foreign policy. I would adopt a serious national program geared toward energy efficiency and independence. Reducing our dependence on oil would be the single greatest multiplier of American power in the world. I leave it to economists to sort out what expensive oil does to America's growth and inflation prospects. What is less often noticed is how crippling this situation is for American foreign policy. "Everything we're trying to do in the world is made much more difficult in the current environment of rising oil prices," says Michael Mandelbaum, author of "The Ideas That Conquered the World." Consider:



    · Terror ism . Over the past three decades, Islamic extremism and violence have been funded from two countries, Saudi Arabia and Iran, not coincidentally the world's first- and second-largest oil exporters. Both countries are now awash in money, and no matter what the controls, some of this cash is surely getting to unsavory groups and individuals.


    · Democracy. The centerpiece of President Bush's foreign policy -- encouraging democracy in the Middle East -- could easily lose steam in a world of high-priced oil. Governments reform when they have to. But many Middle Eastern governments are likely to have easy access to huge surpluses for years, making it easier for them to avoid change. Saudi Arabia will probably have a budget surplus of more than $26 billion this year because the price of oil is so much higher than anticipated. That means it can keep the old ways going, bribing the Wahhabi imams, funding the army and National Guard, spending freely on patronage programs. (And that would still leave plenty to fund dozens of new palaces and yachts.) Ditto for other corrupt, quasi-feudal oil states.


    · Iran. Tehran has launched a breathtakingly ambitious foreign policy, moving determinedly on a nuclear path, and is also making a bid for influence in neighboring Iraq. This is nothing less than an attempt to replace the United States as the dominant power in the region. And it will prove extremely difficult to counter -- more so given Tehran's current resources. Despite massive economic inefficiency and corruption, Iran today has built up foreign reserves of $29.87 billion.


    · Russia. A modern, Westernized Russia firmly anchored in Europe would mean peace and stability in the region. But a gush of oil revenues has strengthened the Kremlin's might, allowing President Vladimir Putin to consolidate power, defund his opponents, destroy competing centers of power and continue his disastrous and expensive war in Chechnya. And the "Russian model" appears to have taken hold in much of Central Asia.


    · Latin America . After two decades of political and economic progress in Latin America, we are watching a serious anti-American movement gain ground. Hugo Chavez in Venezuela -- emboldened by his rising oil wealth -- was the first in recent years to rebel against American influence, but similar sentiments are beginning to be heard in other countries, from Ecuador to Bolivia.

    I could go on, from Central Asia to Nigeria. In almost every region, efforts to produce a more stable, peaceful and open world order are being compromised and complicated by high oil prices. And while America spends enormous time, money and effort dealing with the symptoms of this problem, we are actively fueling the cause.

    Rising oil prices are the result of many different forces coming together. We have little control over some of them, such as China's growth rate. But America remains the 800-pound gorilla of petroleum demand. In 2004 China consumed 6.5 million barrels of oil per day. The United States consumed 20.4 million barrels, and demand is rising. That is because of strong growth, but also because American cars -- which guzzle the bulk of oil imports -- are much less efficient than they used to be. This is the only area of the U.S. economy in which we have become less energy-efficient than we were 20 years ago, and we are the only industrialized country to have slid backward in this way. There's one reason: SUVs. They made up 5 percent of the American fleet in 1990. They make up almost 54 percent today.

    It's true that there is no silver bullet that will entirely solve America's energy problem, but there is one that goes a long way: more efficient cars. If American cars averaged 40 miles per gallon, we would soon reduce consumption by 2 million to 3 million barrels of oil a day. That could translate into a sustained price drop of more than $20 a barrel. And getting cars to be that efficient is easy. For the most powerful study that explains how, read "Winning the Oil Endgame" by energy expert Amory B. Lovins (or go to http://www. http://oilendgame.com ). I would start by raising fuel efficiency standards, providing incentives for hybrids and making gasoline somewhat more expensive (yes, that means raising taxes). Of course, the energy bill recently passed by Congress does none of these things.

    We don't need a Manhattan Project to find our way out of our current energy trap. The technologies already exist.But what we're searching for is perhaps even harder: political leadership and vision. emphasis mine I disagree with him
    on the Manhattan project, we do need one to bring our best and brightest without the special
    interests messing things up.It has gotten
    that serious. imho
     
  2. billwald

    billwald New Member

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    Gas is still to cheap in terms of gallons per hourly pay. When it hits 4 bucks or so people will start to change their habits.
     
  3. Bro. Curtis

    Bro. Curtis <img src =/curtis.gif>
    Site Supporter

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    What...no salient point ?
     
  4. ASLANSPAL

    ASLANSPAL New Member

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    Bro. Curtis excellent question!

    [​IMG]
    Bush making a salient point;)

    I think one of the major points Fareed Zakaria
    is making and their are many.

    But what we're searching for is perhaps even harder: political leadership and vision.

    His excellent analysis is trying to warn us and by
    so doing prepare us or be ahead of the problem.
     
  5. KenH

    KenH Well-Known Member

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  6. hillclimber

    hillclimber New Member

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    Many good ideas but we should start some of them up now. Be doing site studies for Nuclear plants now. Start damning up the rivers we are undamming, but with power generation and recreation as goals. We have vast areas of desert land wholly suitable for solar generation, and little else, and it would provide some shade for the critters there. Electrical generation by the tides is an exciting research arena. Small nuclear plants for anywhere from neighborhoods on up to huge ones for regions are viable now, environmentalists excepted. The internal combustion engine is now all but polution free, and start diverting the money used to attack it to these other forms of energy production and consumption.
     
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