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Home economics

The Good News About Energy

by Dana Blankenhorn
May 26, 2006
in economics, energy, politics, regulation, Science
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Oil_bust
Here is a real inconvenient truth.

High energy prices are a good thing.

High prices create an incentive to find more and use less. They create real economic growth for people selling insulation and low-energy appliances. Not to mention new (higher mpg) cars.  Higher energy prices even reduce pollution, because another word for pollution is waste, money going out the tailpipe or up the chimney.

But there is another inconvenient truth. For high energy prices to do their real job, they have to be sustained.

What we need right now, more than anything else, is a floor price for energy. This is something the U.S. didn’t do in the 1980s, so as a result we not only got right back in bed with the oil exporters, but we killed all sorts of promising technologies and alternative fuels. It’s all on the chart above, which shows Texas oil industry employment in the 1970s and 1980s.

What you’re looking at there is lost opportunity. An entire generation of technology, and innovation, disappeared as we got addicted (again) to cheap oil.

Here is another inconvient truth. Most energy projects are big. They take years to complete. If you’re talking about new forms of industry, they take new distribution channels. For these projects to get the go-ahead, they must be assured of a market. A floor price (which rises) gives them that assurance.

To most Americans, not to mention most politicians, this is a
completely unpalatable solution. The idea that we have to become
accustomed to these prices, change our lifestyles to fit these prices,
is repugnant to most Americans.


Tough.

It’s the only way to unleash creativity and economic growth.

Tags: energy pricesoiloil bust
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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn began his career as a financial journalist in 1978, began covering technology in 1982, and the Internet in 1985. He started one of the first Internet daily newsletters, the Interactive Age Daily, in 1994. He recently retired from InvestorPlace and lives in Atlanta, GA, preparing for his next great adventure. He's a graduate of Rice University (1977) and Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism (MSJ 1978). He's a native of Massapequa, NY.

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Comments 2

  1. Jesse Kopelman says:
    19 years ago

    Your idea has a lot of merit. Another way to bolster development, that would be more palatable to consumers, would be to merely upgrade all military vehicles to run on domestically produced non-petroleum based fuels. This would be quite expensive, but it would accomplish three very important things without making consumers “pay at the pump.” First, it would provide enough demmand to create real industries around the chosen fuel or fuels (the military uses a globally significant ammount of fuel). Second, it would force the retirement of a lot of obsolete and very energy inefficient vehicles (there are military vehicles currently in use that are more than 30 years old). Third, it would eliminate the ability of foreign powers to impact homeland security through interference with the global oil market.

    Reply
  2. Jesse Kopelman says:
    19 years ago

    Your idea has a lot of merit. Another way to bolster development, that would be more palatable to consumers, would be to merely upgrade all military vehicles to run on domestically produced non-petroleum based fuels. This would be quite expensive, but it would accomplish three very important things without making consumers “pay at the pump.” First, it would provide enough demmand to create real industries around the chosen fuel or fuels (the military uses a globally significant ammount of fuel). Second, it would force the retirement of a lot of obsolete and very energy inefficient vehicles (there are military vehicles currently in use that are more than 30 years old). Third, it would eliminate the ability of foreign powers to impact homeland security through interference with the global oil market.

    Reply

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