Posted by
Brent V. on Sunday, May 04, 2008 11:47:03 AM
Picture a kitchen full of food. The shelves are lined with various canned soups and vegetables. The freezer is stacked with microwavable dinners and there is even a pint of ice cream on the door shelf. The refrigerator has a nice piece of meet thawing, eggs, milk, and fruits. The counter has every conceivable kitchen appliance for preparing a grand feast. Now picture a man, face down in the middle of that kitchen. He is dead from starvation. Anyone who stumbles onto that scene would have a very hard time explaining how someone starved to death amongst so much food. And yet, that is exactly what is happening to America and how we are handling our energy needs.
Here are the facts. We have oil under our feet. We have huge reserves in Alaska, California, Texas, and off all our coasts. We have shale rock in Wyoming and Montana. We have a few nuclear power plants that have been running safely for decades. We have not built a new oil refinery since the Ford Pinto was a new car on a dealership lot. Our population is increasing as well as our energy needs. This is true for every American regardless of your race, age, sex, religion, or political affiliation.
Let us return back to the man found dead in his fully-stocked kitchen. Why did he die of starvation? Was it because he only ate at one restaurant that went out of business? Was it because the grocery market across the street raised their prices? Was it because he couldn't find an opener for his soup can? Did he just not like any of the food in that kitchen? Do any of these explanations sound like a good reason to starve to death?.
Like that man, the United States is starving itself to death needlessly when we have so many resources all around us. Our politicians have said that our oil reserves are off limits. Environmentalists have said that we cannot build a new nuclear power plant. Energy companies are not investing on how to convert shale or tar sands into oil. Farmers are wasting energy to produce corn-based ethanol causing commodity prices to spike and people around the planet to literally starve to death.
It seems like our politicians are fixed on an all-or-nothing solution to our energy woes. They will not act on any new energy initiatives because some group will always complain that it is dangerous, inefficient, not environmentally-friendly, ugly, impossible, or expensive. I am pretty sure that every negative adjective in the English language has been used to describe some form of energy. Our politicians are waiting on an energy solution that is clean, efficient, safe, environmentally-friendly, abundant, and cheap. The bad news is that such a solution does not exist and probably never will. Every energy solution has both pros and cons. Any policy will have its supporters and detractors. A real leader looks at the data, weighs the positive and negative affects, and makes a decision. Some people may not like it. But you cannot please everyone all the time.
We are living at a time when our leaders need to make difficult decisions. They need to make decisions that will make some groups unhappy for the benefit of the wider population. These decisions need to be based on facts and history and not on emotion or hoping that "this time it will be different." Good leaders will not try to please everyone but instead make everyone understand why they made their particular decisions. Our politicians have a choice. They can either step up and be real leaders by making difficult, but important, decisions or they can wait until someone discovers the perfect energy source that draws no objects from anyone. Unfortunately it looks like they choose the latter.
Sitting on our hands will not solve our energy problems. Making flowery speeches will not create new refineries. Blaming others will not lower the price of gasoline. Conservation is a band-aid to the problem, not a total solution. Even if we all spent our evenings sitting in the dark doing nothing but breathing shallowly, energy is still required to build and run homes, offices, roads, and factories. We still need fuels for transporting basic goods and materials and food. So before you get angry at that SUV next to you for consuming too much fuel just remember that everything you own from the computer on your desk to the laces on your shoes required energy (and probably lots of it) to produce and transport.
So lets be realistic and reasonable. We have resources, we have the technology to extract it, and we have the need to use it. I for one do not want the United States to be remembered as that country that had a kitchen full of food but decided instead to starve death.