Drilling
Ourselves
Deep In a
Hole
By Firmin
DeBrabander
21/07/08
"ICH" -- - At
one point in
his
masterful
People’s
History of
the United
States,
Howard Zinn
reflects
upon the
unspeakable
carnage
wrought by
the
Conquistadors
in South and
Central
America, all
in the
pursuit of
gold, and
wonders at
how those
obscene
riches
sustained
imperial
greatness…
for barely a
hundred
years. All
that
bloodletting,
enslavement,
massacres --
genocide in
places --
for a
temporary
wealth that
quickly
vanished on
the stage of
history.
It reminds
me of our
current oil
craze: in
one century
we have
plundered
billions of
years of
stored
hydrocarbons,
and what do
we have to
show for it?
Fleeting
prosperity—one
that is
hardly
shared by
all—a highly
volatile
Middle East,
and awesome
ecological
devastation
that will
require
centuries of
recovery.
And now, as
the age of
oil finally
signals its
inevitable
demise, our
president
and his
allies in
Washington
announce
that their
grand
response is
… to drill
for more
oil.
Congress and
the
president
are of
course
reacting to
public
hysteria
from rising
prices at
the pump.
But
expanding
domestic
drilling is
an inane
proposal.
Actually, it
is reckless
and tragic.
Until this
week,
Washington
has largely
chosen to
ignore the
real reason
behind the
dramatic
rise in oil
prices.
Congress
ripped Wall
Street
speculators
for driving
up the price
of a barrel,
but
economists
have long
agreed that
the major
culprit is
increasing
demand in
China, India
and the
developing
world.
Congress now
appears to
have
realized
that global
demand is
the problem;
however,
this is a
problem that
cannot be
drilled
away. Any
increase in
global oil
supply is
destined to
be quickly
outpaced by
skyrocketing
energy
demands.
Domestic
drilling can
only
diminish gas
prices if
that supply
were
guaranteed
for domestic
use alone.
This appears
to be the
underlying
assumption
of the
current
congressional
push for
expanded
domestic
drilling.
And it is
laughable.
Contracts
for drilling
in Alaska
and off our
coasts will
likely go to
US-based
firms, like
Exxon or
Conoco,
which are
also
transnational
corporations,
and thus, in
no way
compelled to
restrict
retail to
the US
market. If
expanded
domestic
drilling
succeeds in
lowering our
gas prices
-- even
marginally
-- five
years from
now, while
gas prices
abroad
remain
robust, we
all know
well where
Exxon will
shop its
Alaskan
crude.
This call to
expand
domestic
drilling is
again the
temptation
to delay the
inevitable:
the
transition
to renewable
energy and
sustainable
lifestyles.
Oil is
ecologically
condemned,
but also
economically
condemned,
for it is a
limited
resource:
its
inevitable
destiny is
to become
more
expensive—and
then run
out.
Accordingly,
those
nations that
best prepare
themselves
for a
post-petroleum
world will
be best
positioned
economically
for the
future.
In Belgium
recently,
where gas
flutters
around nine
dollars a
gallon, I
was
impressed
that people
hardly
complain.
Belgians do
complain
about
Americans,
however, and
our frenzied
reaction to
fuel prices
that are
still less
than half
what they
pay.
Belgians
have long
gotten used
to high fuel
prices. And
they have
long
adjusted to
them.
Belgian
towns, even
the newer
neighborhoods,
are compact
and walkable;
they are
crossed and
interconnected
by competent
public
transportation.
Sidewalks
and bike
paths line
the roads,
which are
populated by
all manner
of tiny cars
such as we
hardly see
in the US.
Europeans
are already
prepared for
oil scarcity
– and demise
even, as the
famed
Autobahn in
Germany is
now lined
with solar
panels.
There is
little sense
that the
powers that
run this
country are
similarly
forward
thinking.
Five years
later, it is
now apparent
that the war
in Iraq was
largely
spearheaded
by this
administration
to secure an
enduring
source of
oil. I do
not have
space here
to review
the ample
evidence
supporting
this. It is
enough to
cite the
shamefully
generous
long term
contracts
for western
oil
companies in
Iraq that
are now
coming to
light.
In his
latest book,
former World
Bank
director
Joseph
Stiglitz
claims that
the war in
Iraq will
end up
costing
three
trillion
dollars.
Imagine if
that amount
had been
dedicated to
researching
and
sustaining
the
transition
to renewable
energies. A
mere
trillion
dollars
would have
gone a long
way towards
remodeling
American
suburbia for
lifestyle
and
transportation
changes such
as I
witnessed in
Belgium.
Instead, we
have
sacrificed
unimaginable
funds (from
future
generations,
Stiglitz
tells us),
and tens of
thousands of
lives (at
least) for a
resource
that is soon
to be
economically
irrelevant!
In this
light, this
administration’s
Iraqi
venture is
shockingly
shortsighted.
And now, in
proposing
that we
sully
pristine
Alaskan
wilds and
our fragile
coastal
shelves in
the name of
oil, the
White House
threatens to
keep living
its lie.
China is
undertaking
a massive
initiative
to install
solar
powered
water
heaters on
urban homes;
Brazil
provides 40%
of its
domestic
fuel use
from
homegrown
sugarcane
ethanol. We,
on the other
hand, aim to
squeeze more
oil from a
taxed
planet, and
further
entrench
ourselves in
our sorry
addiction.
This
nation’s
repeated
gambles on
oil will
likely cost
American
prosperity—and
superiority—in
the 21st
century.
Firmin
DeBrabander,
Assistant
Professor of
Philosophy,
Maryland
Institute
College of
Art
