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Presidential
Election 2008:
OIL ADDICTION, THE ECONOMY
& THE PLANET
By
Alan Shapiro
To the Teacher:
Our
oil addiction and its serious consequences for individuals, the
American economy and our planet--and how one small community in
Denmark ended its oil addiction--are the subjects of the three
student readings below. The readings are followed by discussion
questions and activities that prompt students to consider how
individuals and groups, past and present, have created solutions
for difficult problems. Following that are suggested student inquiries
into how to end our oil addiction with climate-friendly solutions.
Earlier
materials in the high school section of www.teachablemoment.org
that may be useful to teachers include: "Oil
and the Bell-Shaped Curve" (readings on U.S. oil history,
the "peak oil" concept and energy proposals); "Problems
at the Pump (with a DBQ)" (facts about rising gas and
oil prices and competing views on solutions); "The
Unpleasant News About Global Warming" and "Youth
Action on Climate Change."
Introduction:
Oil Addiction
Oil
and gas prices are over the top, and they are driving up the costs
of food, home heating, electricity, healthcare and airline fares--while
driving down automobile sales, house prices, job opportunities
and the stock market.
"Not
since at least 1980...has the economy been in worse shape heading
into the heart of a presidential campaign," was the first
sentence of one article. In another it was, "By huge margins,
Americans think the economy is in lousy shape
." (Articles
by Adam Nagourney and Paul Krugman, New York Times, 7/7/08)
Energy
prices are not the only reason for the economic downturn, but
they are a major one.
Presidential
candidate Senator John McCain supports President Bush's call for
oil drilling offshore and in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
He also suggests a summer repeal of the federal gas tax. His opponent,
Senator Barack Obama, proposes a ten-year $150 billion U.S. investment
in the development of renewable fuels and low-emission coal plants.
He also calls for a tax on oil companies for "windfall profits"
and legislation to require automobile companies to meet higher
miles-per-gallon standards.
Whatever
the worth of any of these proposals, none will bring relief anytime
soon. Oil prices seem headed for $150 per barrel and up and gas
prices are barreling toward $5 per gallon and beyond, producing
an array of negative effects on the American economy.
"This
year, the world is expected to burn through some thirty-one billion
barrels of oil, six billion tons of coal, and a hundred trillion
cubic feet of natural gas. The combustion of these fossil fuels
will
yield around thirty billion tons of carbon dioxide
.If current
trends in emissions continue
atmospheric CO2 levels are projected
to reach
twice pre-industrial levels-virtually guaranteeing
an eventual global temperature increase of three or more degrees."
Global
consequences cannot be predicted in detail but include widespread
plant and animal extinctions, sea level rise of several feet,
global crop disruption and severe droughts. (Elizabeth Kolbert,
"The Island in the Wind," The New Yorker, 7/14&28/08)
For
discussion
1.
What questions do students have about the introduction? How
might they be answered?
2.
Oil, coal and natural gas-all fossil fuels-are essentials of the
American, and every other industrial, economy. How are these fuels
affecting the global climate?
3.
Elizabeth Kolbert names a few basic consequences in the global
environment of their continued, widespread use. Consider each
one closely for what it means in human terms. For example, what
difference does it make to humans if sea levels rise a few feet?
Student Reading 1:
The oil addiction and where it leads
Ghawar. Burgan, Cantarell, Samotlor. They are the names of huge
oil fields in, respectively, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Mexico, and
Russia that are either beginning to produce less oil or soon will.
At the same time, Exxon-Mobil, Chevron, BP, and other major oil
companies are spending more and more to find new oil reserves
and finding less and less. The combination of less production
from major oil fields and fewer discoveries of significant new
fields is "deadly," wrote Michael Klare in his article
"End of the Petroleum Age" in Foreign Policy in Focus
(6/28/08). Klare is a professor of world peace and security studies
and the author of Blood and Oil and other books and essays
on global energy issues.
But
it's not as if Americans and their political leaders haven't been
warned. "Over the last 25 years, opportunities to head off
the current crisis were ignored, missed, or deliberately blocked
.Ever
since the oil shortages of the 1970s, one report after another
has cautioned against America's oil addiction." (Nelson Schwartz,
"Asleep at the Spigot," New York Times, 7/6/08)
During
those years, America has continued its love affair with gas-guzzling
SUVs and pickups. Detroit has successfully resistance raising
automotive fuel-efficiency standards. Congress has failed to raise
taxes on energy consumption, especially gas. Our leaders have
failed to develop a national energy conservation effort, not only
to cut back on fossil fuel consumption but also to combat climate
change and global warming, to which fossil fuel emissions are
the greatest contributor.
At
the same time, China and India with their combined populations
of well over two billion people have been transforming themselves
from undeveloped peasant societies to industrial giants. One statistic
alone is especially telling. China, a country whose roads 20 years
ago were filled with trolley buses, bicyclers and walkers, today
produces 25,000 automobiles daily.
The
frequently-named scapegoats for rising oil prices are greedy oil
companies, speculators, and OPEC. (OPEC, the Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Companies, was founded in 1960 by the Persian
Gulf nations of Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the South
American nation of Venezuela. Other oil-producing countries joined
OPEC later.)
But
in fact, these are the factors that are largely responsible for
rising oil and gas prices:
1.
Diminished oil production from major oil fields
2. Fewer discoveries of large, new oil fields
3. Immense industrial development in what used to be called "the
third world"
Persian Gulf nations hold 728 billion gallons, or 55%, of the
world's known crude oil reserves and 41% of its natural gas reserves.
Net U.S. oil imports came to 17% from the Gulf in 2006, according
to the most recent U.S. Energy Information Administration statistics.(www.eia.doe.gov)
The
importance of Persian Gulf oil to the United States has a history
going back to the 1930s when oil was discovered in Saudi Arabia.
President Jimmy Carter stressed the issue in his State of Union
Address on January 23, 1980: "Let our position be absolutely
clear. An attempt by any outside force to gain control of the
Persian Gulf region will be regarded as an assault on the vital
interests of the United States of America, and such an assault
will be repelled by any means necessary, including military force."
Saddam
Hussein's invasion of Kuwait in 1990 jeopardized U.S. access to
Gulf oil. A result was the American-led 1991 Gulf War. Iraq's
forces were driven out, but at a cost that did not become clear
until ten years later. Neighboring Saudi Arabia, fearing an Iraq
attack, permitted American troops to establish military bases,
not only as a launching pad against Iraq, but also as protection
for itself. Those American troops remained in Saudi Arabia after
the surrender of Iraq.
Meanwhile,
a very wealthy native son of Saudi Arabia, Osama bin Laden, had
become a radical critic of his country's leaders for allowing
the country to become, in his words, "an American colony."
After Saudi leaders expelled bin Laden from his country, he became
even more outspoken in an interview with an American reporter:
"For
over seven years the United States has been occupying the lands
of Islam in the holiest of places, the Arabian Peninsula, plundering
its riches, dictating to its rulers, humiliating its people, terrorizing
its neighbors, and turning its bases in the Peninsula into a spearhead
through which to fight the neighboring Muslim peoples
.
"All
these crimes and sins committed by Americans are a clear declaration
of war on God, his messenger [Muhammad], and Muslims
.On
this basis, and in compliance with God's order, we issue the following
fatwa [religious edict] to all Muslims: The ruling to kill the
Americans and their allies-civilians and military-is an individual
duty for every Muslim who can do it
in order to liberate
the holy mosque [Mecca] from their grip and in order for
their armies to move out of all the lands of Islam, defeated and
unable to threaten any Muslim." (2/23/98).
American
dependence on Persian Gulf oil led directly to bin Laden's creation
of Al Qaeda forces in Afghanistan and to 9/11.
For
discussion
1.
What questions do students have about the reading? How might
they be answered?
2.
What are three major reasons for rising oil and gas prices?
3.
Consider President Carter's statement in 1980. What do you
think he had in mind when he emphasized U.S.'s "vital interests"
in the Persian Gulf?
4.
What does oil have to do with the 9/11 terrorist attacks on
the World Trade Center and the Pentagon?
Student
Reading 2:
The oil addiction and where it leads (continued)
Soon after he entered office, President Bush named Vice President
Dick Cheney to head a review of U.S. energy policies. He convened
a panel of top executives from leading U.S. energy companies who
met in secret for several months. This group gave little attention
to other energy sources or to environmental experts who urged
a change from the country's reliance on oil to the development
of climate-friendly renewables like biofuels, wind, solar, and
geothermal.
"Conservation
may be a sign of personal virtue," the vice president declared
in April 2001, "but it is not a sufficient basis
for
sound, comprehensive energy policy." In May the president
announced a plan that made no significant change in America's
reliance on fossil fuels-oil, coal, natural gas. He supported
the development of renewables, but not as a major national priority.
That
same year, on September 11, came the Al Qaeda attacks on the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon. Before the year was out, American
troops invaded Afghanistan, the Al Qaeda base. But by early 2002
the president was warning Americans and the world that it was
not Osama bin Laden, but Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein and his weapons
of mass destruction that were a growing threat to world peace
and security. In his State of the Union speech that year, the
president named Iraq and Iran as two of the three nations in his
"axis of evil."
Those
two nations on the Persian Gulf hold proven oil reserves of 112
billion and 136 billion barrels respectively. (www.eia.doe.gov)
In
March 2003 American troops invaded Iraq for the second time in
a dozen years, this time seizing Baghdad. U.S. forces largely
stood aside as Iraqis looted their archaeological sites and national
museum treasures as well as stores, commercial buildings, hospitals,
schools, and hundreds of munitions sites. The troops had been
ordered to protect the Oil Ministry and the Security Ministry
but not much of anything else. U.S. soldiers did search for weapons
of mass destruction, but never found any.
"The
invasion of Iraq-intended to ensure U.S. control of the Gulf and
a stable environment for the expanded production and export of
its oil-has had exactly the opposite effect," writes Michael
Klare. "Despite the many billions spent on infrastructure
protection and the thousands of lives lost, production in Iraq
is no higher today than it was before the invasion. Iraq has also
become a rigorous training ground for extremists throughout the
region, some of whom have now migrated to the oil kingdoms of
the lower Gulf and begun attacking the facilities there-generating
some of the recent spikes in prices." (Michael Klare, "Why
We're Suddenly Paying Through the Nose for Gas," The Nation,
6/21/08)
To
Iraq's east is neighboring Iran, with its immense oil fields and
its nuclear program, which Iran insists is strictly for peaceful
purposes. But Iran has failed to give the UN's International Atomic
Energy Agency access to all its nuclear sites and documents. The
result is deep suspicion by the U.S. and its allies. Diplomatic
efforts have made little progress.
The
Bush administration's repeated threats that "all options
are on the table" and Iran's response that it will block
oil shipping in the Gulf if it is attacked have been a fourth
factor in the rise of oil prices. "The National Security
Network, a group of security experts, estimates that the Bush
administration's policy of bluster, threat, and intermittent low-level
actions against Iran has already added a premium of $30-$40 to
every $140 barrel of oil." (Tom Englehardt, "Why the
U.S. Won't Attack Iran," www.tomdispatch.com,
7/9/08
Despite
his stance in favor of oil drilling in the Arctic and the offshore
U.S., President Bush has acknowledged that the U.S. "is addicted
to oil." That addiction has led to the situation Americans
are now in. The choices are clear. Continue the addiction or end
it as rapidly as possible through a dramatic reduction in our
energy consumption and through shifting to renewable energy sources
for the power we do use. Michael Klare calls for "the use
of domestic ingenuity and entrepreneurial skills to maximize the
potential of renewable energy sources, including solar, wind,
geothermal and wave power. The same skills should also be applied
for
using coal without releasing carbon into the atmosphere (via "carbon
capture and storage"), for miniaturizing hydrogen fuel cells,
and for massively increasing the energy efficiency of vehicles,
buildings and industrial processes." (Michael Klare, "Garrisoning
the Global Gas Station," www.tomdispatch.com,
6/12)
At
best, an addiction is very difficult to break, more so when it
has enablers.
The
oil and gas industry "has traditionally had a cozy financial
relationship with lawmakers in Washington, particularly of the
Republican variety," the Center for Responsive Politics reports,
and "the industry is fighting against punitive measures
.Exxon
Mobil best exemplifies the defensive position the industry is
in-in the first few months of this year, the company has already
spent $3 million on lobbying efforts and hired 11 outside lobbying
firms"--in addition to its in-house lobbyists. So far in
2008 the oil and gas industry has spent $26.6 million on lobbying
and $18.4 million on political contributions, 74% to Republicans.
According
to the Center for Responsive Politics "Most recently oil
and gas companies have fought off a windfall profits tax of 25
percent and preserved the $17 billion in tax breaks that Democrats
wanted to re-direct to renewable energy sources. Republicans say
the high gas prices can be remedied not by taxing the industry
but by lifting offshore drilling bans and approving oil shale
exploration in western states."
"Compared
to the industries they're up against, environmental groups have
very little money to give to federal candidates, parties, and
politicians. In the first three months of this year, Exxon Mobil
alone has spent nearly the same amount on lobbying as all environmental
groups put together." The Center for Responsive Politics
(www.opensecrets.org)
is a non-partisan organization that tracks the amounts and sources
of money that go to political candidates and office holders and
for lobbying lawmakers.
For discussion
1.
What questions do students have about the reading? How might
they be answered?
2.
Do you share the vice president's view of conservation?
3.
What does Klare think were the reasons for the U.S. invasion
of Iraq in 2003? What evidence is there for his view? How might
you find more information on this subject? Do you agree with Klare?
Why or why not?
4.
Why has there been a growing disagreement between Iran and
the U.S. and its allies?
5.
What have been the global consequences for oil prices? If
disagreement turned into armed conflict, what might be the global
consequences for oil prices and supplies?
6.
What does Klare view as the basic choices the U.S. now faces
because of its oil addiction?
7.
How do you explain the lobbying activities of oil and gas
companies? Why do you suppose that lobbying by environmental organizations
is much weaker?
Student
Reading 3:
Conclusion--the oil addiction and where it might
lead
Samsø is a Danish island about the size of Nantucket with
4,300 inhabitants. For the past 10 years or so, writes investigative
reporter Elizabeth Kolbert, it "has been the site of an unlikely
social movement. When it began
.most Samsingers heated their
houses with oil, which was brought in on tankers. They used electricity
imported from the mainland via cable, much of which was generated
by burning coal. As a result, each Samsinger put into the atmosphere,
on average, nearly eleven tons of carbon dioxide annually.
"Then,
quite deliberately, the residents of the island set about changing
this. They formed energy cooperatives and organized seminars on
wind power. They removed their furnaces and replaced them with
heat pumps. By 2001, fossil-fuel use on Samsø had been
cut in half. By 2003, instead of importing electricity, the island
was exporting it, and by 2006 it was producing from renewable
sources more energy than it was using."
It
all began in 1997 when the Danish Ministry of Environment and
Energy sponsored a renewable-energy contest. To enter, a community
had to present a plan to wean itself from fossil fuel dependence.
After discussions with Samsø's mayor, an engineer who did
not even live on the island but thought it a likely place for
the project devised a plan that won the contest.
Samsingers
were surprised but not especially interested. "Besides its
designation as Denmark's 'renewable-energy island,' Samsø
received basically nothing--no prize money or special tax breaks,
or even government assistance." But a few islanders, among
them Soren Hermansen, liked the idea. Hermansen had lived on the
island his entire life, farming and teaching environmental studies
at a local boarding school. He became the project's only employee
when some federal money was found to staff one position.
Progress
was very slow. Months stretched into several years. Hermansen
attended meetings on local issues and talked about the project
every chance he got. "He asked Samsingers to think about
what it would be like to work together on something they could
all be proud of. Occasionally, he brought free beer along to the
discussions. Meanwhile, he began trying to enlist the support
of the island's opinion leaders
.As more people got involved,
that prompted others to do so. After a while, enough Samsingers
were participating that participation became the norm."
The
results: large land-based and offshore wind turbines as well as
micro-wind turbines. "The land-based turbines are a hundred
and fifty feet tall, with rotors that are eighty feet long. Together,
they produce some twenty-six million kilowatt-hours a year, which
is just about enough to meet all the island's demands for electricity."
The
even-taller offshore turbines "were erected to compensate
for Samsø's continuing use of fossil fuels in its cars,
trucks, and ferries. Their combined output of around eighty million
kilowatt hours a year provides the energy equivalent of all the
gasoline and diesel oil consumed on the island, and then some
Samsø
generates about ten percent more power than it consumes."
Money for the turbines came from a few wealthy Samsinger investors
as well as a collective of some hundreds of Samsingers.
Hermansen
said the only major disappointment in the Samsø effort
was the resistance of Samsingers to reducing their consumption
of energy. And yet environmentalists have pointed out that cutting
consumption is by far the most effective and cheapest way to shrink
our "carbon footprint."
Still,
Samsø's bottom-up approach to energy independence was hugely
successful overall. Asked what other communities might learn from
Samsø, Hermansen said, "I think we as a nation should
be part of the global consciousness. But each individual cannot
be part of that. So 'Think globally, act locally' is the key message
for us."
A key
message for the rest of us: Former Saudi Arabian oil minister
Sheikh Yamani once said, "the Stone Age didn't end because
there were no more stones. It ended because people became more
intelligent."
James
Hanson, NASA's chief climate scientist, has been warning about
the dangers of global warming for twenty years. He now warns that
"there would be no practical way to prevent "disastrous"
climate change unless the next President and Congress act quickly
to curb emissions.
"Few
parts of the U.S. may be as windy as Samsø
but just
about everywhere there are possibilities for generating energy
more inventively and using it more intelligently. Realizing these
possibilities will require a great deal of effort. We may well
decide not to make this effort. Such a choice to put off change,
however, will merely drive us toward it," concludes Elizabeth
Kolbert. ("The Island in the Wind," The New Yorker,
7/14/08)
For
discussion
1.
What questions do students have about the reading? How might
they be answered?
2.
What do you regard as the key factors in Samsø's adoption
of wind power as its
chief source of energy? "He asked Samsingers to think about
what it would be
like to work together on something they could all be proud of,"
Kolbert writes.
Why can such an appeal be effective? Why was the support of "opinion
leaders"
important?
3.
Land-based turbines meet all of Samsø's electricity
needs, so why did the island
people also build offshore turbines?
4.
What would be an example of thinking globally and acting locally?
5.
What evidence can you offer to support Sheikh Hamani's comment?
To refute it?
6.
Explain Kolbert's final sentence.
For
brainstorming
To help students see that they are not the first generation to
confront and create solutions for serious problems, conduct a
ten-minute brainstorming session.
Possible
question: What is one pre-twentieth century problem that an earlier
generations solved?
Discuss:
What do you know about any cooperative effort that made the solution
possible? If you don't know, how might you find out?
(For
a classic example, see on the Ideas & Essays section of www.teachablemoment.org
Changing
the World: Two Books by Adam Hochschild." The two books
provide detailed accounts of how small groups of people working
together were responsible for ending Britain's slave trade and
the murderous brutality of Belgium's treatment of the Congo people.)
For
interviewing
Have
students interview one or both of their parents or grandparents
on innovations and solutions to problems that they may have been
involved in during some point in their lives. Help students to
frame the questions. Students might take notes during and after
the interviews, organize them and report to the class on their
findings. Sample questions: Have you ever worked with a group
to change something in your town? Your country? The world? How
did the group start? What did the group do?
For
writing and discussion
Ask
students to write about one of the following questions. Then have
students discuss their responses in small groups, and later with
the whole class.
1.
What is one way that your school could be made better? How
might this change be brought about?
2.
What is one way that your town or city could be a better place
to live in. How might this change be brought about?
For
inquiry
Individually
or in small groups, ask students to frame and than have approved
a question with which to begin an investigation into one of the
following:
1.
Everyday energy efficiency measures
2. Solar power
3. Wind power
4. Geothermal power
5. Wave power
6. Hydrogen fuel cells
7. Vehicle energy efficiency
8. Cleaner coal
This
lesson was written for TeachableMoment.Org, a project of Morningside
Center for Teaching Social Responsibility. We
welcome
your comments. Please email author Alan Shapiro at: ashapiro7@comcast.net.
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