The Simple Arithmetic of John McCain's Bogus Claims of Energy Independence

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Posted May 4, 2008 | 10:06 AM (EST)



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"My friends, I will have an energy policy that we will be talking about, which will eliminate our dependence on oil from the Middle East that will prevent us from having ever to send our young men and women into conflict again in the Middle East" John McCain, May 2, 2008

Put aside, for the moment, McCain's suggestion that we invaded Iraq in 2003 because of oil. His energy policy "that we will be talking about" is nothing more than hot air. When he said it "will eliminate our dependence on oil from the Middle East" I could tell that he was in way over his head. Here's a very simple primer on the global economics of oil, to demonstrate why McCain is, once again, way off base.

1. The U.S. imports 2/3 of the oil it consumes. That fraction will not dramatically change any time soon.

The United States has been a net importer of oil since the 1960s. In 1965, it produced 9 million barrels of oil a day, and consumed 11.5 million barrels daily. Then as now, we relied heavily on imports from other producers in the western hemisphere, notably Canada, Mexico and Venezuela. Back in 1965, the western hemisphere was more or less in balance, with 14.6 million barrels a day being produced, and 14.6 million barrels a day being consumed. But those days are long gone. Today the western hemisphere produces about 21 million barrels a day, but it consumes 30 million barrels daily.

Here's what global consumption looks like in 2006:

Oil Consumption
[millions of barrels a day]
US 21
Rest of Western Hemisphere 9
Middle East 6
Africa 3
Asia 25
Former Soviet Union 4
Rest of Europe16
Total 84

And here's what global production looks like in 2006:

Oil Production
[millions of barrels a day]
US 7
Rest of West. Hemisphere 14
Middle East 26
Africa 10
Asia Pacific 8
Former Soviet Union 12
Rest of Europe 5
Total 82

In other words, if the U.S. reduced its consumption of oil down to 11.5 million barrels a day, to the levels of 1965, when we had a lot fewer people and fewer cars, we would still be importing 40% of our oil needs. Most politicians talk about reducing our dependence on foreign oil. The only way to eliminate our dependence on foreign oil is to drastically transform our car culture, or use atotally different technology for transportation. Unquestionably, we must reduce our consumption of oil. But the primary reasons for doing so are the global warming crisis and the need to improve our balance of payments position.

[A few clarifying points: Oil is used for transportation - gasoline, diesel, jet fuel - or as a feedstock for petrochemicals. Not for generating electricity. The hydrocarbons used for power generation are coal and natural gas. (Again, we are painting with a very broad brush here.) With regard to the numbers above, taken from the BP Annual Statistical Review, I presume that the oil consumed, in excess of the oil produced, came from inventories on hand. Finally, it is possible that recent major discoveries off the coast of Brazil may eventually enable the western hemisphere to approach self-sufficiency, but that change has nothing to do with anything proposed by McCain.]


2. Oil is sold in a global market. When U.S. consumption or production changes, the global market adjusts.

For reasons that may seem obvious from the numbers above, oil is traded in a global market. When production is shut down in, say, Nigeria, tankers all over the world are diverted, so that the remaining supply is distributed as efficiently as possible. So the rising demand from China affects the price of oil in Texas. Similarly, oil produced by the Sudan, and purchased by China, adds to the global supply and indirectly contributes toward the overall lowering of market prices. In other words, the market does not care if the source of the supply or the source of the demand is a from good government or a bad government.

Suppose we did reduce our consumption of oil by 10 million barrels a day. What would happen? Would Middle East production suddenly become less important in world oil markets? No, because the region would not lose its competitive advantage. Oil is like every commodity-based business. The key to success is being a low-cost producer, and the Middle East remains the part of the world where oil can be extracted at the lowest cost per barrel.

So even if the United States imported less oil from the Middle East, the global economy would still be highly dependent on Middle East production. As a result, how important is it, from the perspective of energy security, that governments in the region be friendly to the United States?

3. Oil production generates huge amounts of cash flow in all price environments. And all governments, good and evil, want to maximize the current financial value of their oil production.

Once an oil well is drilled, the ongoing operating cost of lifting the oil is generally quite small, whether oil sells for $20 a barrel or $120 a barrel. Private oil companies almost never shut in production because they think the current price is too low. But again, most of the world's oil production is not controlled by private companies, like Exxon or Chevron, but by national governments, like Saudi Arabia and Mexico. And because there is so much money to be made from current production, a government makes absolutely sure that the oil remains flowing. Throughout all the turmoil of a 27-year civil war, Angola's oil production was never seriously disrupted.

Historically, the global swing producer has been Saudi Arabia, which dramatically ratcheted its production down and up during the 1970s and 1980s to meet its strategic goals of managing the price and supply. Since the late 1990s, Saudi production has been relatively stable, though trending upward.

Saudi Arabian Oil Production
[millions of barrels a day]
1970 4
1974 9
1980 10
1983 5
1985 4
1990 7
1996 9
2001 10
2006 11

These days, it doesn't look like any government is purposefully holding back on production, though some disruptions may be caused by civil unrest in places like Nigeria or Iraq.

4. There are two rationales for U.S. military action based on oil.

So if a government, of any stripe, wants to keep the oil flowing for the cash flow, and the oil production affects the global market, whether or not it's sold to the U.S., what is our strategic interest in maintaining governments in oil producing countries that are friendly to the United States? There are two possibilities:

a. We want governments that favor western oil companies and respect western investments.

Once the massive capital expenditure needed to bring an oil well into production is completed, the asset is a huge cash cow, and a foreign oil company remains at risk that the host government will expropriate the investment. Recently, we've seen variations on this theme in Venezuela and in Russia. Historically, the U.S. has supported highly repressive governments -- Saudi Arabia and Equatorial Guinea come to mind -- that have favored U.S. oil company investments. However, there is not much precedent in recent times about the U.S. going to war because of a government nationalized U.S. investments.

b. Massive oil wealth in the wrong hands can accumulate power used for extortion against the rest of the world, or used against U.S. interests.

We have a clear-cut precedent that continues to shape U.S. policy: The use of oil as a weapon against Israel during the 1973 Yom Kippur War. Saudi Arabia and other Arab countries imposed an embargo against oil deliveries the U.S. and the Netherlands after they extended support to Israel, causing supply disruptions and, through OPEC, causing the price of oil to quadruple within a period of months.

According to Alan Greenspan and other neocons, the invasion of Iraq was justified because Saddam Hussein had the wealth and power that came from his oil resources. The absence of WMD was not particularly relevant. He explained it all to Charlie Rose last September:

ALAN GREENSPAN: I was not saying that the administration did not believe that there were weapons of mass destruction, and that was the motive for going to war. I have every reason to believe that that is, in fact, the case. They were wrong, obviously, but that was the motive.

I was raising a different issue. To me, I always thought it was very important that Saddam Hussein be deposed.

CHARLIE ROSE: But not because he was an evil tyrant, but because of what he could do with the oil weapon.

ALAN GREENSPAN: Absolutely. The problem basically was that if you looked at his history, he was clearly gravitating towards gaining control of all Middle East oil, specifically by finding a way to bottle up the Straits of Hormuz.

CHARLIE ROSE: But he had already been defeated in that effort. That is what the `91 war was about. He goes into Kuwait, and he talks about or he thinks or it was projected on him that he wanted to go to Saudi Arabia. In that case, you know, game over.

ALAN GREENSPAN: And he kept coming back and coming back and coming back. I mean, remember that there was no evidence, as far as I could see, that having been defeated in the first Gulf War...

CHARLIE ROSE: That he gave up ambition.

ALAN GREENSPAN: ... that he gave up ambition. And the critical issue was I always suspected or thought fairly inevitable that he would be able to get one of the Soviet nuclear weapons, which I had said it`s inconceivable to me that during the chaos of the immediate fall of the Berlin Wall that they could protect all of those weapons.

CHARLIE ROSE: We believe they have.

ALAN GREENSPAN: Absolutely -- it looks to me as though they have, because if they hadn`t, somebody would have detonated one of those things - - some terrorist...

CHARLIE ROSE: Somebody would have sold it to somebody for a lot of money.

ALAN GREENSPAN: Yes. So that it always -- it was always my impression that he had, obviously a huge amount of cash. And that he would get a nuclear weapon, threaten all of his neighbors, blockade or control the Straits of Hormuz, and essentially blackmail the industrialized world.

People do not realize in this country, for example, how tenuous our ties to international energy are. That is, we on a daily basis require continuous flow. If that flow is shut off, it causes catastrophic effects in the industrial world. And it's that which made him far more important to get out than bin Laden.

As for the risk of nuclear weapons, the evidence showed quite the opposite, and Greenspan's phrase, "if you looked at his history..." was a cheap rhetorical stunt. These days, every Republican is furiously invoking a "don't-blame-me" revisionism of the recent past.

But Greenspan's larger point is correct. Whatever McCain proposes, it will not change the strategic importance of the Middle East, in terms of global oil resources and in terms of a concentration of massive wealth, that can be used as a hammer to extort concessions against western allies. So in a very broad sense, the war in Iraq was about oil.

In the context of oil and in every other respect, the consequences the Iraq invasion have been devastating to our own interests. The ongoing civil war; the millions of refugees that crossed over to Syria, Jordan and elsewhere; the atrocities committed by Blackwater and other agents of the U.S. occupation; and the contempt we show for the Iraqi government, have all promoted radicalism in the region and increased the likelihood that oil will be used as a weapon against us.

Finally, McCain backtracked from his earlier statement with a separate falsehood:

"The Congressional Record is very clear: I said we went to war in Iraq because of weapons of mass destruction."

In fact, McCain advocated war before the weapons inspectors were allowed to evaluate the evidence. So it was no surprise that Alan Greenspan publicly endorsed John McCain for president. And it was no surprise that Andrea Mitchell followed up by giving the senator a softball interview.

 
 

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Your point is what??? If the USA can break away from the middle east it can?? I don't claim to understand why we are still involved there. Or even paying the high prices. We have the means to break the dependence on the middle east. Auto makers and produce better cars that don't run on gas. Home builderscan build better homes (green homes). So why isn't it being done???? When new businesses are being built same thing. They can go green as well.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:52 AM on 05/06/2008

The US uses oil from Canada, US, Mexico, Venezuela, and Nigeria. We do not use nor need middle east oil. It is the control of middle east oil that give the US ruling class power over the rest of the world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:35 PM on 05/06/2008

Very good article, good points. Now lets throw in the efficiency factor. You drive a vehicle that gets 9 miles a gallon...instead you drive a vehicle that gives you 27 miles per gallon, not a big deal right considering there are cars that give you more... so assuming you drive equal amounts of miles in the 9 vs the 27 that means that you consume 3 times more in the heavier less efficient vehicle. At $3.50 a gallon that means, using 10,000 miles as a bench mark/yearly, you have approximately 1000 gallons so you have spent ~$3500 in gas, vs ~ $1300 in the more efficient vehicle. So it follows that we can bring down the consumption of gasoline by a third and considering that our oil imports are for gas as stated in the article previously, we could make a dent in the imports and consequently our out lays of curreny. We could as a nation then decide if these monies saved should be put to developing alternatives to oil such as fuel cells, more efiicient gasoline motors, hybrids etc. Of course then we would have to decide to put our actions where our mouths are and get out of the SUV's... Then of course we need a leader that will take us down that road.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:41 AM on 05/06/2008

The simple reality is that too many people are profiteering from oil dependence.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:11 AM on 05/06/2008

There not bogus if you read between the lines, use your head.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:39 PM on 05/05/2008

The Saudi government is doing the same thing now as Sadam was doing and no one seems to care. Just wait until Saudi oil is cut off !0.00 a gallon.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:01 PM on 05/05/2008

We have plenty of alternative sources of energy. Wind and Nuclear. But the environmetalist nutballs want to kick us all the way back the 18th century. Quit listening to these guys and do what you have to do.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:29 PM on 05/05/2008

Quite frankly, I do not think it is the environmenalist nutballs who are the shills, rather than congress to the oil industry. I support wind, solar and nuclear energy. You did see that the last bill in congress around energy, EXCLUDED economic incentives for these, right?????????

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:46 PM on 05/05/2008

well I would like to add my somewhat unconventional ideas to the mix. I have no great answer. We can't drill for oil because of the enviromental nutballs and I don't like those darned wind machines because they are bird killers and they won't amount to much of anything for years and years. So I say, let's invade Cuba. What the heck for you say? For the sugar cane to make ethanol. A sugar cane/ ethanol paradise is only 90 miles off our southern coast. The 2nd Marine Division could take Cuba in a week. Our Marines would be sun tanning and sipping rum and cokes on the beach in 8 days. Let American business in and we would have a ethanol refinery up and running within a year. Enough to supply a portion of our energy needs, Cuba Libre and Semper Fi!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:45 PM on 05/05/2008

To continue your "out of the Box thinking.... we could kill a couple of million Caribou in Alaska, send the meat to feed the starving masses in Africa and Asia, and drill a couple of thousand Oil Wells in ANWAR.. to free up a million barrels of Oil per day..

Then we could have the 1st Marine Division deploy to Siberia, take over and occupy a few thousand square miles of land, and teach those Russians how to REALLY drill for Oil.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:36 PM on 05/06/2008

Why don't the oil consumers (EU, Russia, China, Japan, US) just agree to steal the oil from the oil producers? They set the price at $50 per barrel and use there national technical means to "explain it" to the producers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:20 PM on 05/05/2008

I feel like America has fallen deep into a drug dependency and the governmental policies continue to enable the behavior. How do we affect an intervention?? How does joe citizen intelligently act on this??? Help!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:09 PM on 05/05/2008

We are running out of oil.

Watch: "A Crude Awakening: The Oil Crash". Google it.

We should go in to Africa and look for more oil. Its the cradle of civilization; must have plenty of fossil fuel. The production is not enough in the African countries.

We're going to be out of oil in a couple decades, according to Epcot Center and the above documentary.

We can survive with electric cars; but the real issue is getting airplanes up and across oceans.

I don't know if airplanes can run on bio fuels. I doubt it.

McCain, if you have a plan---what is it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 PM on 05/05/2008

"I will have an energy policy that we will be talking about, which will eliminate our dependence on oil from the Middle East"

So your saying we can never be dependent form middle east oil?

Middle East 26

You don't think that in America we can't find 26 million barrels a day if we actually were allowed to go get it? I think that there is a strong prabability that we can easily achieve this.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:59 PM on 05/05/2008

One big player in our up-side-down energy world is - the polar bear in the middle of the room!
Having used the Spotted Owl to shut down the American timber industry emboldened enviros to strut forward with actions designed to diminish the rest of American resource production.
Enviro scoffers shrill out, "We don"t have to defend our theories!" They use Al Gore"s flat earth injected CO2 fable, to scold, threaten, lie, demand, and sue you into purchasing their product.
Available credible science (Work done by scientists NOT bought off by anyone!) lays out facts as to why polar bear is not in need of listing. Yet this credible science is blatantly disallowed, dismissed and mocked.
Out of thousands of lawsuits filed by enviro attorneys over the years, only a meager fist full have served us kindly.
The rest have brought great harm to America"s resource producers...and thereon you.
One example: Yesterday"s Spotted Owl brings you today"s horrific fires and pine bark beetle.
Environmentalist actions have cost you handsomely and given teensy good in return.
If you"re sincere about US energy independence, feeding the poor and hungry, or saving anything of value, then get your butt off Al Gore"s CO2 bandwagon, and exercise your independence as a dispassionate fact seeker. Call your representatives right now, and tell them "Do not list the polar bear." It"s American produced food, fuel and fiber that"s in harms way! Protect America"s resource providers, and they"ll protect you!"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:06 PM on 05/05/2008

America's "resource provider" is none other than mother earth - that is exactly the focus of Al Gore and the like-minded folks that are so desparately trying to raise attention and awareness.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:57 PM on 05/05/2008

BluzySuzy,
Gee. Those damn farmers, ranchers, loggers, miners, fishermen have deliberately mis-led the world. Here they've been pretending they're working in the field, toiling from dawn to dusk, planting, harvesting, growing, extracting - resources to feed, clothe and shelter us, while it was big Al doing it solo all along.
No wonder Al's hands are so dirty.
And what is it again, that he's trying to "desperately" to do? Oh. That's right. Make money!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:42 AM on 05/06/2008

Hey! I'm not out there to promote or defend Al Gore. I'm just saying that his message isn't all bs. I do not advocate denegrating anyone's means of making a living, however, from my naive perspective, it looks like many of the industries that you mention have been following SOPs that no longer make sense. I think that many farming, ranching, logging, mining and fishing practices need to be rethought. The traditional bottom-line isn't all that matters anymore.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 AM on 05/06/2008

Your debate would be great if it was based on evidence or facts. Take your right wing scorched earth policy to another site that will agree with your rendition of the "truth". Sad...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:25 PM on 05/05/2008

speakeasy,
Sorry. Not interested in dealing with "touchy-feely-emotion driven" uh, how you say..."right wing scorched earth" conjecture.
Would rather work with intelligent people who seek "facts" through "proven science."
Are you suggesting there are none here? Do you know something I don't?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:42 AM on 05/06/2008

Mr. Fuderer needs to adjust his world view just a bit. The shorfall in U.S. oil needs is the product of Congressional neglect and lack of effective policy. There is no shortage of petroleum resources. There is a limitation on production by cartels, and a lack of will to produce more in the U.S. Oil is till amazingly cheap to produce compared to the price of sale, in part because of increased demand from expanding economies. There is more oil in North American tar sands and oil shales than all the oil in the Middle East, yet this is neglected. There is a huge reserve in the Bakken Formation that remains unused. There is Alaskan oil; oil off of Florida but the only permits to drill are for the Communist Chinese, and issued by the Cubans. American companies cannot drill off of Florida, off the East or West or Northwest coasts, where oil deposits lie.

The U.S. has enormous coal resources. The Chinese and Indians are opening a new coal fired power plant every week, It takes 9 years to permit a plant in the U.S. The U.S. has huge uranium resources and is exporting uranium for fuel for other nations' nuclear plants. The list of countries reducing dependence on fossil fuels to generate power via nuclear is a long, long one. The U.S. is not on that list.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:29 PM on 05/05/2008

Let me supplement your world view with some facts:

1. Your confidence in the Bakken Field may be premature, see "Bakken no energy panacea."http://www.thestar.com/printArticle/414164.

2. The vast majority of tar sands and oil shale reserves are not in the United States, but in Canada, and to a far lesser extent, Venezuela. So Congressional policy would have a marginal impact on the development of most of those reserves, which become economic for development if the price of crude oil remains above $90 a barrel. Development of these resources is significantly more harmful to the environment than traditional crude extraction.http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2007/11/12/071112fa_fact_kolbert

3. Development of unconventional resources does not diminish the economic value of Middle East reserves, which can be extracted at a tiny fraction of the cost of tar sands or oil shale.

4. No one has ever suggested there are sufficient untapped reserves in ANAR or off the coast of Florida to make a serious dent in US reliance on foreign oil.

5. Yes, we have enormous coal reserves which we use for electric power plants. We do not import oil to run power plants, but to run cars. Coal fired generation has gone way up over the last few years, but it's irrelevant to the issue at hand.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:53 PM on 05/05/2008

Unfortunately misinformation is as significiant a product as objective information. The fact is that the Athabaska and other tar Sands are roughly equally distributed between Canada and the U.S. The Eocene Green River Formation is largely U,S, althought there are equivalent oil shales in Canada as well. The Bakken is interesting. It is a Missippian Period shale, very tight with fractures as the main oil traps. Drilling would likely be slant or horizontal. Bakken resources are known to the industry as being absolutely huge. Older models calculated less. I suspect that the industry folks are more likely on track. Total oil shale and tar sands oil is calculated to be sufficient for 800 years at present U.S. consumption. Coal is actually much more versitile than just "power." Coal is a carb source for petro-chemicals, synthetic fuels, fertilizers, and byproducts include sulfuric acid and potentially methane, which can also be useful in lots of ways. 800 years of coal is kind of significant.

Indeed Middle east oil can be produced cheaply--perhaps at $2-5 a barrel. That is just the point. Exploit American resources, drill, drill, drill and oil prices will collapse, probaby to $35 a barrel.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:41 PM on 05/05/2008

DonaldWolberg,
Thank you. You are a voice of calm, logical facts. Much appreciated.
I, along with my husband and a hardy, albeit tiny - crew of salt of the earth types, work tirelessly (With zero compensation.) on the challenging task of educating the illiterate majority and the arrogant, rigid, fad followers.
Sadly though, it appears our culture has grown a hard heart, and a soft brain that lets in only that which will "entertain" it in 15 second bleeps.
Not complaining here, but admittedly it"s a tough go dealing with mostly manner-less, lazy, un-necessarily crude, slovenly burpies who pant over abstract messes of stars afar.
Sure it"d be fun to join the millions who play, or piddle away their time in dumb, destructive activities.
My passion to improve the character of Americans by reconnecting them with reality- - supercedes any notion of play time.
One American by one, we are gaining. More (like you) are using their time to ferret out facts and set aside "feelings." When folks begin to replace their "feelings, emotion and stupidity," with facts, truth, manners and critical thinking, we as a nation will make the turn and begin to thrive.
There"s not one broken piece of government policy that can"t be correctly mended now... today.
We can choose to make the turn-around time un-Godly long... or blessedly short.
It"s up to each of us individually, to decide if we want our actions to work in behalf of forthcoming success...or failure.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:01 PM on 05/05/2008

Before you froth any more at the mouth, read "It's the Crude, Dude" by Linda McQuaig. Noam Chomsky says: "With a keen eye and grim wit, McQuaiq's perceptive inquiry into the world's energy system strips away layer after layer of deceit, cynicism, racism, sordid manipulation, violence and aggression, in the dedicated effort to extract every possible ounce of profit and power in a race to the edge of disaster, perhaps beyond. It is an urgent wake-up call that should " that must " be read and acted upon, without delay."

US policy makers during the 50s, 60s and 70s had a chance to slow down US domestic oil exploration but instead allowed the oil companies to dictate policy (and ever since...) by actually ramping up production until we depleted all known domestic reserves of oil deposits. Now we are faced with prospecting for oil in environmentally vulnerable areas (Alaska, off Florida coast, California coast) and/or in an environmentally destructive manner (tar sands or bituminous soil).
China is the most polluted country on earth and they have no qualms about polluting other parts of the planet in order to meet their growing demand for energy.

Is that what we want? Will our citizens allow oil companies to foul up our Alaskan wilderness and our beaches so we can fill up our SUVs with cheap domestic oil? We can't have it both ways. Your backyard is someone else's front lawn. We have to lessen our dependence on oil.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:45 PM on 05/05/2008

I wondered if Chomsky said that,,,hmmm, but he says so much no one understands or much pays attention to, but then he says it louder.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:48 PM on 05/05/2008

ilpostino,
Each acre of land and acre feet of water in the US, is the last great precious, priceless, princess-nothing- like-it-in-the-whole-wide-world worth saving. Oh wait, I"ve heard that in reference to: China, Russia, all of South America, all of North America, Central America, England, France, Holland, Burma, New Zealand, Australia, Africa, Turkey, Poland, Germany, and oh gosh yes; the entire world.
Who wants all this land and water?
It"s a given we need to be sensible in ways we clothe, shelter, warm and feed ourselves. BUT, do we really need people who have zero education/knowledge about resource production including farming, ranching, mining, logging and fishing to continue their mandates of short-sighted science lacking policies on the guys and gals in the field who do the real work?
The only thing environmentalists produce, are people who "bite the hand who feeds them."
If I could mandate environmentalist actions, they'd include: You are required to bring proven science; obey the EIS portion of ESA, and defend your product before a panel of non-bias, non-partisan, damn smart individuals. You have no right ever, to disturb one hair on the head of an indigenous, touch one blade of grass or one grain of sand on their property. Your actions may be construed as "Trespass." If you choose to proceed, you"ll be subject to penalties under constitutional laws protecting rights of private property and public property usage agreements."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:13 PM on 05/05/2008

Iwhat is "ESA"? EIS is obviously Environmental Impact Statement, but of what?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:46 PM on 05/05/2008

Fuzzy logic leads to fuzzy results. Drilling technology is very sophisticated business, not just pushing pipes anymore and it is possible to also use newer recovery methods that improve production. Discovery of reserves is also sophisticated with geologic modeling techniques. One can argue the "vulnerability issue with the newer and available technology--what vulnerability with virtually zero spill technology. Most significant is the lessened dependence on foreign sources by meeting production needs domestically and lowering the price of oil. The price is driven by the market and more supply means more competitive pricing. Remember, there is enough oil shale and tar sands to exceed all the Middle Eastern oil combined.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:46 PM on 05/05/2008

Agree with speakeasy. Exploration today, is very non-invasive. And whatever pipelines may lay upon the surface, have proved out to be lovely, warm "birthing" areas for caribou.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:58 AM on 05/06/2008

Excellent post ilpostino! Unfortunately, there are trolls here that will disregard your facts with layers of lies to cover up their own lack of intellectual curiosity.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:29 PM on 05/05/2008

I'd prefer to save our fuel and use everyone else's first.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:14 PM on 05/05/2008

Yes, that is one option. But the consequence is that we are dependent on foreign oil and vulnerable to political issues or horrible price structure.