The following is an article by Frank G. Zarb, head of a private US
equity firm, who was assistant to the president for energy affairs in
the Ford administration, published on May 23: "With prices hitting
yet another all-time high, consider this: While history is littered with
examples of countries that were forced to change their domestic and
foreign policies because of the lack of a natural resource, there are
very few notable instances of nations that had the ability to eliminate
such a vulnerability but didn't. America's current energy
condition, however, is a spectacular example of such a failure.
"Consider four facts: No. 1: The United States is very
vulnerable to the interruption of its imported oil supply. No. 2: This
dependence on oil has a huge effect on the country's foreign,
military and economic policies. No. 3: America could have reduced its
vulnerability if it had taken decisive action after the 1973 Arab oil
embargo. (In 1973 the US imported 35% of its oil; today that figure is
over 60%). No. 4: The United States has never adopted a credible plan to
reduce its dependency principally because of a lack of political will.
"Back in 1975, President Gerald Ford used his State of the
Union message to inform Americans how dangerous their growing dependence
on foreign oil was: 'We, the United States, are not blameless. Our
growing dependence upon foreign sources has been adding to our
vulnerability for years and years, and we did nothing to prepare
ourselves for such an event as the embargo of 1973'. But he did
more than fret. He had a plan. 'Within the next 10 years', he
announced, 'my program envisions 200 major nuclear power plants,
250 major new coal mines, 150 major coal-fired power plants, 30 major
new refineries, 20 major new synthetic fuel plants, the drilling of many
thousands of new wells, the insulation of 18 million homes and the
manufacturing and sale of millions of new automobiles, trucks and buses
that use much less fuel'.
"It was clear that Ford's initiatives would materially
reduce dependence on oil imports, but would also increase consumer
energy costs and raise important environmental problems. Liberals
complained about 'excessive' new energy production efforts,
and the right about the heavy hand of government. While the Congress
debated, the normal oil supply from the Middle East resumed and prices
came down. Congressional economists put forward new arguments on what
they believed to be the appropriate pricing of crude oil as reasons to
avoid the harsh medicine Ford advocated. But there were two major flaws
in these pricing models, which have bedeviled US energy policies ever
since. First, OPEC has a very different idea of what is
'appropriate'. Second, the normal laws of supply and demand
did not apply.
"Supply is determined by how many barrels of oil producers are
willing to pump, refine and transport at any given time. And this is
affected more by international politics and less by international
economics. The price volatility caused by this unique market has long
caused business to limit its investment in new, higher-cost energy
supplies.
"In response, the Ford administration studied various ways to
institute a floor price for oil and guarantee an annual price escalation
over 15 to 20 years. The thinking here was that if business could depend
on a predetermined escalation of prices, it would make the necessary
investment in production and conservation technology. Interesting
concept, but again the liberals roared with outrage and the
conservatives laughed at such meddling with the economy. The idea went
nowhere.
"A few modest measures from the Ford program were passed by
Congress, including the strategic petroleum reserve, which stockpiles
oil in case the Middle Eastern spigot gets shut off, and having
retailers label appliances for energy efficiency and automobiles for
mileage. But, obviously, this was far short of what was necessary.
"In a fit of frustration, I asked Senator Henry Jackson, the
Washington Democrat who headed the Senate Energy Committee, what we
needed to do to reawaken Congressional interest. He asked me if I knew
how to start another Arab embargo. He was right. Without a crisis, a
real national energy program could not get past normal political
paralysis. The Ford initiative was the last real national attempt to
reduce our vulnerability.
"Jimmy Carter talked the talk, calling our energy situation
the 'moral equivalent of war'. But his only real
accomplishment was the Synthetic Fuels Corporation, which was supposed
to spearhead research into energy alternatives but quickly became a
multibillion-dollar boondoggle.
"Ronald Reagan offered a package of tax incentives for
domestic oil and gas production and, wisely, dismantled the Synthetic
Fuels Corporation, but that was about it. George H. W. Bush, Bill
Clinton and now George W. Bush followed with proposals to open more
public land for domestic oil production, to create tax subsidies for
ethanol, to mandate more fuel-efficient automobiles and other research
and development programs - none of which can or will have a substantial
impact on oil imports.
"So here we are, 30 years later, with oil prices higher than
ever and greater dependence on imported oil. Since one of the current
presidential candidates will inherit this mess, shouldn't we ask
each of them to spell out the details of his or her energy plan?
I'll lay out some ground rules.
"Any credible strategy needs to reduce oil consumption and
increase other energy supplies. All of the measures in the plan need to
add up to a significant reduction in imported oil in the relatively near
term, say, within 10 to 12 years. I have a few suggestions.
"First, gasoline prices must send the right signals to change
consumer driving and car-buying behavior. For many years there have been
arguments about a gasoline tax of 10 cents or 20 cents per gallon. And
now we are seeing price changes in that range from week to week. But the
driving public believes that such price increases are temporary, so
driving behavior doesn't really change. And long-term car purchase
decisions aren't based upon perceived short-term price
fluctuations.
"To ensure that price signals are consistent and clear, we
could levy a truly substantial gasoline tax - something like 50 cents
per gallon to start, followed by 50 cent increases in each of the
following three years - with rebates for lower-income taxpayers. The
revenue from this levy could be used to pay for tax credits for
fuel-efficient autos. We should also have automakers improve their
corporate average fleet economy - commonly called CAFE standards - by at
least 4 percent per year. Increasing tax incentives for the production
and purchase of alternative-fuel vehicles would also help.
"The other major way to wean us from oil is to resume
construction of nuclear power plants. Nuclear energy is the cleanest and
best option for America's electric power supply, yet it has been
stalled by decades of unproductive debate. Our current commercial
nuclear power plants have an outstanding record of safety and security,
and new designs will only raise performance.
"How can Washington help? One thing would be federal
legislation to streamline the licensing of new plants and the approval
of sites for them. The basic elements of a responsible energy policy are
not complicated, but the politics are horrendous. Still, we can't
continue to throw empty rhetoric at the issue, using the oil companies
as political punching bags and relying on our troops to keep the oil
flowing.
"I once told President Ford that some of our energy proposals
were angering both Democrats and Republicans. His reply: 'We must
have it just right!' If only the presidential candidates could show
the same sort of courage".
Baghdad To Auction 15 E&P Blocks: Visiting India, Oil Minister
Shahristani on May 25 said Iraq's petroleum law would be passed by
parliament within the next two month. Fayadh Hassan Nima, the Oil
Ministry's director general of studies and planning, told reporters
Baghdad planned to auction 15 oil and gas blocks to IOCs once the law
becomes final, saying: "We are preparing a plan for 15 fields and
blocks for the first round of auctioning after the approval of the new
oil and gas law".
Nima said Baghdad planned to invite Indian oil companies to build
two refineries each with a capacity of 100,000 b/d, without elaborating
on which companies might be invited. He said Iraq currently had 750,000
b/d of refining capacity and the country planned to double this in the
next 10 years.
However, the Iraqi oil unions are threatening to strike if foreign
companies are given too much access. And last month more than 60 Iraqi
oil experts wrote a letter to PM Maliki urging the government to wait
until the security situation improved and constitutional issues were
resolved. Nima said a self-imposed end-May deadline to pass the law was
likely to be missed.
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