Lagniappe
Kelpie
Wilson: Dance
of the oil fairies
On April Fools' Day, the House Select Committee on Energy Independence
and Global Warming invited executives from the five biggest US
oil companies to answer questions about high gas prices, oil
company profits and the future of oil. Executives from Exxon,
Shell, BP America, Chevron and ConocoPhillips responded to a
battery of questions from committee members who ranged from strongly
skeptical to downright sycophantic (all the sycophants were Republicans).
Even the
most hard-hitting questioners, however, failed to pin the execs
down on the real issue, which is how to convince
an oil industry that is running up against absolute supply limits
to switch gears and invest resources in what Rep. Jay Inslee
(D-Washington) called the "clean energy revolution." With
practiced facility, the oil execs danced around the question
and reconfirmed their commitment to the relentless pursuit of
hydrocarbons in any form, no matter how dirty or expensive to
extract.
Committee
Chair Ed Markey opened with the observation that today the
poorest 20 percent of Americans are spending 10 percent
of their income on gasoline, while oil company profits have quadrupled
in the past six years. Markey said that much of this profit was
wasted last year and alleged that the five companies spent $50
billion on what he called "financial engineering" to
prop up the price of their stock.
Markey called on the companies to consider the plight of the
poorest Americans and pledge 10 percent of their profits to renewable
energy investments. He also asked them to stop opposing the renewable
energy legislation passed by the House (but not yet by the Senate)
that would shift $18 billion in tax breaks for oil over to support
renewable energy.
J. Stephen
Simon, senior vice president for Exxon, responded that the
oil industry needs the profits it makes in good years
to carry it through the bad years. He stressed the cyclical nature
of the oil business, citing the oil price spike in 1980 that
reached over $100 a barrel in today's dollars. He said the prediction
at that time was for oil to go to over $250 a barrel in today's
dollars, but it never did. By the mid 1980s, prices had fallen
dramatically and the industry was "in dire straits." That
could happen again, he implied.
John Hofmeister,
president of Shell Oil Company, seemed more connected to the
reality of oil today. He called the energy supply
and demand outlook "sobering," acknowledging that "demand
is increasing unrelentingly." He said that he agreed with
Chairman Markey that the country needs a Manhattan Project or
Apollo-style project to develop new energy sources. Shell supports
a cap and trade system to reduce carbon emissions, and Hofmeister
said, "We must work now to address CO2 emissions as we make
the transition from fossil fuels to new energy sources." But
while giving lip service to climate issues, Shell is also making
major investments in the most carbon-intensive energy sources:
Canadian tar sands, US oil shale and coal gasification technologies.
Peter Robertson
of Chevron acknowledged that "the system
is straining" to provide oil for increasing consumption.
He called for "urgent action" and increased efficiency
to moderate demand. Between 2007 and 2008, Chevron plans to spend
$2.5 billion on renewables and energy efficiency services. One
example is a partnership with Weyerhauser Corporation to develop
an advanced biofuels project. But Robertson cautioned on the
scale of the challenge to replace fossil fuels. He said, "a
large biofuels plant in the US produces in a year what one of
our refineries produces in a week."
John Lowe
of ConocoPhillips said renewables were not part of their core
business and he would "disavow the concept that
alternatives can be quickly deployed." He said the US is
in a global race with other countries to increase supplies and
warned that "punitive taxes" would "undermine
our capabilities."
Bob Malone
of BP America said, "we support renewable incentives,
but taxing one form of energy to support another will mean less
energy overall." BP is nearly doubling the capacity of its
Maryland solar photovoltaic plant and investing in next-generation
biofuels that do not use a food crop, he said.
During the
two-and-a-half-hour hearing, the oil executives repeatedly
referred to a study by the National Petroleum Council
released last July called "Facing the Hard Truths about
Energy." This study maintains that oil, gas and coal will
continue to dominate the energy mix in 2030, with renewables
playing only a small part. The execs used this conclusion to
dance around the need for rapid deployment of renewables, saying
their study shows you can't get there from here.
Energy analyst
Tom Whipple has disparaged the petroleum industry's study,
saying: "The NPC artfully camouflaged the enormous
near-term challenges in producing sufficient oil and gas to fuel
the global economy. Hard truths are hinted at but never clearly
identified. Troubling trends are referenced, but their ramifications
are dodged."
In the course
of the hearing, only one Congressional representative actually
uttered the words "peak oil." Jerry McNerney
(the Democratic wind energy consultant who defeated arch anti-green
California Congressman Richard Pombo in 2006) asked the oil executives
if they thought opening up Alaska and offshore areas to oil development
would make much difference in the timing of peak oil.
Shell Oil's
Hofmeister quickly responded that he did "not
subscribe to peak oil" and that Shell believes that world
oil production will rise from the current 85 million barrels
a day to the 110 to 115 million barrels needed to meet future
demand. He said peak oil theory is "based on very narrow
assumptions" that do not include unconventional oil sources
like the Canadian tar sands.
Chairman Markey continued to sharpen his sword for Exxon, the
oil company that has made the most profits and invested the least
in renewable energy. He extracted from J. Stephen Simon the information
that Exxon's investments in renewable energy amount to only about
one-half of one percent of its revenue.
Jay Inslee
of Washington pursued the matter of Exxon's investments further.
He pointed to the global warming challenge that will
require reducing emissions 80 percent below present levels by
2050 and said to Simon, "If your company continues on its
present course, it will fall several hundred orders of magnitude
short of what we must to do to prevent cataclysmic global climate
changeÉif you don't put research dollars into it, where
are these new technologies going to come from? The oil fairies?"
Inslee asked
Simon to consider a study done at Stanford called "A
Renewable Energy Solution to Global Warming" by Mark Jacobson.
The study concluded that the US could replace all of its vehicles
with battery electric vehicles powered by 71,000 to 122,000 five
megawatt wind turbines. Building those turbines would be the
industrial equivalent of building all the aircraft used in World
War II. It could be done.
"Wouldn't you agree," he asked Simon, "that
this vision from Stanford is one the US really needs? With your
pathetically small research budget, we are not going to get there."
Inslee said
that Simon's testimony had made him even more determined to
act. Addressing Simon again, he said: "I don't see things
changing, and obviously we've got to change you by changing this
tax policy."
While Big Oil fights any reduction in its subsidized tax breaks,
the struggling renewable energy industry is facing a catastrophe
as its small but vital production and investment tax credits
expire at the end of 2008. Already the lack of certainty is constraining
investment.
Renewable energy lobbyist Scott Sklar of the Stella Group said
that the industry is seeing job losses and market moves into
Europe and out of the US. He expects that even if Congress manages
to pass a temporary one-year extension of the subsidies, the
industry will still lose 20,000 jobs and utility-scale renewable
projects will stop.
Jens Søby, president of Vestas Americas, a wind turbine
manufacturer, said, "An extension of the federal Production
Tax Credit is crucial, as it will enable investments in facilities
and jobs in our industry to be fully realized and allow us to
develop our long-term strategies. There is a need for market
stability; for example, when the PTC expired and was not extended
at the end of 2003, the wind industry saw a 77 percent drop in
the annual installation of new wind generating capacity according
to the American Wind Energy Association."
On March 5, 2008, Vestas opened its first North American manufacturing
facility, producing turbine blades in Windsor, Colorado. The
factory will employ 650 people. This kind of news could be repeated
in towns all over the country, but not as long as Bush Republicans
and Big Oil stand in the way.
Where are those oil fairies when you need them?
Kelpie Wilson is Truthout's environment editor. Trained as a mechanical engineer,
she embarked on a career as a forest protection activist, then returned to
engineering as a technical writer for the solar power industry. She is the
author of "Primal Tears," an eco-thriller about a hybrid human-bonobo
girl. Greg Bear, author of "Darwin's Radio," says: "'Primal
Tears' is primal storytelling, thoughtful and passionate. Kelpie Wilson wonderfully
expands our definitions of human and family. Read Leslie Thatcher's review
of Kelpie Wilson's novel "Primal Tears." Petroleumworld
does not necessarily share these views
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