Our
Education section is an undiscovered gem. And it is
definitely not a
compilation of boring academic essays but a riveting look at the
serious
problems facing our education system. Take a moment to check it
out.
About Advertising
Click
Advertise Here for more details about our great advertising
rates.
IMPORTANT
NOTE
If running Norton Internet Security (NIS), please
temporarily disable it to enjoy the rich graphics of this
site.
Energy Blues
Our Insatiable Thirst for Oil
By John D. Turner
I have been watching the gasoline prices slowly creeping up again.
Nowhere near what they were in November 2005, but still far higher
than I would like to see them. With four cars in the family, one a
Suburban, higher gas prices make a noticeable dent in the family
budget.
Back in November, when my wife filled up the Suburban it cost
$95.00. And I should consider myself lucky; in other parts of the
country it would have cost us $120.00 to do the same thing. I don’t
know about you, but spending $95 - $120 for what used to cost around
$40, and doing it every two weeks does put a bit of a damper on
things. The money has to come from somewhere, and that means that
either we forego something we as a family were doing, something we
were planning to do, or just ignore it and go further into debt.
We are all paying more, and the end is still not in sight. While oil
prices have dropped recently, there is no guarantee that happy state
of affairs will continue, and every reason to expect that having
been in the stratosphere once, they will inevitably do so again. I
have read a multitude of articles that attempt to make me feel
better about this by pointing out that in Europe they are paying
much more; 7-8 dollars a gallon in Norway.
That’s nice. But what these articles never mention is that the high
cost of fuel in Europe is driven primarily by the high taxes
European countries assess their citizens for the privilege of buying
that fuel; taxes significantly higher than we have here in the U.S.
So aside from the fact that we can feel smug and superior that at
least our government isn’t screwing us as bad as their governments
are when it comes to gasoline, what is causing the problem and how
can we fix it?
Leaving aside all the conspiracy theories concerning greedy evil oil
companies and not taking the easy way out by blaming it all on
George Bush, there are a number of factors at work in the world
today that, collectively, are causing the problem.
The leading problems appear to be supply, demand, and anxiety about
future supply and demand.
The world is not a static place; big changes are afoot. It has been
in vogue over the past 30 years or so to point out how much, as a
percentage, of the world’s energy consumption we in the United
States account for vs. our total population. Typically, this is done
to make us feel guilty for being so “wasteful” of resources, so that
we will conserve more and cut back on our standard of living to
bring us more in line with those who live in mud huts. This is the
energy equivalent of the “starving children in India” ploy our moms
used on us to get us to eat our peas and broccoli.
One of the things these statistics never point out is why the
numbers are the way they are. Even the poorest American living in
the meanest ghetto in the country will look like an energy
spendthrift simply because people living at the subsistence level in
a mud or grass huts don’t use any electricity. And there are a lot
more of them than there are of us. So the only way for us to reduce
our energy consumption to our “fair share” as it were, would be for
us to give up our way of life and go back to subsistence living, or
for the rest of the world to industrialize and come up to our
consumption levels. As anyone who is not a radical-left
environmentalist might suspect, it’s the latter that is occurring.
China and India, the two largest countries in the world, each with a
population of over 1 billion people, are moving rapidly in this
direction. And as might be expected, their demand for oil is
increasing rapidly as well.
According to the CIA World Fact Book, China’s estimated population
as of July 2005 was over 1.3 billion. Note that this is more than 1
billion more people than we currently have in our country, over four
times as many people as live in the United States.
As the percentage of the world’s population that is becoming
industrialized and using energy resources increases, the percentage
that we in the U.S. use compared with everyone else will decline.
China needs only a quarter of its population to reach our standard
of living to equal our energy consumption. That energy has to come
from somewhere, and like here, a lot of it comes from oil.
However much oil there may actually be, there is only a finite
supply available on the market at any one time. And there is only a
finite system of transportation to move it and a finite number of
refineries to convert it from a gooey smelly substance into more
useful products such as gasoline, asphalt, and plastics.
If your demand is higher than the amount you can produce, transport,
and/or refine, prices increase until the demand can be satisfied.
Rising demand for raw crude means that more oil must be pumped to
meet demand. Rising demand for refined products means that more
refineries must be built to meet demand. If either is not done,
demand will not be met and prices will rise in competition for the
amount that is available. The rising prices will result in more
profit for the companies involved, providing the capital needed to
invest in more oil wells and refineries to meet the rising demand.
As the demand is met, competition will force the prices back down
again.
This is how market forces operate and how the market, over time and
given no outside influences, regulates itself. At least, this would
be true in a perfect world. But of course, we don’t have a perfect
world. Not even close.
Oil is not evenly distributed across the planet. Most of it, at
least most of what has been discovered so far, is located in the
Middle East, one of the most politically unstable places on Earth.
So, factored into the cost of the oil is also the potential for
supply disruption. This causes contracts for future delivery of oil
from these areas to be higher than they would otherwise be to cover
the risks. It also means that the people making the extra money off
the higher prices are crying crocodile tears when they say they
would like prices to be lower and are working to make it so.
They have increased production supposedly to try and force prices
down. A “glut” of oil on the market in excess of demand will cause
prices to drop until the excess is absorbed by the market. But
somehow the extra amount pumped doesn’t seem to be enough to satisfy
the demand, just to keep those higher profits flowing in. That might
be true if demand were down, but it’s not. They are crying all
right…all the way to the bank.
So the solution seems to be for us to drill more oil wells.
Unfortunately, we can’t do that. Oil wells are smelly, and they
disturb the environment. We can’t drill in the off the coast of
California. We can’t drill off Florida. We don’t seem to be able to
drill much of anywhere in the U.S. We can’t even drill in the ANWR,
a frozen, desolate wasteland that 99 percent of the American public
will never even see.
Various political tactics are used to move public opinion against
drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. One of the most
popular is often called in sales terms “reduction to the
ridiculous”. We frequently hear that “there isn’t enough oil in the
ANWR to run the country for more than six months. Why risk the
destruction of this valuable wildlife refuge for such a small gain?”
Well, the same could be said for any source of oil, save perhaps for
Saudi Arabia. The fact is that we wouldn’t be running the entire
country off any one source exclusively anyhow. And, as it turns out,
that “insignificant” amount happens to be greater than the total
known onshore reserves of the entire lower 48 states. ANWR is
capable of producing 1.4 million barrels of oil per day, and can do
so for at least 10 years, assuming additional reserves are not
discovered and extraction technology doesn’t improve. That’s 1.4
million barrels of oil (assuming pumping at full capacity, which we
probably wouldn’t be for various reasons) each day that we wouldn’t
have to buy from Saudi Arabia, or Iran, or Venezuela, or any other
country seeking our destruction.
So how exactly are we supposed to reduce our dependency on foreign
sources of energy, primarily oil? We can’t drill new oil wells –
we’ll disturb the environment. New refineries? Not in my back yard!
Even natural gas, once touted as a clean source of energy has been
getting a bad name from environmentalists.
Don’t even think about nuclear…
Coal? We have lots of coal. Enough to last hundreds of years.
Unfortunately, coal is dirty, and mining it, like everything else,
harms the environment.
Hydroelectric? Far from building new hydroelectric dams and plants,
they are actually talking about getting rid of them in Oregon, to
make it easier for salmon to get upstream and spawn. And you thought
that because dams produce lakes that they were good for fish! Guess
it depends on the sort of fish you are interested in. Dams destroy
natural habitat and replace it with unnatural habitat. Who are we to
take the land away from mice and rabbits and give it to catfish and
perch? Who knows how many innocent species we have wiped out from
all the dams we have built? Building a dam of any size in this
country is nearly impossible, and hundreds of small dams have been
breached to return rivers and streams to their natural flow. Don’t
expect a rash of dam-building to break out in the United States any
time soon.
Wind power? Seemed like a good idea at first. However now that we
have actually built windmill farms, we have discovered that birds
have problems with windmills, similarly to the problems that fish
have with dam turbines. Thus, environmentalists are starting to have
the same complaints about windmills as they do with dams. Besides
they take up a lot of space, and are unsightly and noisy. Forget
about it.
Solar? Not ready for large scale use as of yet.
Space solar? Nice idea, but we can’t even keep a shuttle going.
Space solar would require a geosynchronous setup and way more
infrastructure than we have managed so far with the International
Space Station. Besides, the power is transferred back to Earth via
microwave. That has to be bad for something.
Fusion power might work. Except that we haven’t successfully
designed and build a process that produces more power than it
consumes. Not commercially viable at this stage of the game. And you
can bet that once it does become viable (if ever), someone will find
some reason why we can’t (or shouldn’t) build it.
I have heard many tout fuel cells as the wave of the future. Clean
energy. Hydrogen and oxygen combine, and the only byproduct is good
clean water. Except…can you imagine eight million cars gridlocked in
Los Angeles on a hot summer day, all spewing out water vapor?
Almost anything that sounds good in a lab, when you scale it up to
the size that would be needed to really do any good, will cause some
unforeseen side effect that someone will complain about. I’m not
sure there is anyone who won’t have a problem with it or won’t want
in their back yard.
And the dirty little secret that isn’t being told is that there are
many people in this country who are happy that gas is costing some
of us over $3 a gallon (particularly those of us who own an SUV). In
fact, they wish it would cost more! Remember, Al Gore and others see
the internal combustion engine as the greatest danger facing mankind
in the world. If it costs you $3 a gallon, maybe you will drive
less.
And that suits them just fine.
We want your opinion! Tell us what you thought about
this article. Click the
Your Feedback menu item to send us
your comments.
Any opinions or views
expressed herein belong solely to the author and does not represent
any employer, organization, political party, governmental agency, or
any other entity and do not necessarily reflect the views of the
site owner or its participants.
Premium Ad
Announcements
Our
Miscellaneous section is our feature that covers offbeat
stories as well as our personal musings on just about anything.
Take a five minute break and check it out.