Here's an interesting article about what's gone wrong with US energy policy over the past 25 years:
Even as politicians heatedly debate opening new regions to drilling, corralling energy speculators, or starting an Apollo-like effort to find renewable energy supplies, analysts say the real source of the problem is closer to home. In fact, it's parked in our driveways.Nearly 70 percent of the 21 million barrels of oil the United States consumes every day goes for transportation, with the bulk of that burned by individual drivers, according to the National Commission on Energy Policy, a bipartisan research group that advises Congress.
The article focuses on policy failures in Washington:
Although the road to $4 gasoline and increased oil dependence has been paved in places like Detroit, Houston and Riyadh, it runs through Washington as well, where policy makers have let the problem make lengthy pit stops."Much of what we're seeing today could have been prevented or ameliorated had we chosen to act differently," says Pete V. Domenici, the ranking Republican member of the Senate Energy and Natural Resource's Committee and a 36-year veteran of the Senate. "It was a bipartisan failure to act."
Mike Jackson, the chief executive of AutoNation, the country's biggest automobile retailer, is even more blunt. "It was totally preventable," he says, anger creeping into his affable car-salesman's pitch.
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Tags: crude futures, crude oil, gas crisis, oil, oil policy
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