U.S. Energy Security –
A New Realism
Senator Lugar's speech to the Brookings Institution on March 13,
2006
It is a privilege to deliver the inaugural speech for the Brookings
Institution's 90th Anniversary Leadership Forum series. I have
had the opportunity to come here to share my thoughts on a number
of national security issues over the years, and your reception
has always been generous. I appreciate very much receiving the
invitation to speak from my good friend, Strobe Talbot, who has
been a source of sound counsel for many years and who continues
to provide outstanding national and international leadership.
Last August, I represented President Bush on a diplomatic mission
to North Africa. The President asked me to go to Algeria and Morocco
to facilitate the release of the longest-held prisoners of war
in the world – 404 Moroccan soldiers, some of whom had been
held since the 1970s by the Polisario Front operating out of Algeria.
American diplomats had discussed their potential release, and
General Jim Jones, Supreme Allied Commander Europe, had offered
to transport the POWS home to their families in Morocco. After
this humanitarian mission had been fulfilled, I had the opportunity,
with the Administration’s blessing, to continue on to Libya
for meetings with Libyan officials, including Muammar Qaddafi.
While staying overnight in the Corinthia Hotel in Tripoli, overlooking
the Mediterranean, I came face to face with a microcosm of the
new reality of global economic life. It was impossible to walk
around the hotel without meeting someone who was hoping to tap
into Libya’s oil reserves. The hotel was populated with
representatives from China, India, and Western oil companies who
were in Libya to stake out drilling or refining options for every
pool of oil that the government might make available. The world
had come to the Corinthia Hotel to compete for the energy opportunities
that were expected to develop with Libya’s hopeful return
to the international mainstream.
I relate this anecdote to underscore how rapidly the world is
changing due to the expansion of energy demand. These conclaves
of modern day oil prospectors can be found wherever there are
proven energy supplies and a government willing to bargain. Indeed,
my delegation also saw evidence of this in natural gas-rich Algeria.
The Chinese and Indians, with one third of the world’s people
between them, know that their economic future is directly tied
to finding sufficient energy resources to sustain their rapid
economic growth. They are negotiating with anyone willing to sell
them an energy lifeline.
The Shifting Balance of Realism
The gasoline price spikes following the Katrina and Rita hurricanes
underscored for Americans the tenuousness of short-term energy
supplies. But, as yet, there is not a full appreciation of our
economic vulnerability or the competition that is already occurring
throughout the world.
In a remarkable moment during the State of the Union Address,
President Bush caught the attention of the nation with five words:
“America is addicted to oil.” Those five words probably
generated more media commentary than all the rest of his remarks
from that evening combined. I had an opportunity soon after the
speech to talk 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 genuine
in wanting to devote more focus to pursuing alternative energy
sources. But his Texas roots, his administration’s 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 oil-man
who believes in the oil economy.
Though not hostile to alternative energy sources, the Bush administration
clearly downplayed their significance during the early part of
his presidency. Vice President Cheney, who oversaw Bush Administration
energy policy, stated on April 30, 2001, “Years down the
road, alternative fuels may become a great deal more plentiful
than they are today. But we are not yet in any position to stake
our economy and our way of life on that possibility. For now,
we must take the facts as they are. Whatever our hopes for developing
alternative sources and for conserving energy - and that's part
of our plan - the reality is that fossil fuels provide virtually
100 percent of our transportation needs and an overwhelming share
of our electricity requirements. For years down the road, this
will continue to be true.”
For decades, the energy debate in this country 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. They
have implied that those who have bemoaned oil dependency do not
understand that every energy alternative comes with its own problems
and limitations. Lee Raymond, the former CEO of Exxon offered
an example of this line of reasoning in 2005: “There are
many alternative forms of energy that people talk about that may
be interesting. But they are not consequential on the scale that
will be needed, and they may never have a significant impact on
the energy balance. To the extent that people focus too much on
that — for example, on solar or wind…— what
they are doing is diverting attention from the real issues. And
25 years from now, even with double-digit growth rates, they will
still be less than 1 percent of the energy supplied to meet worldwide
demand. I am more interested in staying focused on the 99 percent
than the 1 percent.”
Indeed, advocates of alternative energy must resist the rhetorical
temptations to suggest that energy problems are easily solved.
They are not. Relieving our dependence on oil in any meaningful
way is going to take much greater investments of time, money,
and political will. There is no silver bullet solution. But the
difficulty of solving the problem does not make it any less necessary.
The President’s State of the Union address indicates that
he understands this.
Whether or not one classifies America’s oil dependence
as an addiction, the bottom line is that with less than 5 percent
of the world's population, the United States consumes 25 percent
of its oil. If oil prices remain at $60 a barrel through 2006,
we will spend about $320 billion on oil imports this year. Most
of the world’s oil is concentrated in places that are either
hostile to American interests or vulnerable to political upheaval
and terrorism. And demand for oil will increase far more rapidly
than we expected just a few years ago. Within 25 years, the world
will need 50 percent more energy than it does now.
With these basics in mind, my message is that the balance of
realism has passed from those who argue on behalf of oil and a
laissez faire energy policy that relies on market evolution, to
those who recognize that in the absence of a major reorientation
in the way we get our energy, life in America is going to be much
more difficult in the coming decades. No one who cares about U.S.
foreign policy, national security, and long-term economic growth
can afford to ignore what is happening in Iran, Russia, Venezuela,
or in the lobby of the Corinthia Hotel in Tripoli. No one who
is honestly assessing the decline of American leverage around
the world due to our energy dependence can fail to see that energy
is the albatross of U.S. national security.
We have entered a different energy era that requires a much different
response than in past decades. What is needed is an urgent national
campaign led by a succession of Presidents and Congresses who
will ensure that American ingenuity and resources are fully committed
to this problem.
We could take our time if this were merely a matter of accomplishing
an industrial conversion to more cost effective technologies.
Unfortunately, U.S. dependence on fossil fuels and their growing
scarcity worldwide have already created conditions that are threatening
our security and prosperity and undermining international stability.
In the absence of revolutionary changes in energy policy, we are
risking multiple disasters for our country that will constrain
living standards, undermine our foreign policy goals, and leave
us highly vulnerable to the machinations of rogue states.
The majority of oil and natural gas in the world is not controlled
by those who respect market forces. Geology and politics have
created petro-superpowers that nearly monopolize the world’s
oil supply. According to PFC Energy, foreign governments control
up to 77 percent of the world’s oil reserves through their
national oil companies. These governments set prices through their
investment and production decisions, and they have wide latitude
to shut off the taps for political reasons.
I am not suggesting that markets won’t eventually come
into play to move America away from its 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. Given enough time,
overcoming oil dependence and imbalances is well within the scope
of human, and indeed American, ingenuity. The problem is that
such investment cannot happen overnight, and even if it did, it
will take years or even decades to build supporting infrastructure
and change behavior. In other words, by the time a sustained energy
crisis fully motivates the market, we are likely to be well past
the point where we can save ourselves. Our motivation will come
too late and the resulting investment will come too slowly to
prevent the severe economic and security consequences of our oil
dependence. This is the very essence of a problem requiring government
action.
The first step is to admit how grave the problem is. Hopefully,
we will look back on President Bush’s declaration that America
is “addicted to oil” as a seminal moment in American
history, when a U.S president said something contrary to expectations
and thereby stimulated change. Like President Nixon using his
anti-communist credentials to open up China or President Johnson
using his Southern roots to help pave the way for the Civil Rights
Act, President Bush’s standing as an oil man would lend
special power to his advocacy, if he chose to initiate an all-out
campaign for renewable energy sources.
Six Threats
As a national security problem, energy is unique in that the
risks we face from this single condition are diverse and are intensifying
simultaneously. In fact, our energy dependence creates at least
six different threats that could directly or indirectly undermine
American security and prosperity. Each of these threats could
be the subject of its own speech, but today, I will provide an
abbreviated review.
First, as we have seen, oil supplies are vulnerable to natural
disasters, wars, and terrorist attacks that can disrupt the lifeblood
of the international economy. The entire nation felt the spike
in prices caused by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita last year. But
these shocks, which helped send the price of oil to $70 a barrel,
were minor compared to what would occur if major oil processing
facilities in Saudi Arabia were sabotaged. In late February, terrorists
attempted such an attack. They penetrated the outer defenses of
Saudi Arabia’s largest oil processing facility with car
bombs before being repulsed. A successful terrorist attack –
either through conventional ground assaults, suicide attacks with
hijacked aircraft, terrorist inspired internal sabotage, or other
means – would be devastating to the world economy. Al-Qaeda
and other terrorist organizations have openly declared their intent
to attack oil facilities to inflict pain on Western economies.
Recently, we have also seen the shutdown of a fifth of Nigeria’s
production by militants, and Iraq’s continuing struggle
to expand its oil production capacity amidst terrorist attacks.
The vulnerability of oil supplies is not a new concern. But the
lack of spare oil production capacity is new. As recently as four
years ago, spare production capacity exceeded world oil consumption
by about ten percent. As world demand for oil has rapidly increased
in the last few years, spare capacity has declined to less than
two percent. Thus, any major disruption of oil creates scarcity
that will drive prices up.
These circumstances require massive expenditures to preserve
our oil lifeline. One conservative estimate puts U.S. oil-dedicated
military expenditures in the Middle East at $50 billion year.
Second, over time, even if oil and natural gas supplies are not
disrupted in dramatic ways that produce local or global economic
shocks, worldwide reserves are nevertheless diminishing. This
is occurring within the context of explosive economic growth in
China, India, Brazil, and many other nations. The demand for energy
from these industrializing giants is creating unprecedented competition
for oil and natural gas.
Americans paid 17 percent more for energy in 2005 than in the
previous year. That increase accounted for 40 percent of the rise
in the consumer price index. Last November, we spent more than
$24 billion on oil imports, accounting for more than a third of
our trade deficit.
To meet world oil demand, the International Energy Agency estimates
a need for $17 trillion in investment, with the bulk going to
the Middle East . But political and economic conditions may not
let this investment happen. Even if some investment does occur
and reserves prove to be much larger than anticipated, there is
no guarantee that hostile governments will either choose to develop
new capacity or make any new oil available to the United States.
In the decades to come, price will not be the only issue. We
will face the prospect that the world's supply of oil may not
be abundant and accessible enough to support continued economic
growth in both the industrialized West and in large rapidly growing
economies. As we approach the point where the world's oil-hungry
economies are competing for insufficient supplies of energy, oil
will become an even stronger magnet for conflict and threats of
military action, than it already is.
Third, the use of energy as an overt weapon by producing nations
is not a theoretical threat of the future; it is happening now.
Oil and natural gas are the currency through which energy-rich
countries leverage their interests against import dependent nations
such as ours. Iran has repeatedly threatened to cut off oil exports
to selected nations if economic sanctions are imposed against
it. Similarly Hugo Chavez in Venezuela has issued threats of an
oil export embargo against the United States.
In January, Ukrainians were confronted by a Russian threat to
cut off natural gas exports in mid-winter if Ukraine did not submit
to a four-fold price increase. Russia took action to deny some
natural gas to Ukraine. The dispute led to sharp drops in gas
supplies reaching European countries that depend on natural gas
moving through Ukrainian pipelines from Russia. Russia charged
that Ukraine was diverting gas intended for Austria, Italy, France,
Hungary and other European nations. Eventually, the confrontation
was resolved with a near doubling of the price of natural gas
sold by Russia to Ukraine. In contrast, Russia did not inflict
such a price increase on Belarus, considered by Moscow to be a
good partner, compared to the pro-Western Ukrainian government.
The episode underscored the vulnerability of consumer nations
to their energy suppliers.
We are used to thinking in terms of conventional warfare between
nations, but energy is becoming the weapon of choice for those
who possess it. It may seem to be a less lethal weapon than military
forces, but a natural gas shutdown to Ukraine in the middle of
winter could cause death and economic loss on the scale of a military
attack. Moreover, in such circumstances, nations would become
desperate, increasing the chances of armed conflict and terrorism.
The use of energy as a weapon might require NATO to review what
alliance obligations would be in such cases.
Fourth, even when energy is not used overtly as a weapon, energy
imbalances are allowing regimes in countries that are rich in
oil and natural gas to avoid democratic reforms and insulate themselves
from international pressure and the aspirations of their own people.
We are seeing Iran and Venezuela cultivate energy relationships
with important nations that are in a position to block economic
sanctions. For decades, we have watched Saudi Arabia and other
Gulf states use oil wealth to create domestic conditions that
prevent movement toward democracy. In Russia and Nigeria, energy
assets have offered opportunities for corruption. In many oil
rich nations, oil wealth has done little for the people, while
ensuring less reform, less democracy, fewer free market activities,
and more enrichment of elites.
Beyond the internal costs to these nations, we should recognize
that we are transferring hundreds of billions of dollars each
year to some of the least accountable regimes in the world. Some
are using this money to invest abroad in terrorism, instability,
or demagogic appeals to populism.
At a time when the international community is attempting to persuade
Iran to live up to its non-proliferation obligations, our economic
leverage on that country has declined due to its burgeoning oil
revenues. If one tracks the arc of Iran’s behavior over
the last decade, its suppression of dissent, its support for terrorists,
and its conflict with the West have increased in conjunction with
its oil revenues, which soared by 30 percent in 2005.
Sometimes observers comfort themselves with the thought that
most U.S. imports come from friendly nations such as Canada and
Mexico, rather than from Iran or other problematic countries.
But oil is a globally priced commodity. Even if our dollars are
not going directly to Iran, this does not mean that our staggering
consumption of oil is not contributing to the price paid to Iran
by other consumers.
Fifth, the threat of climate change has been made worse by inefficient
and unclean use of non-renewable energy. In the long run this
could bring drought, famine, disease, and mass migration, all
of which could lead to conflict and instability.
There are no unilateral solutions to climate change. I have urged
the Bush Administration and my colleagues in Congress to return
to a leadership role on the issue of climate change. I have advocated
that the United States must be open to multi-lateral forums that
attempt to achieve global solutions to the problem of greenhouse
gases.
Our scientific understanding of climate change has advanced significantly.
We have better computer models, more measurements and more evidence
-- from the shrinking polar caps to expanding tropical disease
zones for plants and humans -- that the problem is real and is
caused by man-made emissions of greenhouse gases, including carbon
dioxide from fossil fuels.
Sixth, our efforts to stem terrorist recruitment and prevent
terrorist cells and training grounds in the developing world are
being undercut by the high costs of energy. The economic impact
of high oil prices is far more burdensome in developing countries
than in the developed world. Generally, developing countries are
more dependent on imported oil, their industries are more energy
intensive, and they use energy less efficiently.
The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development estimates
that non-OPEC developing nations spend 3.5 percent of their GDP
or more on imported oil -- roughly twice the percentage paid in
the main OECD countries. World Bank research shows that a sustained
oil-price increase of $10 per barrel will reduce GDP by an average
of 1.47 percent in countries with a per-capita income of less
than $300. Some of these countries would lose as much as 4 percent
of GDP. This compares to an average loss of less than one half
of one percent of GDP in OECD countries. Some nations, such as
Nepal and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, would experience
GDP losses from a sustained $10 increase in the price of a barrel
of oil that are twice the amount of foreign assistance that they
receive from the United States. Even a nation like Ethiopia, which
receives the substantial sum of $134 million in U.S. assistance
because it is a focus country of the President’s AIDs initiative,
would see almost all of this offset by a $10 oil price increase.
Last week I chaired a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing
on the nomination of Randy Tobias to be the new Administrator
for USAID. In this capacity he would oversee a large share of
our foreign assistance budget, which now exceeds $20 billion per
year. This budget is intended to meet our humanitarian goals,
but its success is also directly linked to national security.
But all of this effort and money, in essence, can be wiped out
merely by an increase in the price of energy.
Without a diversification of energy supplies that emphasizes
environmentally friendly energy sources that are abundant in most
developing countries, the national incomes of energy poor nations
will remain depressed, with negative consequences for stability,
development, disease eradication, and terrorism.
Each of these six threats from energy dependence is becoming
more acute as time passes. Any of them could be the source of
catastrophe. Any realistic American foreign policy must redeploy
diplomatic, military, scientific, and economic resources toward
solving the energy problem.
The basic dilemma for U.S. energy policy is how can our government
speed up the transition to alternative renewable energy sources
so that we can prevent irreparable harm to our nation or the world
associated with these threats? The realist must ask: how can we
shape our energy future before it shapes us in disastrous ways?
Working Toward Energy Security
American energy policy to date has suffered from two fundamental
flaws. First, we have let two decades of relatively cheap oil
and natural gas deepen our dependence on imports. An approach
that focuses on research, while ignoring deployment of new fuels
will not meet our national security challenge.
The second flaw is that we have lacked a truly comprehensive
energy policy with energy security as a strategic goal. American
energy policy has been focused on a narrow definition of energy
security that strived to ensure sufficient supplies at affordable
prices. This has translated into policies promoting diversification
in supplies of oil and natural gas, with little emphasis on energy
alternatives. A policy that relies on a finite resource concentrated
in a few countries is doomed to failure. Our long-term security
and prosperity require sufficient, affordable, clean, reliable,
and sustainable energy.
A first component of energy security is to ensure sufficient
supplies. Our energy intensity per unit of GDP has steadily decreased,
but our energy consumption is still projected to increase by more
than a third over the next twenty-five years. This demand scenario
is not inevitable. Public policy can do more to promote efficiency
while still growing the economy. Expanded programs to enhance
energy efficiency in appliances, building construction, and industry
are all necessary to keep our energy intensity declining.
One third of our projected energy growth is in oil, a majority
of which we have to import. I have co-sponsored a bipartisan bill
with Senators Bayh and Lieberman that would require federal agencies
to implement a plan to reduce U.S. oil consumption by 10 million
barrels a day by 2031. The legislation contains many provisions
to enhance energy conservation -- from tire efficiency to reduced
school bus idling to light-weight materials research.
Automakers have a central role to play in improving our oil efficiency.
We are working to close the SUV CAFE standards loophole, and to
get more hybrids and flex-fuel vehicles on the road. A fleet of
hybrid, and future plug-in hybrids, that run on E85 could reduce
our oil use by 10 million barrels a day. The bill I have co-sponsored
removes the cap on the number of tax rebates for hybrid vehicles.
It also fosters demand by requiring that 30 percent of the government
auto fleet be hybrids and advanced diesels. With increased demand
for fuel efficient cars, new manufacturing facilities will be
built that provide jobs for Americans.
In partnership with the American auto industry, we should provide
a set of incentives that give them the opportunity to regain their
strength and save jobs through innovation. This bill offers a
35 percent tax credit for automakers to retool their factories
so that they can make fuel efficient, advanced technology vehicles.
Affordability of energy supplies also remains a key goal for
energy security. Crude oil still hovers around $60 a barrel, and
last October’s price for natural gas was more than double
what it had been in the previous year. These high energy prices
increase inflation and inhibit future economic growth.
Elevated oil and natural gas prices do have the benefit of making
alternative fuels more competitive. With the end of twenty years
of low oil and gas prices, investment in alternative fuels has
surged. As more is invested, innovation in technology and production
will drive prices down further. That is why it is so important
to get the first cellulosic ethanol facilities up and running.
The President said in his State of the Union address that he wanted
to make cellulosic ethanol “practical and competitive within
six years.” In fact, one plant is ready to be built in Idaho,
and many others could be built within the six-year time frame.
I have asked the President to make sure that the loan guarantees
that Congress authorized for cellulosic ethanol production are
in place by this summer.
As alternative fuels become more competitive, oil and gas producers
have strong incentive to drop prices to kill the competition.
Investors need to know that alternative energy initiatives will
continue to be competitive. A revenue-neutral $35 per barrel price
floor on oil would provide the security investors need. At this
price, alternative fuels like cellulosic ethanol, shale and tar
sands oil, and Fischer-Tropsch diesel could still compete with
regular gasoline. Many analysts say that expensive oil is here
to stay, but most energy investors are hesitant to take on that
risk. A modest price floor for oil that we may never reach would
provide a major stimulation for energy alternatives.
Long-term energy security also requires the use of clean energy,
a third component of energy security. As long as we continue to
consume fuels that do not burn cleanly or cannot have their damaging
gases sequestered, we will continue to pay environmental costs
and will remain vulnerable to a climate change induced disaster.
The Congress must pass legislation establishing a cap and trade
mechanism. A cap and trade system would provide regulatory certainty,
reward innovation to improve energy efficiency, and provide strong
market incentives for clean renewable fuels. Any such system should
give credit for carbon sequestration in coal-fired plants and
allow farmers and foresters to sell credits for the carbon they
sequester.
I have introduced a resolution that calls for America to lead
other nations to new agreements under the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change. Thanks to new technology, we can
control many greenhouse gases with proactive, pro-growth solutions,
not just draconian limitations on economic activity. Industry
and government alike recognize that progress on climate change
can go hand in hand with progress on energy security, air pollution,
and technology development.
Even as we strive to reduce the prevalence of fossil fuel in
our energy portfolio, pragmatism requires that we diversify to
the greatest extent possible our sources of oil and natural gas.
I have supported opening ANWR for exploration. While we continue
to debate production there and on the outer continental shelf,
we have to carefully consider both the security and economic benefits
of more exploration, as well as the environmental costs.
We must also ensure that we are not wasting fossil fuel resources
in end-use that could be fueled by other means. I am encouraged
by DuPont’s commitment to replacing petrochemicals with
bio alternatives. This wise business choice leaves DuPont less
vulnerable to price spikes than competitors who still rely exclusively
on oil and gas.
With natural gas prices high, there is now a shift to coal-fired
electrical generation. New plants should favor coal, which we
have in abundance, over natural gas. I continue to vigorously
support the deployment of clean coal technology with carbon sequestration.
We can also use coal to reduce our oil dependence. The Energy
Bill included legislation I coauthored with Senator Obama authorizing
$85 million for federal research into the production of coal-based
transportation fuels. One of the technologies that will be encouraged
by this program, the Fischer-Tropsch process, yields a diesel
fuel that is compatible with existing vehicle technology. It is
superior to oil-derived fuel with respect to performance and emissions.
Another critical component of reliability is protection of the
physical infrastructure and transit of our energy supplies. Terrorists
have made clear their intentions to destroy refineries and pipelines
worldwide. At home, in addition to power plants, ports, refineries,
and platforms, we have 160,000 miles of oil pipelines. As the
United States considers liquefied natural gas and nuclear facilities,
we must be vigilant to the security implications.
While diversity in supplies at home and abroad is necessary for
more reliable energy in the coming decades, diversification of
sources for oil and gas is an outdated strategy that will never
bring energy security. Reserves are too concentrated and infrastructure
too vulnerable. Real diversity can only be achieved by an energy
portfolio dominated by sustainable energy, the final component
of energy security.
As we make policies to influence the composition of our future
energy portfolio, we should strive to consume fewer hydrocarbons
than we can produce domestically. This means more clean coal and
renewable fuels of all types. I am encouraged that some states
and municipalities are taking the initiative to increase their
use of renewables. With Congressman Pete Visclosky, I am advocating
a bill that will do that for Indiana.
Our policies should be targeted to replace hydrocarbons with
carbohydrates. Obviously this is not a short-term proposition,
but we can off-set a significant portion of demand for oil by
giving American consumers a real choice of automotive fuel. We
must end oil's near monopoly on the transportation sector, which
accounts for 60 percent of American oil consumption.
I believe that biofuels, combined with hybrid and other technologies,
can begin to move us away from our extreme dependence on oil in
the next decade. Corn-based ethanol is already providing many
Midwesterners with a lower-cost fuel option. Most of this is in
a 10 percent ethanol mix, which is fully compatible with nearly
all vehicles. I have recently called for my home state of Indiana
to mandate that all gas stations in the state offer a 10 percent
blend.
Cellulosic ethanol, which is made of more abundant and less expensive
biomass, is poised for commercial take-off. I am pleased the President
now supports the ethanol research that began under my legislation
in 2000. I have long championed a renewable fuels standard, and
we finally passed a 7.5 billion gallon ethanol mandate in the
2005 energy bill. The bill I am co-sponsoring with Senators Bayh
and Lieberman will increase the proportion of ethanol from cellulose
that will be in that mix.
As our domestic ethanol industry strengthens and demand grows,
we will have to revisit the tariff we put on ethanol imports.
We do not want to trade oil import dependency for biofuel import
dependency, but trade in alternative energy also creates jobs,
provides new markets for our advance technology, and diversifies
our own supply. In the end, I believe the United States is well
positioned to produce ethanol at competitive rates.
We have to make sure that consumers have access to E85 ethanol.
Already there are millions of E85 capable vehicles on the road.
I have introduced legislation that would require manufacturers
to install flexible-fuel technology in all new cars in the next
ten years. This is an easy and cheap modification, which allows
vehicles to run on a mixture of 85 percent ethanol and 15 percent
gasoline, and will make their products more attractive to consumers.
Next we have to make sure that consumers can buy the E85 fuel.
I’m pleased that many independent gas station owners are
taking advantage of the tax credit for E85 pump installation that
we passed in the energy bill. I have co-sponsored legislation
that would back loans for even more E85 pumps. The next challenge
is to get E85 distributed through the big gas station chains.
I’ve asked the oil majors about this, and they have said
that sufficient demand for E85 does not exist. But demand will
not develop for something that consumers do not have an option
to buy. It is time for the oil companies to make E85 available
to the consumer. If these companies do not take advantage of the
incentives Congress has provided, I would be in favor of legislation
mandating that they install E85 pumps in appropriate markets.
There is still more work to be done to tilt our energy balance
toward alternative fuels. That is why Senator Obama and I will
soon introduce a new bill that will promote other means to move
these fuels into additional markets and make them more widely
available for consumers. Among many provisions, the Obama-Lugar
bill would create an alternative diesel standard comparable to
the renewable fuels standard that I helped put into the 2005 energy
bill. It would also provide new incentives for the production
of flexible fuel vehicles. We believe that U.S. national security
will be served by more robust coordination of all the elements
that contribute to energy security. Consequently, the bill also
would establish the post of Director of Energy Security, who would
answer to the President.
Energy Partnerships
As we pursue energy security at home, we must seek energy partnerships
abroad. This week, I will introduce framework legislation that
calls for a realignment of our diplomatic priorities to meet energy
security challenges. Partnerships with foreign governments can
help speed our conversion to real energy security, rebalance power
in geopolitics, and open new markets for fuel technologies.
The “Energy Diplomacy and Security Act” calls upon
the Federal Government to expand international cooperation on
energy issues. This bill will enhance international preparedness
for major disruptions in oil supplies. A particular priority is
to offer a formal coordination agreement with China and India
as they develop strategic petroleum reserves. This will help draw
them into the international system, providing supply reassurance,
and thereby reducing potential for conflict.
The bill would also stimulate regional partnerships in the Western
Hemisphere. Most of our oil and virtually all of our gas imports
come from this Hemisphere. The bill creates a Western Hemisphere
Energy Forum modeled on the APEC energy working group. This would
provide a badly-needed mechanism for hemispheric energy cooperation
and consultation.
Finally, the bill calls for international partnerships with both
energy producers and consumers. In addition to seeking new avenues
of cooperation, the bill is intended to give focus to existing
bilateral energy dialogues, which have lacked clear objectives
and political backing.
We must engage major oil and natural gas producers. We should
advocate more transparency, improved investment climates, and
greater infrastructure security. Oil exporting states wield power
for which we must account. Not working with these states will
lead to unproductive political showdowns and conflict. Even in
challenging relationships such as Venezuela and Russia, we must
explore how to improve our energy dialogue.
Strategic energy partnerships with other major consuming countries
are crucial for our national security. Energy security is a priority
we hold in common with other import dependent countries, which
constitute 85 percent of the world’s population. Strategic
partnership for energy security with the world’s largest
consumers will increase leverage in relation to petro-states.
In November, I introduced S. 1950, a bill that specifically targets
India for enhanced cooperation on alternative energy sources,
such as clean coal technology and biofuels.
To close, I would like to express my optimism for the future.
Our current energy balance is the result of industrial and consumption
choices of the past. Despite our import dependence today, the
U.S. is in a strong position to choose a different path, a path
toward real energy security. Success would free future generations
of Americans from the energy dilemma that threatens to compromise
our security and prosperity. It could also lead to opportunities
in many new industries that could reinvigorate our economy. These
are problems that can be solved. We must act now. We must act
together.
Thank you.