
The Republican
Reformation - Energy -
“Think, Baby, Think”
by Glenn R. Jackson
“Drill, Baby, Drill”
Nothing fuels Islamic terrorism like the petro-dollar. Without question the vast
sums of money the oil sheiks receive from this country and the rest of the world
leaks into the terror network.
In fact
the case for oil and Islamic fanaticism’s co-dependency are well documented for
anyone interested in the discovery.
Yet we are treated to
“Drill, Baby, Drill” as a rally cry.
Does spouting such
nonsense make you a serious person on energy policy?
Unfortunately such simplicity works only as a great applause line.
In its simplicity this rally cry hopes to convey a quick, easy, and
effective means of securing energy, but as to “independence” there has been no
thought.
Given the cost and time for the work between “exploration”, “drilling”, and
“production” this approach is anything but quick or really expected to impact
our national energy needs in the timeframe that is reasonable for national
security and energy independence.
The Hibernia platform off the coast of Canada cost $5 billion and took
19-years to complete (discovery to production), and BP’s Thunder Horse platform
in the Gulf of Mexico cost $4 billion and took from discovery in 1999 to first
production in June 2008 about ten years.
Exploration takes time and cost money and with oil currently in the
$50 a barrel range how likely is “drill, baby, drill” to be implemented anytime
soon?
Meanwhile our balance of trade is off the charts and petro-dollars lead the way
straight to the middle-east, lining the robes of the sheiks and doing nothing to
alleviate the crushing poverty of the region…or of the terrorism that finds root
there. Since
US oil production peaked sometime in the 1970’s we have squandered the
intervening time opportunity to find another way to energy independence. We do
not have time left to continue the drilling/no-drilling argument, explore and
drill if you can find takers, but that is not the answer for our critical energy
independence needs.
Economic concerns, i.e. sinking billions into an oil field/platform, works
against a consistent and timely reaction to our desperate energy dependence, for
profit is still king and there are record profits to be had without “drill,
baby, drill.”
At $140/barrel and upward you bet Exxon would be drilling, but clearly that
is not a given in our current economic slowdown.
In addition, the assumption is being made that new fields can be found
in the short-term.
In the mean time our base energy needs are not changing and the petro-dollars
continue their mid-east transit.
Can’t we do better?
Apparently the Republican Party seems to be bereft of anything deeper
than Palin’s well. So why don’t conservatives take charge of the Republican
Party’s energy policy and provide the road map to revamping America’s current
energy infrastructure to ensure independence.
As a starting point Robert Zubrin is one of those who has provided an
analysis of and way out of the losing energy game that the United States is
currently engaged in, and he starts by detailing the US penchant for staying
with a losing hand in an oil only energy policy.
Energy
Trump Suit
Zubrin argues in his new book
“Energy Victory” that while oil is the world’s current energy trump suit,
the United States holds other energy cards that are uniquely this nation’s
strength and if played right could replace oil as a primary energy source.
He makes the case that the U.S. holds disproportional strength in
coal, natural gas, and biomass, and could change the national energy picture and
balance of power in energy if the
U.S. would but work to convert coal, natural gas, and biomass into their “energy
equivalent in usable liquid fuels,” or in simple form “all we need to do is make
alcohol,” and in point of fact the simplest alcohols – ethanol and methanol.
Our nation’s energy needs are essentially of two uses, one for
transportation/distribution and one for the power grid.
Alcohol fuels
directly address our needs in the transportation/distribution sector, as Robert
Zubrin points out - The technologies exist today, and have for the last 30 plus
years, to convert our automobile production to 100% flex-fuel internal
combustion, meaning an internal engine monitoring that burns all mixtures of
fuels whether alcohol or oil based.
An alcohol liquid fuels based program is doable, and food prices do not have
to sky-rocket.
Beside the strengths mentioned by Zubrin in coal and natural gas, biomass,
just plain growing stuff, is a considerable strength for the US.
Of course we might have to look at and change some of the more inane
US farm policies, and that will mean we will need to show a political backbone.
Yet with political will and government backing an alcohol based liquid
fuels system can be developed.
Two things will be needed to start to see the light at the end of the OPEC
tunnel: 1. a commitment from two of the three American auto makers to produce
100% flex-fuel vehicles (running on any blend of gas, ethanol, or methanol) and
2. a commitment from the US government to build the distribution infrastructure
for alcohol.
Are these burdensome commitments?
Automakers are moving in this direction anyway, although in a “kicking and
screaming” manner as congress mandates fuel economy.
Hopefully, the industries near death experience will sharpen their
focus to a wholehearted commitment to flex-fuel vehicles, and of course it has
been done before.
The Ford Model T was the first flex-fuel vehicle, its engine could run on
either gasoline or ethanol, or a mix of both.
If the industry retools production with existing technology for 100% flex-fuel
vehicles, they would assure a competitive distinction for American auto
manufacturers.
Biomass can be used for either ethanol or methanol
production. There are many studies that have found that methanol could be
produced from cellulosic biomass at a cost competitive with that of gasoline and
diesel. However, equally important is the use of coal to produce methanol.
The US Department of Energy provides information on a Kingsport TN
plants use of coal to methanol linked at -
Successful Clean Coal-to-Methanol Project Boosts Prospects For "Multi-Product"
Coal Plant
. The bottom line for conservatives,
make building the alcohol infrastructure for transportation/distribution a
priority.
Add the Pickens Plan
While there are alternatives to improving power to the grid without the use of
oil, the most interesting is the Pickens Plan, or wind power.
As T. Boone Pickens says on his website -
The Pickens Plan – “The
United States is the Saudi Arabia of wind power.”
And if you live on or
have stood on the Great Plains of the US for any length of time you do not doubt
that assertion.
The Pickens Plan needs no bump from this article, having an impressive PR
campaign of its own, but as the recession tightens its hold and oil prices fall
conservatives should not take their eye off the ball.
The Republican Party has been captive of the Wall Street financial elites for
far too long, and conservatives need to declare their allegiance to Main Street
USA. What’s
good for AIG, Citi-group, JP Morgan, Merrill, and dearly departed Lehman is
really not good for America (or for Wall Street).
Conservatives in the Republican Party need to lead the fight for Main
Street USA.
For Wall Street is best seen as our servant and not our master.
There is certainly plenty of opportunity to get rich on the Street so
no one will be denied here, but Main Street is the strength of the nation and
support of that proposition needs to be realized by conservatives within the
Republican Party or the Party sinks into history.
So as the Party wrestles with finding direction for the future, conservatives
need to start by shouting the new rallying cry for energy independence “Think,
Baby, Think.”
Without an effective independent strategy on energy in the very near term the
trade imbalance from petro-dollars, the insane funding of the terror culture
with petro-dollars, and the deficits piling up from hubris on Wall Street will
destroy the generational progress in this nation.
We are a nation at risk as long as we are dependent on oil as our
primary energy source, and doubly so since we are dependent on foreign oil.
The time is now for conservatives to lead the reform of the Republican
Party, and the first step is a policy of comprehensive energy independence.
Glenn R. Jackson is the founder of the American Reformation Project, Board Member of Hire American Citizens, and Member National Board of Advisors for FAIR (Federation for American Immigration Reform). Glenn was a founding Board member and first President of the National Association for the Employment of Americans (NAEA), and organizer of American Jobs Coalition (organizations fighting against the American Worker Replacement Program). Glenn is also a former State Chairman for Buchanan 2000 Presidential campaign, and former state Chairman of the Georgia Freedom Party (a Reform Party affiliate). Glenn holds an MA in Philosophy from Georgia State University in Atlanta.
© Glenn R. Jackson