No Need for Oil?
Making the Energy Challenge Look Easy
By Jonathan Weber, 4-06-05
| Amory B. Lovins | |
The debate about energy policy is generally framed by those who believe - as the Bush Administration does - that we need to find and use every last drop of fossil fuel in the U.S., and those who think that conservation and alternative energy can at least reduce the need for new oil sources and new coal-burning power plants. Amory B. Lovins, the chief executive of the Rocky Mountain Institute and a long-time thought leader on energy issues, has a far more radical agenda: ending our dependence on oil entirely over the next few decades.
To hear him tell it, as I did today at the Colorado College State of the Rockies conference, this is not only possible, it's simple. Use new composite materials to make cars and trucks much, much lighter, and therefore several times more fuel efficient. Invest in next-generation biofuel alternatives. That's it. No more wars over Middle East oil, no more destructive drilling in some the nation's most pristine places, no more economic jolts from energy price volatility. Oh, and this program will also create a million new jobs in the U.S. - most of them in rural areas where they're needed most - and keep the country from falling behind China in the economic arms race.
Now Lovins is not one to be taken lightly. His list of acheivements is longer than this article, including no less than nine honorary doctorates and a MacArthur Fellowship, and he appears to have the ear of many government and industry officials. Yet my all my journalistic instincts tell me to be skeptical of grand and too-simple solutions to big problems and to adhere to the maxim that if it's too good to be true, it probably is.
At the same time, though, everything he says is emminently sensible, and my experience writing about technology tells me that he's almost certainly correct on the basics of his argument. There are lots of new materials out there much stronger and lighter than the steel that still fills automobiles, and many of them are already in use in many areas. I know less about biofuels, but it stands to reason that better refining techniques promise a lot of advances in this area.
I didn't entirely follow the math on which steps save how much money at what oil price level (and to be honest I did oversimplify his argument quite a bit, you can get the full version in his 2004 book, Winning The Oil Endgame, available free online). But I'll take his word for it that if you accept the assumptions the money math adds up in a way that none of this would cost either consumers directly or the government a lot of money over the long run.
So what's one to think? Why don't we at least hear of politicians and business leaders jumping onto Lovins' bandwagon? Maybe he's been pigeon-holed as a nutty environmentalist (he did say something about growing bananas in his house in Colorado at 7100 feet), and maybe the science and economics don't quite hold up. But I tend to think it has more to do with political timidity and the (logical) reluctance of business leaders to transform nicely profitable industries. I'll try to ask Bill Richardson, the New Mexico governor and leader on Western energy issues, what he thinks when he's here tonight.
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Comments
The long and short of why this is not going to happen in our life time is the 'good ole green' (money).
The oil industry has so much pull in our government it is not even funny. Who will front the billions of dollars to fight them?
The people of this country are so non-chalant about the USA it disgusts me. If we would get up and make our voices heard, America could be beautiful again!
Radical inefficiency, much of which seems to be encouraged by gov't and industry, seems to me to be the key topic in all of the energy debate-- as Wyoming writer Ted Kerasote said two years ago,"There is really only one question that serves to illuminate all the others: Why is it, in the wake of 9/11, that a nation who created the Manhattan Project does not create something similar to free us from dependence on oil, foreign or otherwise? And I think Cameron has answered that question, sadly enough.
I have been extremely impressed with the work and expertise of Randy Udall (yes, that Udall family) at the Community Office for Resource Efficiency in Aspen, Colorado. Udall has an ecyclopedic knowledge of where the failures and shortfalls are, and has excellent ideas about remedying them.
Best,
Hal
those millions of throwbacks like myself who believe in patriotism, are feeling like Mr. Smith.
How can the innovative and entreprenuerial spirit that created this fantastic American experiment in liberty and prosperity and egalitarianism just sit there, obese and stupified, while our energy dollars flow directly to regimes and nations that would like to see us destroyed? While we dismantle the environmental protections and progress that have made us the envy of the world?
Whatever happened to the US leading the way in something other than weapons of mass destruction?To whom much is given, much is expected.I think we have the largest brain trust in the world right now, and the prosperity to fuel it--where is the new energy economy? What policies are keeping us shackled to the old?
Hal