Obama lays out plan to reduce Our dependence on foreign
oil
Petroleumworld
DETROIT
Petroleumworld.com
05 08 07
During
a speech at the Detroit Economic Club, Barack Obama today
proposed a plan to change the cars we drive and the fuels
we use in order to reduce our dependence on foreign oil and
fight the cause of global climate change. By 2020, Obama's
plan will cut our oil consumption by 2.5 million barrels
of oil per day; take 50 million cars' worth of pollution
off the road; save more than $50 billion at the gas pump;
and help the auto industry save millions of jobs and regain
its competitive footing in the world.
Barack Obama's plan focuses on three key components:
1. Fuel Economy Standards: Despite tremendous technological innovation in the
auto industry, Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards for cars have
been held hostage to ideological battles in Washington for 20 years. Barack
Obama introduced a bold new plan, bringing together long-time opponents to
gradually increase fuel economy standards while protecting the financial future
of domestic automakers. Obama's plan would establish a target of four percent
increase each year - unless the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
proves the increase is technologically unachievable, hurts safety, or is not
cost-effective. If the target is met for ten years, Obama's plan will save
1.3 million barrels of oil per day and 20 billion gallons of gasoline per year.
2. Help for Consumers: Under current law, tax credits are available for consumers
who buy hybrids--but only if they buy one of the first 60,000 ultra-efficient
vehicles produced by a given manufacturer. Barack Obama would lift the 60,000-per-manufacturer
cap on buyer tax credits to allow more Americans to buy ultra-efficient vehicles.
3. Help for Manufacturers: U.S. automakers are facing retiree health costs
that add $1,500 to the cost of every GM car. They are struggling to afford
investments in hybrid technology. Obama would encourage automakers to make
fuel-efficient hybrid vehicles by helping the companies shoulder the health
care costs of their retirees. Domestic automakers will get health care assistance
in exchange for investing 50 percent of the savings into technology to produce
more fuel-efficient vehicles. In addition, Obama would provide automakers with
generous tax incentives for retooling assembly plants.
Full text of Obama proposed a plan
America is a country that hasn't come easily. In our brief history, we have
been tested by revolution and slavery, war and depression, and great movements
for social, civil, and equal rights.
We have emerged from each challenge stronger, more prosperous, and ever closer
to the ideals of liberty and opportunity that lay at the heart of the American
experiment.
And yet, the price of our progress has always been borne by the struggle and
sacrifice of our people - by leaders who have asked ordinary Americans to do
extraordinary things; and by generations of men and women who've had the courage
to answer that call.
It was the greatest of all generations that took up this charge in the days
after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Almost overnight, they were asked to transform
a peacetime economy that was still climbing out from the depths of depression
into an Arsenal of Democracy that could wage war across three continents. If
you weren't heading overseas, you were heading into the factories - factories
that had to be immediately retooled and reorganized to produce the world's
greatest fighting machine.
Many doubted whether this could be achieved in time, or even at all. President
Franklin Roosevelt's own advisors told him that his goals for wartime production
were unrealistic and impossible to meet. But the President simply waved them
off, saying, believe me, "the production people can do it if they really
try."
And so the nation turned here, to Detroit, with the hope that the Motor City
could lead the way in using its assembly lines to mass produce arms instead
of automobiles. At first, the industry was skeptical about whether this was
technologically possible or even profitable in the long run. But after repeated
assurances from Roosevelt and some help from the federal government, the arsenal
began to churn.
In an astonishingly short period of time, the auto industry and its workers
became one of the nation's most important contributors to the war effort, manufacturing
more planes, tanks, bombs and weapons than the world had ever seen. The New
York Times declared that the automakers had achieved a "production miracle," and
it labeled Detroit "the Miraculous City."
It was a miracle that was distinctly American - the idea that in the face of
impossible odds, people who love their country can rise to meet its greatest
challenges.
It's the kind of American miracle we need today.
At the dawn of the twenty-first century, the country that faced down the tyranny
of fascism and communism is now called to challenge the tyranny of oil. For
the very resource that has fueled our way of life over the last hundred years
now threatens to destroy it if our generation does not act now and act boldly.
We know what the dangers are here. We know that our oil addiction is jeopardizing
our national security - that we fuel our energy needs by sending $800 million
a day to countries that include some of the most despotic, volatile regimes
in the world.
We know that oil money funds everything from the madrassas that plant the seeds
of terror in young minds to the Sunni insurgents that attack our troops in
Iraq. It corrupts budding democracies, and gives dictators from Venezuela to
Iran the power to freely defy and threaten the international community. It
even presents a target for Osama bin Laden, who has told al Qaeda to, "focus
your operations on oil, especially in Iraq and the Gulf area, since this will
cause (the Americans) to die off on their own."
We know that our oil dependency is jeopardizing our planet as well - that the
fossil fuels we burn are setting off a chain of dangerous weather patterns
that could condemn future generations to global catastrophe. We see the effects
of global climate change in our communities and around the world in record
drought, famine, and forest fires. Hurricanes and typhoons are growing in intensity,
and rapidly melting ice sheets in Antarctica and Greenland could raise global
sea levels high enough to swallow up large portions of every coastal city and
town.
And this city knows better than any what our oil addiction is doing to our
economy. We are held hostage to the spot oil market - forced to watch our fortunes
rise and fall with the changing price of every barrel. Gas prices have risen
to record levels, and could hit $4 a gallon in some cities this summer. Here
in Detroit, three giants of American industry are hemorrhaging jobs and profits
as foreign competitors answer the rising global demand for fuel-efficient cars.
America simply cannot continue on this path. The need to drastically change
our energy policy is no longer a debatable proposition. It is not a question
of whether, but how; not a question of if, but when. For the sake of our security,
our economy, our jobs and our planet, the age of oil must end in our time.
This is a challenge that has not been solved for a lack of talking. Every single
President since Richard Nixon has spoken in soaring rhetoric about the need
to reduce America's energy dependence, and many have offered plans and policies
to do so.
And yet, every year, that dependence keeps on growing. Good ideas are crushed
under the weight of typical Washington politics. Politicians are afraid to
ask the oil and auto industries to do their part, and those industries hire
armies of lobbyists to make sure it stays that way. Autoworkers, understandably
fearful of losing jobs, and wise to the tendency of having to pay the price
of management's mistakes, join in the resistance to change. The rest of us
whip ourselves into a frenzy whenever gas prices skyrocket or a crisis like
Katrina takes oil off the market, but once the headlines recede, so does our
motivation to act.
There's a reason for this.
A clean, secure energy future will take another American miracle. It will require
a historic effort on the scale of what we saw in those factories during World
War II. It will require tough choices by our government, sacrifice from our
businesses, innovation from our brightest minds, and the sustained commitment
of the American people.
It will also take leadership willing to turn the page on the can't-do, won't-do,
won't-even try politics of the past. Leadership willing to face down the doubters
and the cynics and simply say, "Believe me, we can do it if we really
try."
I will be that kind of President - a President who believes again in America
that can. A President who believes that when it comes to energy, the challenge
may be great and the road may be long, but the time to act is now; who knows
that we have the technology, we have the resources, and we are at a rare moment
of growing consensus among Democrats and Republicans, unions and CEOs, evangelical
Christians and military experts who understand that this must be our generation's
next great task.
A comprehensive energy plan will require bold action on many fronts. To fully
combat global climate change, we'll need a stringent cap on all carbon emissions
and the creation of a global market that would make the development of low-carbon
technologies profitable and create thousands of new jobs. We'll also need to
find a way to use coal - America's most abundant fossil fuel - without adding
harmful greenhouse gases to the environment.
I have already endorsed a cap-and-trade system that would achieve real near-term
reductions in greenhouse gas emissions and return America to a position of
leadership so that we can secure an effective and equitable global solution
to this crisis. It would invest substantial revenue generated by auctioning
off emissions credits into the development of carbon sequestration, advanced
biofuels, and energy efficiency.
We'll also need new ideas on energy efficiency and the ability to harness renewable
sources of energy, because there is absolutely no reason we shouldn't be able
to get at least 20% of our energy from clean and renewable sources by 2020.
I will be laying out more detailed proposals on each of these areas in the
months to come. But here in Detroit, I want to focus on a few proposals that
would drastically reduce our oil dependence and our carbon emissions by focusing
on two of their major causes - the cars we drive and the fuels we use. By 2020,
these proposals would save us 2.5 million barrels of oil per day - the equivalent
of ending all oil imports from the Middle East and removing 50 million cars'
worth of pollution off the road.
It starts with our cars - because if we truly hope to end the tyranny of oil,
the nation must once again turn to Detroit for another great transformation.
I
know these are difficult times for automakers, and I know that
not all of the industry's problems are of its own making.
But we have to be honest about how we arrived at this point.
For years, while foreign competitors were investing in more fuel-efficient
technology for their vehicles, American automakers were spending their time
investing in bigger, faster cars. And whenever an attempt was made to raise
our fuel efficiency standards, the auto companies would lobby furiously against
it, spending millions to prevent the very reform that could've saved their
industry. Even as they've shed thousands of jobs and billions in profits over
the last few years, they've continued to reward failure with lucrative bonuses
for CEOs.
The consequences of these choices are now clear. While our fuel standards haven't
moved from 27.5 miles per gallon in two decades, both China and Japan have
surpassed us, with Japanese cars now getting an average of 45 miles to the
gallon.
And as the global demand for fuel-efficient and hybrid cars have skyrocketed,
it's foreign competitors who are filling the orders. Just the other week, we
learned that for the first time since 1931, Toyota has surpassed General Motors
as the world's best-selling automaker.
At the dawn of the Internet Age, it was famously said that there are two kinds
of businesses - those that use email and those that will. Today, there are
two kinds of car companies - those that mass produce fuel-efficient cars and
those that will.
The American auto industry can no longer afford to be one of those that will.
What's more, America can't afford it. When the auto industry accounts for one
in ten American jobs, we all have a stake in saving those jobs. When our economy,
our security, and the safety of our planet depend on our ability to make cleaner,
more fuel-efficient cars, every American has a responsibility to make sure
that happens.
Automakers still refuse to make the transition to fuel-efficient production
because they say it's too expensive at a time when they're losing profits and
struggling under the weight of massive health care costs.
This time, they're actually right. The auto industry's refusal to act for so
long has left it mired in a predicament for which there is no easy way out.
But
expensive is no longer an excuse for inaction. The auto industry
is on a path that is unacceptable and unsustainable - for their
business, for their workers, and for America. And America must
take action to make it right.
That's
why my first proposal will require automakers to meet higher fuel
standards and produce more fuel-efficient cars while providing
them the flexibility and assistance to do it.
This is a proposal that's already brought together Republicans and Democrats,
those who've long-advocated increases in our fuel standards, and those who
have opposed those increases for years. It enjoys the support of corporate
leaders like Fred Smith of Federal Express who understand that our economy
is at risk if we fail to act and military leaders like General P.X. Kelley
who know all to well the human cost of our nation's addiction to oil.
It's a proposal that answers the concerns that many have previously had with
raising fuel standards - that it's too expensive, or unsafe, or not achievable.
And it's an approach that asks our government, our businesses, and our people
to invest in a secure energy future - that recognizes we can make great cars
and protect American jobs if we transform the auto industry so that our autoworkers
can compete with world once more.
It begins by gradually raising our fuel economy standards by four percent -
approximately one mile per gallon - each year. The National Academy of Sciences
has already determined that we can begin to achieve this rate of improvement
today, using existing technology and without changing a vehicle's weight or
performance. And so the only way that automakers can avoid meeting this goal
is if the National Highway Traffic and Safety Administration can prove that
the increase is not safe, not cost-effective, or not technologically possible.
This proposal provides additional flexibility to manufacturers as well. Currently,
domestic automakers are disadvantaged by the requirement that their fleets
have to meet the same overall fuel standard as foreign manufacturers even though
U.S. companies sell a much broader array of vehicles. My approach would establish
different fuel standards for different types of cars. This reform will level
the playing field by requiring all car makers to achieve a similar rate of
progress regardless of their vehicle mix. It will also allow manufacturers
to get credit if they increase the fuel-efficiency in one particular car beyond
what the fuel economy standards require.
We also know that, absent some assistance, the significant costs associated
with retooling parts and assembly plants could be prohibitive for companies
that are already struggling and shedding workers. Our goal is not to destroy
the industry, but to help bring it into the 21st century. So if the auto industry
is prepared to step up to its responsibilities, we should be prepared to help.
That's why my proposal would provide generous tax incentives to help automakers
upgrade their existing plants in order to accommodate the demands of producing
more fuel-efficient vehicles.
This approach would also strike a bargain with the auto industry on one of
the biggest costs they face. We've heard for years that the spiraling cost
of health care for retired autoworkers constrains manufacturers from investing
in more fuel-efficient technology. We all know the statistic - health care
costs currently account for $1,500 of every GM Car. So here's the deal. We'll
help to partially defray those health care costs, but only if the manufacturers
are willing to invest the savings right back into the production of more fuel-efficient
cars and trucks.
Finally, we should make it easier for the American people to buy more fuel-efficient
cars by providing more tax credits to more consumers for the purchase of hybrid
and ultra-efficient vehicles. But we should also realize that the more choices
we have as consumers, the more responsibility we have to buy these cars - to
realize that a few hundred extra dollars for a hybrid is the price we pay as
citizens committed to a cause bigger than ourselves.
For too long, we've been either too afraid to ask our automakers to meet higher
fuel standards or unwilling to help them do it. But the truth is, if we hope
for another miracle out of Detroit, we have to do both. We must demand that
they revamp their production, we must assist that transition, and we must make
the choice to buy these cars when we have the option. All of us have a responsibility
here, and all of us are required to act.
Now it's not enough to only build cars that use less oil - we also have to
start moving away from that dirty, dwindling fossil fuel altogether. That's
why my second proposal will create a market for clean-burning, home-grown biofuels
like ethanol that can replace the oil we use and begin to slow the damage caused
by global climate change.
The potential for biofuels in this country is vast. Farmers who grow them know
that. Entrepreneurs and fueling station owners who want to sell them know that.
Scientists and environmentalists who study the atmosphere know it too.
It's time we produced, sold, and used biofuels all across America - it's time
we made them as commonly available as gasoline is now.
I've already done some of this work in the U.S. Senate by helping to provide
tax credits to those who want to sell a mix of ethanol and gasoline known as
E85 at their fueling stations. And since it only costs $100 per vehicle to
install a flexible-fuel tank that can run on biofuels, I've also proposed that
we help pay for this transition.
Government should lead the way here. I showed up at this event in a government
vehicle that does not have a flexible-fuel tank. When I'm President, I will
make sure that every vehicle purchased by the federal government does.
Of course, to truly overcome the lack of a biofuel infrastructure in this country,
we need to create a market for the production of more biofuels.
Like the auto industry, the oil industry has generally been resistant to making
the transition from petroleum to biofuels - with some even trying to block
the installation of E85 pumps at fueling stations.
To overcome this resistance and create this infrastructure, I've introduced
a proposal known as a National Low-Carbon Fuel Standard, based on the one introduced
by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger in California just a few months ago. Like
raising our fuel-efficiency standards, this approach simultaneously reduces
our dependence on oil and reduces greenhouse gas emissions.
The idea behind the standard is simple.
Beginning in 2010, we will require petroleum makers to reduce the carbon content
of their fuel mix one percent per year by selling more clean, alternative fuels
in its place. This proposal will spur greater production and availability of
renewable fuels like cellulosic ethanol and biodiesel, and it will even create
an incentive for the production of more flexible-fuel and plug-in hybrid vehicles
that can use these clean fuels or charge up with renewable electricity.
This approach will also allow the market, not the government, to determine
which fuels are used by fuel distributors to meet the standard. It's gradual,
so it gives these companies time to meet the requirements. And if you're a
fuel producer that's having trouble meeting the standard, it allows you to
pay for a credit from a company that is.
The low-carbon fuel standard also provides a greater incentive for private
sector investment in the cleanest biofuels possible. Corn-based ethanol has
led the way here, and now we need to expand the universe of biofuels to include
cellulosic ethanol made from switchgrass or forest waste that can reduce our
carbon footprint even further.
In the end, the two major proposals I outlined today - higher fuel-efficiency
standards and a National Low-Carbon Fuel Standard - will not end our oil dependence
entirely.
But the transformation of the cars we drive and the fuels we use would be the
most ambitious energy project in decades, with results that would last for
generations to come: 2.5 million fewer barrels of oil per day; 50 million cars'
worth of pollution off the road by 2020. The direct consumer savings at the
pump in that year would be over $50 billion, not to mention the great economic
benefits of a rejuvenated and fiercely competitive domestic auto industry.
Some will say that the goals are too large; that the ask is too great; and
that the political reality is too difficult for this to work.
To that I'd say that we've heard it all before, and we still believe we can
do it if we really try. Because that's who we are as Americans. Because that's
who we've always been.
In the days and months after September 11th, Americans were waiting to be called
to something larger than themselves. Just like their parents and grandparents
of the Greatest Generation, so many of us were willing to serve and defend
our country - not only on the fields of war, but on the homefront too.
This is our generation's chance to answer that call. Meeting the challenge
posed by our oil dependence won't require us to build the massive war machine
that Franklin Roosevelt called for so many years ago, but it will require the
same sense of shared sacrifice and responsibility from all of us - not just
the auto industry and its workers here in Detroit, but oil companies in Texas,
power plants from New Jersey to California, legislators in Washington, and
consumers in every American city and town. It's time for all of us to head
back into the factories and universities; to the boardrooms and the halls of
Congress so we can roll up our sleeves and find a way to get this done. I am
ready and willing to lead us there as your next President, and I hope you are
willing to join me in the journey toward that next great American miracle.
Thank
you.
Source:
Obama for President
Petroleumworld
news 05 07 07
Copyright© 2007
Petroleumworld. All rights reserved.