Barack Obama -
Energy Independence and the Safety of Our Planet
[source: http://obama.senate.gov/speech/060403-energy_independ/index.php ]
Monday, April 3, 2006
Chicago, IL
In April of 2005, Elizabeth Kolbert did a series of articles for The New Yorker
about climate change. In one of those articles, she tells a very interesting
story about some of the effects we're already seeing from global warming.
About fifteen years ago, in the furthest reaches of Alaska, the people of a
small, thousand-year-old, oceanfront hunting village noticed something odd. The
ice that surrounded and protected the village, which is only twenty feet above
sea level, began to grow slushy and weak. Soon, it began to freeze much later in
the fall and melt much earlier in the spring.
As the ice continued to melt away at an alarming pace during the 1990s, the
village began to lose the protection it offered and became more vulnerable to
storm surges. In 1997, the town completely lost a hundred-twenty-five-foot-wide
strip of land at its northern edge. In 2001, a storm with twelve-foot waves
destroyed dozens of homes. And finally, in the summer of 2002, with the storms
intensifying, the ice melting, and the land shrinking all around them, the
residents of Shishmaref were forced to move their entire town miles inland -
abandoning their homes forever.
The story of the Village That Disappeared is by no means isolated. And it is by
no means over.
All across the world, in every kind of environment and region known to man,
increasingly dangerous weather patterns and devastating storms are abruptly
putting an end to the long-running debate over whether or not climate change is
real. Not only is it real, it's here, and its effects are giving rise to a
frighteningly new global phenomenon: the man-made natural disaster.
For decades, we've been warned by legions of scientists and mountains of
evidence that this was coming - that we couldn't just keep burning fossil fuels
and contribute to the changing atmosphere without consequence. And yet, for
decades, far too many have ignored the warnings, either dismissing the science
as a hoax or believing that it was the concern of enviros looking to save polar
bears and rainforests.
But today, we're seeing that climate change is about more than a few
unseasonably mild winters or hot summers. It's about the chain of natural
catastrophes and devastating weather patterns that global warming is beginning
to set off around the world - the frequency and intensity of which are breaking
records thousands of years old.
In Washington, issues come and go with the political winds. And they are
generally covered through that prism: Who's up and who's down? Which party
benefits? Which party loses?
But in these superficial exchanges, we often lose sight of the real and lasting
meaning of the decisions we make and those we defer.
The issue of climate change is one that we ignore at our own peril. There may
still be disputes about exactly how much we're contributing to the warming of
the earth's atmosphere and how much is naturally occurring, but what we can be
scientifically certain of is that our continued use of fossil fuels is pushing
us to a point of no return. And unless we free ourselves from a dependence on
these fossil fuels and chart a new course on energy in this country, we are
condemning future generations to global catastrophe.
Just think about some of the trends we've seen.
Since 1980, we've experienced nineteen of the twenty hottest years on record -
with 2005 being the hottest ever.
These high temperatures are drying up already dry land, causing unprecedented
drought that's ruining crops, devastating farmers and spreading famine to
already poor parts of the world. Over the last four decades, the percentage of
the Earth's surface suffering drought has more than doubled. In the United
States, the drought we experienced in 2002 was the worst in forty years. And in
Africa, more rivers are beginning to dry up, threatening the water supply across
the continent.
As more land becomes parched, more forests are starting to burn. Across
Indonesia, throughout Alaska, and in the Western United States, wildfires have
raged in recent years like never before. A new record was set in 2002, as more
than 7 million acres burned from Oregon down to Arizona.
And while the situation on the land may look ugly, what's going on in the oceans
is even worse. Hurricanes and typhoons thrive in warm water, and as the
temperature has risen, so has the intensity of these storms. In the last
thirty-five years, the percentage of Category 4 and 5 hurricanes has doubled,
and the wind speed and duration of these storms has jumped 50%. A hurricane
showed up in the South Atlantic recently when scientists said it could never
happen. Last year, Japan set a new record when it suffered its tenth typhoon and
the United States set a record for the most tornadoes we've ever had. And at one
point, Hurricane Wilma was the most powerful storm ever measured.
These are all frightening situations, but perhaps none more so than what is
beginning to occur at the North and South Poles. There, a satellite image from
space or a trip to the region shows indisputable evidence that the polar ice
caps are melting. But it's not just a slow, steady thaw that's been occurring
over centuries, it's a rapidly accelerating meltdown that may eventually dump
enough water into the ocean to annihilate coastal regions across the globe.
In 1996, a melting Greenland dumped about 22 cubic miles of water into the sea.
Today, just ten years later, it's melting twice as fast. In real terms, this
means that every single month, Greenland is dumping into the ocean an amount of
water 54 times greater than the city of Los Angeles uses in an entire year. All
in all, Greenland has enough ice to raise the global sea level 23 feet, making a
New Orleans out of nearly every coastal city imaginable.
Indeed, the Alaskan village of Shishmaref could be just the beginning.
And yet, despite all the ominous harbingers of things to come, we do not have to
stand by helplessly and accept this future. In fact, we can't afford to. Climate
change may be unleashing the forces of nature, but we can't forget that this has
been accelerated by man and can be slowed by man too.
By now, the culprit of this climate change is a familiar one, as is the
solution. Last September, when I gave my first speech on energy, I talked about
how our dependence on oil is hurting our economy, decimating our auto industry,
and costing us millions of jobs. A few months ago, I discussed how the oil we
import is jeopardizing our national security by keeping us tied to the world's
most dangerous and unstable regimes. And when it comes to climate change, it's
the fossil fuels we insist on burning - particularly oil - that are the single
greatest cause of global warming and the damaging weather patterns that have
been its result.
You'd think by now we'd get the point on energy dependence. Never has the
failure to take on a single challenge so detrimentally affected nearly every
aspect of our well-being as a nation. And never have the possible solutions had
the potential to do so much good for so many generations to come.
Of course, many Americans have gotten this point, and it's true that the call
for energy independence is now coming from an amazingly diverse coalition of
interests. From farmers and businesses, military leaders and CIA officials,
scientists and Evangelical Christians, auto executives and unions, and
politicians of almost every political persuasion, people are realizing that an
oil future is not a secure future for this country.
And yet, when it comes to finding a way to end our dependence on fossil fuels,
the greatest vacuum in leadership, the biggest failure of imagination, and the
most stubborn refusal to admit the need for change is coming from the very
people who are running the country.
By now, the Bush Administration's record on climate change is almost legendary.
This is the administration that commissioned government experts and scientists
to do a study on global warming, only to omit the part from the final report
that said it was caused by humans. This is the administration that didn't try to
improve the Kyoto Treaty by trying to include oil guzzlers like China and India,
but walked away from the entire global effort to stem climate change. And just
recently, this is the administration that tried to silence a NASA scientist for
letting the rest of us know that yes, climate change is a pretty big deal.
Meanwhile, it's pretty tough to make any real progress on this issue in Congress
when the Chairman of the committee in charge of the environment thinks that, in
the face of literally thousands of scientists and studies that say otherwise,
global warming is the "greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American people."
And you know it's bad when the star witness at his global warming hearing is a
science fiction writer.
Now, after the President's last State of the Union, when he told us that America
was addicted to oil, there was a brief moment of hope that he'd finally do
something on energy.
I was among the hopeful. But then I saw the plan.
His funding for renewable fuels is at the same level it was the day he took
office. He refuses to call for even a modest increase in fuel-efficiency
standards for cars. And his latest budget funds less then half of the energy
bill he himself signed into law - leaving hundreds of millions of dollars in
under-funded energy proposals.
This is not a serious effort. Saying that America is addicted to oil without
following a real plan for energy independence is like admitting alcoholism and
then skipping out on the 12-step program. It's not enough to identify the
challenge - we have to meet it.
See, there's a reason that some have compared the quest for energy independence
to the Manhattan Project or the Apollo moon landing. Like those historic
efforts, moving away from an oil economy is a major challenge that will require
a sustained national commitment.
During World War II, we had an entire country working around the clock to
produce enough planes and tanks to beat the Axis powers. In the middle of the
Cold War, we built a national highway system so we had a quick way to transport
military equipment across the country. When we wanted to pull ahead of the
Russians into space, we poured millions into a national education initiative
that graduated thousands of new scientists and engineers.
America now finds itself at a similar crossroads. As gas prices keep rising, the
Middle East grows ever more unstable, and the ice caps continue to melt, we face
a now-or-never, once-in-a-generation opportunity to set this country on a
different course.
Such a course is not only possible, it's already being pursued in other places
around the world. Countries like Japan are creating jobs and slowing oil
consumption by churning out and buying millions of fuel-efficient cars. Brazil,
a nation that once relied on foreign countries to import 80% of its crude oil,
will now be entirely self-sufficient in a few years thanks to its investment in
biofuels.
So why can't we do this? Why can't we make energy security one of the great
American projects of the 21st century?
The answer is, with the right leadership, we can. We can do it by partnering
with business, not fighting it. We can do it with technology we already have on
the shelf. And we can do it by investing in the clean, cheap, renewable fuels
that American farmers grow right here at home.
To deal directly with climate change, something we failed to do in the last
energy bill, we should use a market-based strategy that gradually reduces
harmful emissions in the most economical way. John McCain and Joe Lieberman are
continuing to build support for legislation based on this approach, and Senators
Bingaman and Domenici are also pursuing proposals that will cut carbon
emissions. Right here in Chicago, the Chicago Climate Exchange is already
running a legally binding greenhouse gas trading system.
The idea here is simple: if you're a business that can't yet meet the lower cap
we'll put on harmful carbon emissions, you can either purchase credits from
other companies that have achieved more than their emissions goal, or you can
temporarily purchase a permit from the government, the money from which will go
towards investments in clean energy technology. As Fred Krupp, the president of
Environmental Defense has said, "Once you put a value on carbon reductions, you
make winners out of innovators."
Any strategy for reducing carbon emissions must also deal with coal, which is
actually the most abundant source of energy in this country. To keep using this
fossil fuel, I believe we need to invest in the kind of advanced coal technology
that will keep our air cleaner while still keeping our coal mines in business.
Over the next two decades, power companies are expected to build dozens of new
coal-fired power plants, and countries like India and China will build hundreds.
If they use obsolete technology, these plants will emit over 60 billion tons of
heat-trapping pollution into the atmosphere. We need to act now and make the
United States a leader in puting in place the standards and incentives that will
ensure that these plants use available technology to capture carbon dioxide and
dispose of it safely underground.
But of course, one of the biggest contributors to our climate troubles and our
energy dependence is oil, and so any plan for the future must drastically reduce
our addiction to this dirty, dangerous, and ultimately finite source of energy.
We can do this by focusing on two things: the cars we drive and the fuels we
use.
The President's energy proposal would reduce our oil imports by 4.5 million
barrels per day by 2025. Not only can we do better than that, we must do better
than that if we hope to make a real dent in our oil dependency. With technology
we have on the shelves right now and fuels we can grow right here in America, by
2025 we can reduce our oil imports by over 7.5. million barrels per day - an
amount greater than all the oil we are expected to import from the entire Middle
East.
For years, we've hesitated to raise fuel economy standards as a nation in part
because of a very legitimate concern - the impact it would have on Detroit. The
auto industry is right when they argue that transitioning to more hybrid and
fuel-efficient cars would require massive investment at a time when they're
struggling under the weight of rising health care costs, sagging profits, and
stiff competition.
But it's precisely because of that competition that they don't have a choice.
China now has a higher fuel economy standard than we do, and Japan's Toyota is
doubling production of the popular Prius to sell 100,000 in the U.S. this year.
There is now no doubt that fuel-efficient cars represent the future of the auto
industry. If American car companies hope to be a part of that future - if they
hope to survive - they must start building more of these cars. This isn't just
about energy - this is about the ability to create millions of new jobs and save
an entire American industry.
But that's not to say we should leave the industry to face the transition costs
on its own. Yes, we should raise fuel economy standards by 3% a year over the
next fifteen years, starting in 2008. With the technology they already have,
this should be an achievable goal for automakers. But we can help them get
there.
Right now, one of the biggest costs facing auto manufacturers isn't the cars
they make, it's the health care they provide. Health care costs make up $1,500
of the price of every GM car that's made - more than the cost of steel. Retiree
health care alone cost the Big 3 automakers nearly $6.7 billion just last year.
I believe we should make the auto companies a deal that could solve this
problem. It's a piece of legislation I introduced called "Health Care for
Hybrids," and it would allow the federal government to pick up part of the tab
for the auto companies' retiree health care costs. In exchange, the auto
companies would then use some of that savings to build and invest in more
fuel-efficient cars. It's a win-win proposal for the industry - their retirees
will be taken care of, they'll save money on health care, and they'll be free to
invest in the kind of fuel-efficient cars that are the key to their competitive
future.
But building cars that use less oil is only one side of the equation. The other
involves replacing the oil we use with the home-grown biofuels that will finally
slow the warming of the planet. In fact, one study shows that using cellulosic
ethanol fuel instead of oil can reduce harmful emissions by up to 75%.
Already, there are hundreds of fueling stations that use a blend of ethanol and
gasoline known as E85, and there are millions of cars on the road with the
flexible-fuel tanks necessary to use this fuel - including my own right here in
Illinois.
But the challenge we face with these biofuels is getting them out of the labs,
out of the farms, and onto the wider commercial market.
The federal government can help in a few ways here, and recently, I introduced
the American Fuels Act with Senator Dick Lugar to get us started.
First, this legislation would reduce the risk of investing in renewable fuels by
providing loan guarantees and venture capital to those entrepreneurs with the
best plans to develop and sell biofuels on a commercial market.
Second, it would let the private sector know that there will always be a market
for renewable fuels by creating an alternative diesel standard in this country
that would blend millions of more gallons of renewable fuels into the petroleum
supply each year.
Third, it would help make sure that every single new car in America is a
flexible-fuel vehicle within a decade. Currently it costs manufacturers just
$100 to add these tanks to each car. But we can do them one better. If they
install flexible-fuel tanks in their cars before the decade's up, we will
provide them a $100 tax credit to do it - so there's no excuse for delay. And
we'd also give consumers a bargain by offering a 35 cents tax credit for every
gallon of E85 they use.
Fourth, this legislation calls for a Director of Energy Security to oversee all
of our efforts. Like the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs and the National
Intelligence Director, this person would be an advisor to the National Security
Council and have the full authority to coordinate America's energy policy across
all levels of government. He or she would approve all major budget decisions and
provide a full report to Congress and the country every year detailing the
progress we're making toward energy independence.
Finally, while it's not in the bill, we should also make sure that every single
automobile the government purchases is a flexible-fuel vehicle - starting today.
When it becomes possible in the coming years, we should also make sure that
every government car is the type of hybrid that you can plug-in to an outlet and
recharge.
As the last few residents of Shishmaref pack up their homes and leave their tiny
seaside village behind, I can't help but think that right now, history is
testing our generation.
Will we let this happen all over the world? Will we stand by while drought and
famine, storms and floods overtake our planet? Or will we look back at today and
say that this was the moment when we took a stand? That this was the moment when
we began to turn things around?
The climate changes we are experiencing are already causing us harm. But in the
end, it will not be us who deal with its most devastating effects. It will be
our children, and our grandchildren.
I have two daughters, aged three and seven. And I can't help but think that they
are the reason I wanted to make a difference in this country in the first place
- to give them a better, more hopeful world to raise their children.
This is our generation's chance to give them that world. It's a chance that will
not last much longer, but if we work together and seize this moment, we can
change the course of this nation forever. I hope we can start today. Thank you.