As oil spill damages Gulf, will U.S. change energy
use?
May 30 - McClatchy Washington Bureau
The Gulf oil spill has triggered a crisis of confidence, shaking
Americans' views about BP, the oil industry, technology and President
Barack Obama and slowing a planned expansion of domestic offshore oil
drilling.
Are the worst spill in U.S. history and images of dead birds and toxic
syrup lapping at Gulf shores shocking enough to be a tipping point for
energy policy and consumer behavior, however?
Will Americans rush to smaller cars or spend more to buy hybrids? Will
politicians embrace gas taxes and charges on large carbon polluters or
adopt other measures to punish fossil-fuel burning and encourage
alternative energy use?
It's probably too soon to say. Public willingness to change - and the
political courage to provoke change - may hinge on how long the spill
continues, how the wind blows, how the cleanup goes and the extent of
damage to wildlife, seafood, jobs, tourism and real estate.
The debate also comes as the nation is emerging from the worst
economic crisis in decades, saddled with debt, trying to wrap up two
wars and embarking on an experiment in health care that has left many
Americans unsettled and businesses bracing for higher taxes. It also
comes as key developing nations, including China and India, rely heavily
on oil and coal to drive their expansions.
For now, many experts say Americans aren't ready to change.
"I don't think it's a game-changer," said Antoine Halff, the head of
commodities research at Newedge, a New York-based brokerage firm. "It
drives home the risky nature of meeting the demand for oil," but he
predicted perspective largely would be offset by a more powerful reflex:
"People like to have their cake and eat it too."
Even the most cautious analysts expect the crisis to lead Americans to
embrace greater government regulation of offshore drilling and perhaps
to expedite higher fuel-efficiency standards for cars and trucks.
Advocates of a faster transition from an oil economy to alternative
energy are seizing the opportunity to push for as much as they can get.
"Perhaps in the face of this terrible crisis we can find the political
will and the political leadership to get it done," said Kevin Knobloch,
the president of the Union of Concerned Scientists. The National
Resources Defense Council Action Fund has launched ads in eight states
pressuring senators to pursue a "strong clean-energy climate bill."
The searing images of the spill already are having some impact. In a USA
Today/Gallup poll released this week, 55 percent of those polled said
environmental protection should be prioritized, even if it meant
limiting U.S. energy production.
In the same poll, however, 50 percent said they still supported
increased offshore drilling, perhaps realizing the nation depends so
heavily on oil that change will be difficult. The lion's share of the
oil used domestically goes to power cars, trucks and airplanes, and
alternatives such as hybrid-powered engines remain too expensive and
inefficient for most Americans.
"We've been through this sort of drill before with the oil embargo back
in the 1970s, the various oil price shocks," said Frank Felder, the
director of the Center for Energy, Economic and Environmental Policy at
Rutgers University in New Jersey. "Everyone gets riled up ... and then
we go back to our ways. The reason we do it is that oil is just very,
very useful."
With the economy recovering gingerly and elections looming in November,
politicians aren't radically changing their rhetoric, either.
President Barack Obama has said while the Gulf spill should be "a
wake-up call" for the need to invest in renewable energy, he continues
to support expanded domestic drilling as part of a national security
effort to make the country less dependent on foreign oil.
Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., the leading author of the major energy bill
the Senate is considering this year, said this week that, "The sooner we
can move off fossil fuels and to a new energy paradigm, the better for
our nation." At the same time, he said, "We're not going to stop
drilling in the Gulf. Let's be realistic."
"About 30 percent of our transportation fuel comes from the Gulf," Kerry
said. "You think Americans are suddenly going to stop driving to work
tomorrow? You think people are going to stop driving trucks to deliver
the goods to the department store? It's not going to happen."
Some say the challenges are overstated and that Americans can end their
oil dependence with a few small lifestyle changes: promoting electric
vehicles, investing in light rail, creating pedestrian- and
bike-friendly communities and exploiting alternatives such as natural
gas.
"Meeting this challenge will not be easy, but nor will it require
tremendous sacrifices," the American Security Project, a nonpartisan
research center, and the Sierra Club, a leading environmental group,
wrote in a report this week. "There is a powerful economic rationale for
taking action now."
Sean Kay, a professor and the chairman of the international studies
program at Ohio Wesleyan University, said even if the spill made
Americans rethink how they used oil, it would take "a sustained
campaign" by politicians, lasting years and with far more intensity than
on display now, to shift behavior and spending.
Kay said expanding alternative energy was essential, not just for
national security but also for preserving U.S. dominance, but Americans
still considered the short-term costs more important than the long-term
benefits.
"A press conference on a Thursday afternoon probably isn't going to do
the trick," Kay said. "The actual movement and action on these things
would cause near-term economic dislocation."
"It begs the question: At what cost to American competitiveness?" said
John Hofmeister, a former president of Shell Oil who's founded an
advocacy group, Citizens for Affordable Energy, and written a book
called "Why We Hate the Oil Companies."
"I understand the environmentalists' issue with hydrocarbons. I don't
like hydrocarbons any more than they do, but the reality is we're living
off hydrocarbons," Hofmeister said. "It would take us at least 50 years
to get to where the environmentalists want to get, but they want to get
there a lot faster."
He said America was well on its way to developing alternative energy
sources and didn't need the BP spill to get people interested. The
question, he thinks, is how quickly it's practical to shift without
hurting the economy and outpacing science.
In the interim, Hofmeister supports more domestic oil and gas
exploration in shallow offshore areas or on federal land.
One pet cause he hopes will get more attention is moving away from the
internal combustion engine.
"Let's use batteries, let's use hydrogen fuel technology for mobility,"
he said. He notes moves by Germany and Japan in this direction. Even so,
he said, "It would take 25 years to cycle away from the internal
combustion engine if we start now."
The pace of change that environmentalists and scientists want seems, for
now, to be distant and extremely expensive.
According to PFC Energy, a consulting firm to energy companies, shifting
10 percent of U.S. electricity sources to wind power would require wind
farms covering an area the size of South Dakota; shifting 10 percent to
solar would require an investment of $16 trillion.
"I'm not trying to trivialize things," said J. Robinson West, the firm's
founder. "It's just the scale and cost are staggering."
The "low-hanging fruit," as West put it, is legislation requiring
automobiles to become more fuel-efficient, which the Obama
administration has slowly been trying to advance.
"I haven't seen a vast movement in the last 20 years for everybody
saying, 'I want to buy this small car because I'm worried about national
security,'" said James Sweeney, a management science and engineering
professor who heads Stanford University's Precourt Energy Efficiency
Center. "They may be willing to say, 'I'd like more fuel efficiency
standards.'"
The 1989 Exxon Valdez spill didn't stop Americans from driving, Sweeney
pointed out, but it did force oil companies to adopt double-hulled
tankers. In the same way, many experts said, the Gulf spill probably
will lead to tougher government regulations on offshore drilling. That
could cause production delays and raise costs to consumers, but even
some limited-government advocates seem to agree now that that's a worthy
tradeoff.
"If the result of this is to determine a set of practices to make
drilling much safer," said Halff, the commodities researcher, "that
would be a positive outcome."
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(Renee Schoof contributed to this article.)
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