Thinking Outside The Barrel
By Senator Richard G. Lugar
As submitted to Business Week
March 27, 2006
In a remarkable moment during the State of the Union address,
President George W. Bush caught the attention of the nation with
five words: ``America is addicted to oil.'' Soon after the speech,
I talked to the President about energy, and he admitted that he
had not anticipated the impact of that statement or that some
commentators would find it incongruous.
I believe he is sincere in wanting to focus efforts more on pursuing
alternative energy sources. But his Texas roots, his high-profile
advocacy of opening up the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to
drilling, and other associations with the oil industry have created
long-standing public impressions that the President is an oilman
who believes in the oil economy.
Bush's predicament mirrors the nation's own love-hate relationship
with oil. For decades the energy debate in the U.S. has pitted
so-called pro-oil realists against idealistic advocates of alternative
energy. The pro-oil commentators have attempted to discredit alternatives
by saying they make up a tiny share of energy consumed and that
dependence on oil is a choice of the marketplace. They assert
that our government can and should do little to change this. Former
Exxon CEO Lee Raymond echoed such reasoning in 2005, when he noted
that in 25 years, even with double-digit growth rates, alternatives
like wind and solar power will still provide less than 1% of the
energy needed to meet worldwide demand. ``I am more interested
in staying focused on the 99%,'' he said.
YES, ADVOCATES of alternative energy must resist the temptation
to suggest that energy problems are easily solved. They are not.
Relieving our dependence on oil is going to take huge investments
of time, money, and political will. But the difficulty of solving
the problem doesn't make doing so any less necessary. With less
than 5% of the world's population, the U.S. consumes 25% of its
oil and will spend about $320 billion on oil imports this year.
Most of the world's oil is concentrated in places either hostile
to U.S. interests or vulnerable to political upheaval or terrorism.
Given that sobering outlook, I believe the balance of realism
has passed from those who argue on behalf of oil and a laissez-faire
energy policy relying on market evolution to those who recognize
that life in America will be far more difficult in coming decades
unless there is a major reorientation in the way we get our energy.
No one who cares about U.S. foreign policy and long-term economic
growth can ignore what is happening in Iran, Russia, or Venezuela.
And no one who is honestly assessing the decline of American leverage
around the world due to our energy dependence can fail to see
that oil is the albatross of U.S. national security.
We need an urgent campaign, led by a succession of committed
Presidents and Congresses, to promote alternative sources. We
could take our time if this were simply a matter of managing an
industrial conversion to more cost-effective technologies. Unfortunately,
U.S. dependence on ever-scarcer fossil fuels has already created
conditions that threaten our security and prosperity and undermine
international stability.
Most of the world's oil and gas is not controlled by those who
respect market forces. Foreign governments control up to 77% of
world oil reserves via national oil companies, which set prices
through production decisions -- and can easily shut off the taps
for political reasons.
I am not suggesting that markets won't someday come into play
to stanch America's oil dependence. Eventually, because of scarcity,
terrorist attacks, market shocks, and foreign manipulation, the
high price of oil will lead to enormous investment in, and political
support for, alternatives. The problem is that such investment
won't happen overnight. Even if it did, building supporting infrastructure
and changing behavior could take decades. In other words, by the
time a sustained energy crisis fully motivates the market, the
resulting investment will come too late to prevent the dire consequences
of our oil fixation. This is the very essence of a problem requiring
government action.
That's why I hope we will look back on President Bush's declaration
about oil addiction as a seminal moment in U.S. history. Like
President Richard M. Nixon using his anticommunist credentials
to open up China, President Bush could use his standing as an
oilman to lend special power to his advocacy of renewable energy.
Such action is long overdue.