home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT0386>
- <title>
- Feb. 18, 1991: The Energy Mess
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Feb. 18, 1991 The War Comes Home
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 40
- The Energy Mess
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In the new plan the White House is about to unveil, Bush offers
- half a loaf: a boost for domestic oil drilling, short shrift
- for conservation
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Jerome Cramer and Michael
- Duffy/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Some lessons are hard to learn. Three times in the past two
- decades, the U.S. has been burned by its unbridled appetite for
- energy and its dependence on foreign oil. First came the OPEC
- embargo in response to the Arab-Israeli war of 1973. Iran
- administered the second oil shock six years later. Both
- episodes produced some national hand-wringing and a spate of
- conservation measures that cut imports in half between 1977,
- their peak year, and 1985. But when world oil prices collapsed
- in 1986, the nation's per capita oil consumption began to
- climb again, the fuel efficiency of American cars slid
- downward, and oil imports returned to the levels of the 1970s.
- </p>
- <p> Now comes the bill for that profligacy. U.S. troops are
- fighting a war spurred at least partly by fear that Saddam
- Hussein's seizure of Kuwait would give him decisive control
- over the Middle East's oil. With the real cost of energy
- dependency--in both dollars and lives--more apparent than
- ever, Americans may at last be receptive to a durable energy
- plan. And George Bush is prepared to lead them to it, but only
- halfway.
- </p>
- <p> Next week the President is expected to unveil a national
- energy policy that will favor increased use of natural gas and
- nuclear power and stepped-up oil exploration--including a
- controversial proposal to drill in the Arctic National Wildlife
- Refuge. But the plan is almost certain to ignore any
- significant steps to promote conservation. Most notably,
- although automobiles, buses and trucks account for two-thirds
- of U.S. oil use, the program is expected to shun the two most
- effective means to put the brakes on fuel consumption: a hike
- in the gas tax and a higher federal fuel-efficiency standard
- for U.S. autos.
- </p>
- <p> Nearly two years have passed since Bush asked Energy
- Secretary James Watkins to shape a plan. Watkins, former head
- of Ronald Reagan's commission on AIDS, conducted 18 public
- hearings and waded through 22,000 pages of written comments
- from individuals and organizations. From these, he culled
- dozens of proposals, which he forwarded late last year to the
- White House's Economic Policy Council, where many of them were
- handled like incoming Scuds, shot down quickly before they
- could have any impact.
- </p>
- <p> The big gunners were three White House aides: Budget
- Director Richard Darman, White House chief of staff John Sununu
- and Michael Boskin, chairman of the Council of Economic
- Advisers. The troika treated most measures that would compel
- conservation as unwarranted government interference in the free
- market. "Watkins' proposals just got blasted by Sununu, Darman
- and Boskin," says a White House official. "They just tore them
- apart."
- </p>
- <p> The plan the President will make public preserves mostly
- those Energy Department suggestions that suit the
- Administration's step-on-the-gas philosophy. The most
- controversial by far will be a call for Congress to permit oil
- exploration in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, an
- ecologically sensitive area that has been closed to drilling
- since it was established in 1960. Environmental groups, fearing
- irreversible damage to the ecosystem, are promising to fight
- that proposal with an all-out campaign that could turn into
- this year's version of the bitter Robert Bork confirmation
- battle. "We'll fight to the end," says Sierra Club spokesman
- Marty Hayden. "There's no compromise on ANWR."
- </p>
- <p> The White House plan is also expected to include proposals
- to streamline the licensing of natural-gas pipelines and
- nuclear plants. One idea is to decrease the number of public
- hearings required before a license is granted. In another boost
- to the nation's moribund nuclear-power industry--one that is
- sure to raise the hackles of antinuclear activists and state
- lawmakers--the plan proposes to cut states out of the
- approval process when selecting sites for storing nuclear
- waste.
- </p>
- <p> At most, alternative-energy sources will be given only
- modest gestures of support, including extension of tax
- incentives for solar and geothermal-energy investments. The
- conservation measures that survived the White House triage are
- even more modest. Most likely to be included are tax breaks for
- builders of energy-efficient homes and office buildings and
- energy-efficiency labeling requirements for products.
- </p>
- <p> Even many Administration officials concede that any serious
- effort to cut oil consumption would have to be built around an
- increased gas tax. But the President, a former Texas oilman,
- won't hear of it. The White House fears that higher gas prices
- could put downward pressure on an economy already in recession.
- Bush is also mindful of the potential cost to his popularity.
- He remembers all too vividly how his standing in the polls
- plunged during the federal budget fight last autumn, when he
- mishandled the budget deal that resulted in a nickel-a-gallon
- gas-tax increase.
- </p>
- <p> Congressional Democrats are blaming Bush for a failure of
- leadership. "The President could call for a 10 cents- or 15
- cents-per-gal. tax on gasoline, and the American people would
- back him all the way," says Michigan Democrat John Dingell,
- chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee. "He could
- call it a tax to support our war effort, and it would rally the
- nation."
- </p>
- <p> But given American resistance to new taxes, Democrats may
- simply be asking the President to walk the plank ahead of them.
- Republican pollster Robert Teeter has provided the White House
- with data showing that a gas tax is especially unpopular with
- so-called Reagan Democrats, the blue-collar swing voters whom
- Bush needs for re-election in 1992. "Cheap fuel is part of our
- standard of living," says oil expert Robert Bradley of the Cato
- Institute, a Washington-based think tank. "You can force
- Americans to drive small, unsafe cars, pay $5 per gallon for
- gas, and force the poor to abandon their automobiles. But
- Americans don't want that."
- </p>
- <p> Legislative strategy is another reason why conservation
- measures were neglected in the plan. The President's proposals
- are merely a first move in what is sure to be a lengthy
- tug-of-war with Congress. Sununu and Darman were concerned that
- the opening bid not be too generous. That's the mistake they
- feel Bush made in his initial version of last year's Clean Air
- Act, which gave Congress the chance to make the law
- significantly tougher and more expensive during a year of
- negotiations.
- </p>
- <p> The counterbids are already appearing in Congress, where two
- dozen energy-related bills are circulating, including several
- that would require higher fuel-efficiency levels. One that was
- introduced in the Senate last week by Nevada Democrat Richard
- Bryan and Washington Republican Slade Gorton would oblige U.S.
- automakers to increase the current 27.5-m.p.g. average
- fuel-efficiency standard to 34 m.p.g. within five years and to
- 44 m.p.g. within a decade. Supporters are confident they have
- the votes to win. A similar measure was defeated in the Senate
- last year.
- </p>
- <p> Predicting the final shape of an energy plan is tricky.
- Energy politics don't divide along party lines. When the time
- comes to vote, liberal Democrats from oil-patch states, like
- Oklahoma Congressman Mike Synar, tend to line up with the
- petroleum industry. Detroit Democrats like Congressman Dingell
- back away from fuel-efficiency standards that are opposed by
- hometown automakers. And defenders of the environment can still
- turn up on both sides of the aisle. On Aug. 4, two days after
- the invasion of Kuwait, the House voted 281 to 82 effectively
- to ban for one year any drilling for natural gas along North
- Carolina's Outer Banks, one of the nation's largest untapped
- energy reserves.
- </p>
- <p> Any effective national energy plan must contain two strands:
- increased domestic energy production and more efficient
- consumption. The President is tugging at the production strand.
- Congress appears to be groping toward the other. The question
- is whether they can weave them together and give the country
- the leadership it urgently needs on this vital issue.
- </p>
- <p>BUSH'S PLAN
- </p>
- <p> FUEL CONSUMPTION
- </p>
- <p> The plan will make no mention of the two most effective
- measures to reduce gas consumption: higher taxes at the pump
- and a federally mandated increase in the fuel efficiency of new
- cars.
- </p>
- <p> OIL EXPLORATION
- </p>
- <p> The White House wants to open up 1.5 million acres of the
- 19 million-acre Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil
- drilling, a prospect that enrages environmentalists. The plan
- may also call for an examination of potential offshore drilling
- sites.
- </p>
- <p> NUCLEAR POWER
- </p>
- <p> Look for a controversial simplification of the process for
- licensing nuclear power plants. At present, one public hearing
- is required before a plant can be built, and another before it
- can begin operation. The White House wants to eliminate the
- second hearing.
- </p>
- <p> ALTERNATIVE SOURCES
- </p>
- <p> Expect stingy support for the development of substitutes for
- coal, oil and nuclear power. One possibility: continuing tax
- incentives for solar- and geothermal-energy investments--but
- only after a project actually produces energy, not, as now, in
- the start-up phase.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-