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Friday, January 26, 2007
Cliff May :: Townhall.com Columnist
Diversity Can Pave the Road Toward Energy Security
by Cliff May
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Was the Copenhagen Global Warming Summit Walk-Out a Win for the U.S.?


You don't have to be a military strategist on the order of Sun Tzu or Carl von Clausewitz to understand this: It is a bad idea to fund your enemy's war effort.

But every time we fill the tanks of our cars with gasoline we put money in the pockets of terrorists intent on killing Americans.

When will our elected officials finally grapple with this problem? Maybe now. In his State of the Union Speech this week, President Bush sounded serious about "diversifying" American's energy supply, about developing an energy policy that does not leave Americans interminably at the mercy of such regimes as those in Tehran and Caracas. And in Congress legislation already has been introduced that could at least begin to reduce the economic, political and military power of Middle Eastern oil.

More on that in a moment. First, let's be clear: Oil is different from other products. If the French offend me, I can buy wine from Australia instead. If the price of beef goes up, I can dine on lamb. But oil enjoys a kind of monopoly: If you drive a car, you have no choice but to buy fuels refined from petroleum, a resource most abundant in countries where hostility toward Americans runs high. Currently, we spend about $150 million a day on oil from the Persian Gulf and more than $70 million a day on oil from Venezuela.

Two obvious solutions: First, develop liquid fuels from other resources and, secondly, develop vehicles that can run on something other than liquid fuels.

In fact, such alternative fuels and vehicles already exist. A bill has been introduced in Congress -- with broad bipartisan support -- to get both moving down the road: The DRIVE Act (for Dependence Reduction through Innovation in Vehicles and Energy) is based on an energy security blueprint drafted by Set America Free (www.setamericafree.org), which former CIA director Jim Woolsey calls "a coalition of tree huggers, do-gooders, sodbusters, cheap hawks and evangelicals." (Full disclosure: Both Woolsey and I are among its members.)

If passed into law, your next new car could be a Flexible Fuel Vehicle (FFV): It would be able to utilize not just gasoline but also a variety of non-petroleum liquid fuels. That would provide an incentive to the private sector to produce those fuels and make them widely available. Imagine if you could pull up to a pump and choose between conventional gas and similarly priced alternative fuels guaranteed not to fund terrorists. Which would you choose? Continued...

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About The Author

Clifford D. May is the President of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies.

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Oh God
Sorry about the typos in that post.

Alternative = Inferior
All of all of the alternatives to oil are inferior in terms of energy density or cost effectiveness. Ethanol has much lower energy density at a higher per gallon cost than gasoline not to mention that as demand for it would increase so would the price. Then ther is the cost of conversion. Today's cars cannot run with fuel having more than about 10% ethanol - it's very corrosive especially to rubber seals and other parts in the fuel system. To run E85 takes a fuel system specifically designed to handle it. Hydrogen sounds like a good, clean fuel but was two major drawbacks, cost and safety. There is no method of large scale H2 production that does not use more energy than can be derived by burning that hydrogen. Also hydrogen is highly explosive. If you want to see what happens when hydrogen combusts uncontrollably think Hindenburg or even more spectacular Challenger. Electric cars ,YGBSM. They may work OK in the land of fruits & nuts, but where I live the low temps this coming week will struggle to make it out of single digits. Under those conditions, after you fire up your Voltmobile, get the heater and rear window defroster up to temp, you might have enough juice left to drive around the block before needing a recharge. Plus the electricity to charge the batteries doesn't come from the Tooth Fairy. All that said, the shortcomings of current tehnology should not deter in the slightest every effort to develop new, economically efficient ways to use all available energy sources.
P.S Someone once said to me "If we get a new fuel to replace gas, won't that put Big Oil out of business?" My response was "Who do you think will be selling this new fuel?"
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