2006.08.08: August 8, 2006: Headlines: Figures: COS - India: NGO's: Sierra Club: Environment: Oil: Energy: USA Today: Carl Pope writes: Drilling isn't the answer
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2006.08.08: August 8, 2006: Headlines: Figures: COS - India: NGO's: Sierra Club: Environment: Oil: Energy: USA Today: Carl Pope writes: Drilling isn't the answer
Carl Pope writes: Drilling isn't the answer
"Opening our nation's coastline to drilling will do nothing to end our dangerous dependence on oil. It will do nothing to lower gas prices for American families and businesses. But Big Oil will love it." Sierra Club President Carl Pope served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in India in the 1960's.
Carl Pope writes: Drilling isn't the answer
Drilling isn't the answer
Posted 8/8/2006 8:40 PM ET E-mail | Save | Print | Subscribe to stories like this Subscribe to stories like this
By Carl Pope
Opening our nation's coastline to drilling will do nothing to end our dangerous dependence on oil. It will do nothing to lower gas prices for American families and businesses. But Big Oil will love it.
There's no denying that America faces an urgent energy challenge. We can continue the current expensive and unsustainable energy practices and policies that have left us addicted to oil. Or we can make the changes and take the actions that will put us on the path to a smarter, cheaper and cleaner energy future.
The latest discovery by BP of severe corrosion in a Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, pipeline is a reminder that oil and gas drilling is a dirty and messy business. Instead of committing to destructive drilling off our beaches, Congress could be adopting smart energy solutions that would help wean Americans off oil and save money at the pump.
For example, if our cars, trucks and SUVs together averaged 40 miles per gallon — something that is achievable with existing technology — we would save as much oil as the United States currently imports from the Persian Gulf, with another million barrels to spare. And the average driver would save nearly $600 a year at the pump.
Sacrificing America's shoreline is not what will bring down — and keep down — energy prices. Four times more natural gas is available in areas already open to drilling than in waters protected by the moratorium, and the industry is using only 18% of what it already has access to. It should use what it has first before going after the last protected places.
There is no magic solution to America's energy problems. But if we want to leave our children and grandchildren a healthy planet, our generation must decrease its dependence on polluting, global-warming-causing petroleum and other finite fossil fuels.
We know our nation can do it. Our history shows that there are few challenges we have not overcome with American ingenuity. Now we just need the political will and courage — something that is in short supply these days in Washington.
Carl Pope is executive director of the Sierra Club, the nation's oldest environmental group.
When this story was posted in August 2006, this was on the front page of PCOL:
Peace Corps Online The Independent News Forum serving Returned Peace Corps Volunteers
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Story Source: USA Today
This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; Figures; COS - India; NGO's; Sierra Club; Environment; Oil; Energy
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