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August 8, 2007 |  3 comments |  Print | E-Mail Your Opinion  

Beware of False Assumptions on US Energy Policy

F. William Engdahl: I take a critical look at last week’s Five Principles For US Energy Security from Stuart Butler and Kim Holmes. My counterproposals emphasize environmental and fiscal concerns, as well as historical perspective.

Sound Economic Policy?
Butler and Holmes’ first point, to make “full use of domestic petroleum reserves,” seems a hopeful start. But the devil is in the details: in the 1960s large and prolific volumes of domestic oil were being produced in the Permian Basin in Texas and offshore California—within US territory, secure and abundant. These domestic oil fields did not “peak” as King Hubbert and others today would have us believe. They were shut in. Why? Because Big Oil made a strategic move after 1945 to secure staggering volumes of crude at ridiculously cheap prices from Saudi, Iranian, Iraqi and other sources. The CIA instigated coups to do so, and US troops were deployed to protect the oil routes. California and Texas simply could not compete with the dirt-cheap Saudi Ghawar prices.

If Washington policy makers genuinely seek national energy independence, they should begin with a two-pronged tax incentive strategy which will:

  • attract investment to allow for an environmentally-friendly reopening of those offshore US fields that have been shut in
  • provide incentives for citizens to convert to more fuel-efficient cars burning diesel.

The Biofuels Fallacy
To suggest that Bio-ethanol is a solution to energy problems is more than misleading. Bio-ethanol is a net energy loser. The killer-diller about ethanol is that it holds at least 30% less energy per gallon than normal gasoline, translating into a fuel economy loss per gallon of at least 25% over gasoline for an Ethanol E-85% blend. No advocate of the ethanol boondoggle addresses the huge social cost which is beginning to hit dining room tables across the US, Europe and the rest of the world. Food prices are exploding as corn, soybean and grain prices go through the roof because of the astronomical—and Congress-driven—demand for corn to burn for bio-fuel.

Bio-ethanol thrives today not on the “free market” merits that Butler and Holmes advocate, but on huge taxpayer subsidies. The Energy Policy Act of 2005 mandates that corn ethanol for fuel rise from 4 billion gallons in 2006 to 7.5 billion in 2012. To make certain it will happen, farmers and big agribusiness giants like ADM get generous taxpayer subsidies to grow corn for fuel instead of food. In the past two years the amount of US corn burned for fuel has passed total corn-feed exports, and it is rising exponentially. World carryover stock reserves of all grains are at their lowest since the end of the 1990s.

If Washington wishes to encourage domestic energy production and influence gasoline consumption, policy makers could:

  • create tax incentives to reopen thousands of viable oil wells and support an independent oil industry willing to develop that oil
  • fund independent research and development on gasoline engines with greater fuel efficiency

Taking a Look Back
The authors’ suggestion that the United States should develop “strong bilateral measures to deal with efforts by coercive regimes to wage economic warfare” is disingenuous. Given the history of US military presence in the Middle East since well before 2003, it should not be surprising to know that most of the rest of the world increasingly regards the USA as the locus of coercion and “might makes right.” China definitely seems convinced—one reason they have already launched a massive diplomatic and financial offensive into resource-rich African and Middle Eastern states.

To call for Washington to use “the instruments of national power—including military, diplomatic, law enforcement, intelligence, economic, and informational power—in any theater where U.S. interests could be at risk” merely poses as recommendation what has been US foreign policy regarding energy and US national interests since well before the Second World War. The Mossadegh CIA coup led by Kermit Roosevelt in the 1950s was about US energy interests.

Bringing Focus to Fuzzy Thinking
Readers need a clearer idea of what Butler and Holmes mean when they call for Congress to pass measures “to advance freedom in energy markets” domestically and abroad. Is this a call for Congress to enforce the existing US antitrust laws against giant oil majors such as ExxonMobil or Chevron?


F. William Engdahl is an economist and the author of A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics (Pluto Press, 2004). He can be reached at www.engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net.


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Tobias  Wolny

August 8, 2007

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Since I questioned the narrow defense-oriented focus of Butler's and Holmes'
five principles in a previous comment myself, I of course welcome Mr Engdahl's unveiling of their "false assumptions".

Concerning biofuels I agree that there is too much bio-ethanol hype.
Bio-ethanol is not the solution but - being more upbeat than Engdahl - it's a start!
There is certainly more to biofuels than bio-ethanol - advanced biofuels like butanol or jatropha for diesel that provide higher energy content and lower GHG emission - and reduce the need to divert land needed for food crops.

Mr Engdahl's statement on the link between US foreign policy and energy since the Second World War would certainly be seen as anti-American if uttered by a European. I think it is too much of a generalisation about the past.

But looking at today and the future, it is hopefully not anti-American to point out that the neocons have hijacked US foreign policy (with Bush's
complicity) in the 21st century.

No need to re-invent the wheel. The solution is at hand. President Bush himself mentioned it in his first inaugural speech: The US would do itself and the world a favour if it conducted a more "humble foreign policy".


 
Christoph  Schwegmann

August 8, 2007

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Although I am by no means an expert on energy I wonder whether a state-centred focus on energy supply and energy security realy serves us well in th long run.

While it seems self evident that secured access to affordable resources is in the short term a desirable insurance against being blackmailed by energy exporting regimes, a globalised and interdependent world economy seems to require well distributed resources and not a system of "haves and have-nots". In a nutshell, are we realy better off if we have light and China is left in the dark, or the Europena Union, or the US ... or whoseever perspective one would like to share?

How must a global energy policy be organised to get the win-win situation the world economy requires?
 
C. Scott  Miller

August 8, 2007

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Engdahl is right about one thing but it shows the narrowness of his thinking. Ethanol, alone, is not a solution - but it is hardly a "boondoggle". Everything he says about ethanol does not apply equally to cellulosic ethanol as U.S. national labs will concur. Corn ethanol is a milestone on the road to a vast array of renewable fuels.

Energy self-reliance, here and abroad, requires a cornucopia of clean solutions - wind, solar, bioenergy, geothermal, wave - that can be regionally deployed. The monolithic oil mindset that the solution to oil dependence is coastal drilling and a switch to diesel for cars is myopic - and untenable considering that at least four states - California, Texas, Florida, and Michigan - will never agree for a myriad of political, environmental, and legal reasons.

Thanks to the price hikes of the last two years, concern about fossil fuel emissions (aka global warming), and the wearying military intervention in the Middle East the petroleum industry no longer enjoys what scant public relations it once enjoyed.

The House Energy Bill that just passed last Saturday must be Engdahl's worst nightmare. Far from implementing his proposed "two-pronged tax incentive strategy" It not only seeks to increase incentives for biofuel development but also withdraw the current oil industry subsidies - pegged at $16 billion. His plan doesn't gain us any additional control over the future price of oil.

By comparison, the renewable fuels - biooils, biodiesel, hydrogen, in addition to ethanol - will get cheaper with technological development as is happening already for both ethanol and cellulosic ethanol. Why? Free enterprise competititon. And most conversion technologies developments are trying to go closed loop - so they aren't dependent on any unfixed expenditures, like the volatile price of fossil fuels.

Furthermore, feedstock prices will go down because we can decide to grow and source a greater variety of non-food sources - including ag waste, energy crops, hybrid trees, petcoke, tires, municipal solid waste, forestry slash, etc. - which are being added to the list. These same feedstocks can be blended and then gasified to produce steam and heat to generate electricity. Some can be cleanly co-fired with coal.

We can either choose to employ soldiers (who destroy global infrastructure and equity) or employ scientists, farmers, ranchers, foresters, and waste managers (who build infrastructure, equity, and who have a vested interest in the proper stewardship of the resources). Stateside bioenergy development can bankroll energy self-reliance, regional and decentralized energy security, and environmental improvements.

Neither the DOE or the DOA seeks to pay for anything. Through matching grants they are priming the pump by helping private industry secure investment for emerging technologies. The government will recoup their expenditures long-term through a healthy economic rebirth of major sectors of the economy.

I am not against the use petroleum or coal. They will be continue to be mainstays of domestic energy production for generations. But renewable energy development is a good thing for many of the reasons I list above. To call ethanol a "boondoggle" is demeaning and counterproductive in the extreme.
Tags: | biofuels | security | oil dependency |
 

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