Arctic
Drilling Is No Energy Answer
Tapping ANWR wouldn't help much with the most pressing problem:
American dependence on foreign oil
Michael T. Klare
Los Angeles Times
April 3, 2005
The Senate's tentative approval of oil drilling in the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge has again focused attention on the nation's most pressing
energy concern: growing U.S. dependence on imported oil. As recently
as 1986, the United States relied on foreign oil for less than one-third
of its total supply; now we are 56% reliant on imports. With rising
dependency, we have become more vulnerable to supply disruptions and
entanglement in foreign oil wars, dangers plainly evident in the Middle
East today.
President Bush and his allies in the Senate claim that drilling in
ANWR for U.S. oil will diminish these risks, but close examination of
the problem suggests that ANWR cannot reduce U.S. dependency on imports
to any significant degree. More important, by spotlighting ANWR's putative
advantages, the administration obscures the fact that its overall energy
policy actually increases U.S. oil dependency.
According to the most optimistic estimates, ANWR holds 10 billion barrels
of oil. It is unclear, however, how much of it can be extracted at reasonable
cost and without causing excessive environmental damage. At best, ANWR
would pump out only about 1 million barrels per day in 2015, when all
of the necessary pipelines are in place. That may seem a lot, but in
fact it represents only 4% of anticipated U.S. petroleum consumption
and 6% of all imports.
If long-term U.S. dependence on foreign oil was trending downward,
an additional 6% reduction might make a dent in our reliance on foreign
oil. But the opposite is true: According to the latest Department of
Energy projections, U.S. reliance on imported petroleum will rise from
58% in 2010 to 65% in 2020 and 68% in 2025, and keep climbing after
that. If the projections are accurate, the tiny fraction of U.S. imports
potentially accounted for by ANWR would only grow smaller with each
passing year.
The projected increases also mean that the U.S. is at ever- increasing
risk of harm from disruptions in the global flow of petroleum. U.S.
foreign policy and, no doubt, our troops must continue to be deployed
in service of foreign oil potentates, such as the monarchs of Saudi
Arabia, and contain those who pose a threat to our energy supplies,
such as the mullahs of Iran.
It follows that the question we need to ask is not, "Should we
drill in ANWR?" but, "What, besides drilling in ANWR, is the
Bush administration doing to reduce our reliance on imported petroleum?"
The answer, unfortunately, is virtually nothing.
True, the president has called for accelerated research on more fuel-efficient
vehicles, including hydrogen-powered fuel-cell automobiles. But at the
current meager level of research spending, it will be decades -- if
ever -- before affordable fuel-cell vehicles will be available. And
beyond this, all of the oil-related recommendations contained in the
administration's May 2001 National Energy Policy (a.k.a. the Cheney
report) are devoted to obtaining energy in ways that would increase
rather than decrease U.S. reliance on imported petroleum.
In particular, the Cheney report identified two priorities: first,
to expand the role of U.S. energy firms with Middle East producers,
so as to boost those producers' net output, and, second, to increase
U.S. imports from other areas of the world.
In line with the first objective, the report called for the U.S. to
persuade the leaders of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and other Persian Gulf
producers "to open up areas of their [state-owned] energy sectors
to foreign investment." In support of the second, it affirmed that
"we need to strengthen our trade alliances, to deepen our dialogue
with major oil producers, and to work for greater oil production in
the Western Hemisphere, Africa, the Caspian and other regions with abundant
oil reserves."
This is not a program of energy independence, as claimed by the president.
Rather, it is a blueprint for permanent bondage to energy producers
of the developing world. Seen from this perspective, ANWR is a sideshow
-- a minor distraction from the main story of growing U.S. dependence
on imports.
American leaders must vote their consciences when the question of drilling
in ANWR comes up for a final vote. They must decide whether the refuge's
puny contribution to diminished U.S. dependency really outweighs the
inevitable environmental damage that will accompany turning a wilderness
area from pristine to developed, however carefully it is done. And those
who vote yes can't tell us that it will mark a major step toward U.S.
energy independence; if they do, they are fooling themselves.
Until this country adopts a serious program of energy conservation
and transformation, including tough automotive fuel-efficiency standards
and the development of alternative sources of fuel, we will remain deeply
dependent on foreign oil -- ANWR or no ANWR.
Michael T. Klare is the author of "Blood and Oil: The Dangers
and Consequences of America's Growing Petroleum Dependency" (Metropolitan
Books, 2004).
Copyright Los Angeles Times 2005
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