Posted on 12/01/2006 6:32:44 PM PST by Extremely Extreme Extremist
LAS VEGAS, Dec. 1 (UPI) -- When he takes control of the U.S. Senate in January, Harry Reid's agenda will include moving the country toward energy independence -- a U.S. security issue, he says -- which he blames the Republican Congress and president for hindering.
In an exclusive interview with United Press International in his Las Vegas office, the future Senate Majority Leader said Thursday he's astonished by how much oil the United States consumes and by the lack of attention paid to drawing down the crude habit.
"Think about this: We use 21 million barrels of oil every day," said Reid, D-Nev. "But then to make it even more profane, we import 65 percent of that."
He said voters Nov. 7 decided on the Democratic Party, partly because "energy independence" was part of its platform.
"With the Republican-dominated Congress and the president, we couldn't change it. We offered amendments that were turned down easily. We were voted down on party line basis most every time."
Reid said Congress needs to invest away from fossil fuels and more in solar and wind power, geothermal (generating power from the natural heat deep in the Earth) and biomass (converting plant matter to fuels).
"We can't do it overnight but I think we have to set goals. How about something as simple as reducing the importation of oil by a million barrels a year," Reid said.
"If we could only import 20 million barrels then we could do a number of things. What I hope that we would do is move to alternative energy. Give tax credits over a long period of time, not a year or two, so people could invest in alternative energy. We could certainly do more with conservation that we're not doing."
Of the 7.6 billion barrels of crude and petroleum products the United States consumed in 2005, 3.3 billion barrels was burned in the nation's vehicles, according to the Energy Information Administration, the data arm of the U.S. Energy Department.
Reid says this is a great starting point for reducing U.S. consumption and increasing energy efficiency, and favors raising the bar for fuel economy standards, which the industry is against.
"We really feel that the best way to encourage efficiency is by stimulating the market with incentives," said Wade Newton, communications director for the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers.
"The industry supports putting as many fuel efficient vehicles on the road as soon as possible," not with mandates, but by creating a market of many options and giving consumers tax incentives to purchase efficient vehicles.
Reid says he'd also be open to new nuclear power in the United States. But he's at odds with the industry over what to do with the nuclear waste. Reid wants it kept safe at the nuclear plants as opposed to a proposed repository inside Yucca Mountain, 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas.
While the Yucca argument is a major one, Trish Conrad, spokeswoman for the Nuclear Energy Institute, said the industry is looking forward to working with the new Congress.
"We know that he has supported nuclear energy in the past," she said.
Without giving exact details, Reid said to expect a tax on oil company profits he deems excessive.
"Yeah, we're going to do a number of things. We believe that there should be a windfall profits tax. See I personally think it's not right that Exxon makes $40 billion a year net profit and we give them subsidies."
He said he's in favor of some domestic oil and gas drilling off the U.S. coast, part of an offshore drilling bill the Senate passed earlier this year (although it's at odds with a House version), but won't allow exploration in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
"ANWR will not happen. I am opposed to it. That was one of the joys of my life was when we defeated that legislative initiative of Sen. (Ted) Stevens (R-Alaska) to drill in ANWR," he said.
"There are things we can do for domestic production but keep in mind we control less than 3 percent of oil in the world," Reid said. "Ninety-seven- plus percent is in Saudi Arabia, Russia, other countries. We can't produce our way out of the problems that we have. It's not improbable, it's impossible.
"We have two years guaranteed and I hope by the end of this Congress we have things that are in motion to cut down our dependence on foreign oil."
Reid said the country has been short-sighted when making decisions on energy, which he said should be looked at as both a security and an economic issue. And he said foresight requires a move away from Bush administration policies; away from the secret energy strategy meetings held by Vice President Dick Cheney in 2001, which created the basis for all energy legislation and policy over the past six years.
"How did we come up with the energy policy that we have? Obviously this is the most oil-friendly administration in the history of our country. They both made their fortunes in oil."
Nice strawman, but objective criticism is not "hating" the President. I met and shook hands with Bush several times, so yank your head out from your behind.
It's tough to refute anything from the Dems when the msm does not do honest and balanced reporting on GOP speeches. The msm always tries to make it sound like there's really not much oil in Alaska or offshore of California and it really won't help us out if we produce oil from those regions. That kind of reporting is just false, distorted and unbalanced and it makes it very difficult for the GOP to get our side of the story out to the public. The Democrat energy plan is usually mass transit subsidies and more regulation to increase fuel economy by making cars & trucks smaller and lighter. Regulation to require smaller vehicles saves some energy but it makes it harder for US auto companies to compete with Asian companies and it causes more traffic fatalities in accidents.
I am surprised theyre not screaming about the harbor seal and the pelicans.
The Democrats haven't learned anything. Back to preaching about "sinful consumption" and clamoring for a "windfall profits tax" just like in the days of president Carter. What is their plan for "alternative energy?" Nuclear power? Nope. Solar energy? They would be against it where it might be practical because solar arrays gather too much heat and might warm the earth. Windmill electric generators? No way! Windmills are "ugly." Efficient, clean diesel engines in cars? Probably not -- they don't want cars to be fuel-efficient and affordable. They would rather force those who can afford it to buy expensive gimmicks like hybrid or electric cars. The proles who cannot afford $40,000 for a fancy hybrid car can walk. Oil from shale? No way, the greedy oil companies might profit from that.
Ford is probably already going bankrupt. increase CAFE, or tax SUVs, and Ford is gone, and GM probably goes down too.
I've been voting all straight republican for years in order for the US to become independent on foreign oil by increasing the drilling here in our own country. Even when they were in control they failed to do it.
Exactly
The President made his money by an astute investment in a baseball stadium that the good people of Arlington Texas approved in a referendum. How did you make your money Senator.
Well, the honorable senator is half right: We do need to move toward energy independence, so that we aren't giving billions in petrodollars to our rabid enemies. But to lay the blame for our current dependency exclusively at the Republicans' doorstep--or even chiefly there--is a convenient distortion of the facts. The Democrats' refusal to drill in the winter wonderland of ANWR is hardly the result of dispassionate reasoning; it is more closely akin to a religious taboo, albeit one of a distinctly secular variety.
Reid...favors raising the bar for fuel economy standards, which the [automotive] industry is against.
Reasonable people can debate this one. But if new standards are applied to US-manufactured cars alone, there will be an even greater flight to imported cars--at least, to the extent that the two can still be distinguished from each other. (After all, Nissans are built in Smyrna, Tennessee--just a hop, skip, and a jump from where I live--and other "foreign" cars are also routinely built in the US.)
If the new standards are applied across the board, it will probably result in marginally higher prices for new cars--not an automatic disqualifier, but something to be considered, nonetheless.
Either way, the result is likely to be lighter cars--which is to say, more fatality-prone cars, whenever they are involved in accidents.
An honest approach would be one that considers the potential benefits and trade-offs of the proposed policy. Anything less is unworthy of a man who seeks to be a leader.
Without giving exact details, Reid said to expect a tax on oil company profits he deems excessive.
This is sheer demagoguery. Very few people harbor warm and fuzzy feelings toward Big Oil; so there is not much of a downside in rhetorically attacking it. And since President Bush and Vice-President Cheney have past ties--in one way or another--to the oil industry, there could be no better opportunity for a cheap shot. It's a "twofor."
In fact, oil-company profits are not typically "excessive," when compared with other industries. To single out this vital industry for confiscatory taxation is not indicative of a great mind--even by the rather limited standards of the US Senate--since that would no doubt result in less domestic exploration.
Then again, that is something about which most Democrats (including Majority Leader-to be) Harry Reid seem rather unconcerned...
The Congress actually did pass an energy bill after Bush prodded them for years. The bill unfortunately contained almost none of the energy policy that our national security desperately needs, but it did recycle tired canards, offer vague platitudes, and distribute train loads of corrupt political pork. Even under nominal Republican control, the Congress utterly failed to confront the daunting problems of our generation and our posterity, failed to make any difficult choices that might generate political animosity, and acted only ambivalent about the seminal issue of our time, Islamofascist terrorism.
Hey Harry,
I hear Jimmah Carter has a few sweaters he can spare for use by the Whine Wing of the Dem party. You know, the ones hat blocked any attempts at meaningful policy legislation for 6 years.. all in the name of energy independence.
PS.. If you want to champion efforts, quit being such a freakin' hypocrit.
Democrats have so little imagination.
Must be from smoking entirely too much crack.
as a side note,,
I personally find it ironic that the Senator that sat as the head on a Senate committee investigating the oil-for-food debacle at the UN is also on record as voting against drilling ANWR.
Thanks Norm old boy, but for a vote or two , we would already be on the road towards energy independence to a limited degree.
There is definitely plenty of blame and flame to go around on both sides of the aisle.
High school Dingy. Very, very high school.
Grow up!
This "article" had all objectivity of an item I read earlier today about "our wise and kind leader, Kim Jong IL".
This is why the so-called financial advantage for republican campaigns amounts to nought. The outright propaganda coming from the BSM cannot be bought by us at any price.
So much for "journalistic integrity".
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