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It's a familiar sight. Over the past few weeks, we've seen gas
prices shooting up at the pumps.
Due in large part to the uprisings across the Middle East, oil
prices recently topped out at more than $100 a barrel, and if
the security situation worsens, prices could rise significantly
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And while one eye watches oil prices, the other sees events
continue to unfold in the Middle East and Northern Africa.
First, the fall of the Tunisian government and the resignation
of Egyptian President Mubarak, then unrest in Bahrain, Yemen,
Libya and beyond. The United States has rightly championed the
freedom of expression in affected nations and denounced the
violent and oppressive reactions of regimes like that of Gaddafi
in Libya.
Despite our distance, we can clearly feel the vibrations from
uprisings on the other side of the world. They have once again
exposed our country's Achilles heel -- an addiction to foreign
oil.
If gas prices continue to rise, they could cripple our economy,
which is still struggling to recover from the recession. And
while we should be growing clean energy jobs here at home, we
continue to spend more than $1 billion every day on imported
oil. Some of these petro-dollars fuel America's enemies. As
former CIA Director James Woolsey has said, our addiction to
foreign oil means we are in effect funding both sides of the
current conflicts in the Middle East.
More than ever, I think the message is clear: We must stop
relying on hostile or unstable nations for our energy sources
and spur the development of sources at home.
We must invest in domestic alternatives to imported oil like
natural gas-powered trucks, electric vehicles, and next
generation biofuels like the algae cultivated near Columbus, NM.
We must also focus on improving public transportation, better
urban planning, and continued vehicle fuel economy improvements.
Last year, I worked on the Oil Independence Act with Sen.
Merkley of Oregon. That legislation would have combined these
policies to eliminate our dependence on oil from the Middle East
within 20 years.
Right now in Washington there's a debate on how to control
spending. Truth is, too much of our nation's spending is
controlled by the price of foreign oil -- $475 billion in 2008
alone. We need to take control of our future, and the clear path
is investment in clean energy technologies and infrastructure.
By Senator Tom Udall, New Mexico's 17th United States Senator.
The Huffington Post
March 3, 2011

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