We’re all paying the price at the pump
By By Sen. Richard Shelby, Guest Columnist
As the price of gasoline creeps past $4 a gallon, more and more Americans are feeling pain in their wallets each time they fill their car’s tank. While some have advocated suspending the federal gas tax, increasing mandates on fuel technology, adding new subsidies or raising taxes on energy producers, this will likely provide no relief at the pump and, in fact, could ultimately lead to higher prices. Not one of these solutions produces even a single drop of oil, and what we need is more oil at lower prices, not misguided policies that provide marginal, if any, results. These short-term “fixes” threaten to turn us into victims of the law of unintended consequences.
It is clear that the U.S. faces a critical need to encourage domestic oil production. High gas prices are linked to production shortages during times of increased demand. This problem is a result of a prohibition on the collection of oil that we have right here in the United States and a continuing lack of oil refining capacity in this country. Yet, due to the high costs and regulatory red tape associated with constructing a new refinery, Americans must import about 1 million barrels of gasoline every day. This means that 1 out of every 10 gallons of gas Americans purchase at the pump is refined in a foreign county. In fact, a new oil refinery has not been built in the United States since 1976, further increasing U.S. dependence on foreign oil.
Our nation’s demand for oil continues to grow and the instability in the Middle East continues to make its supply unpredictable. We need to reduce oil imports from unstable nations by ensuring all sources of domestic energy are made available.
It is clear that the first step is to increase domestic energy production in environmentally sensitive ways. We should open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) and the Outer Continental Shelf to exploration and production in a safe and sound manner.
To that end, I have advocated exploration and drilling in ANWR. I have also long supported exploration and production of oil and natural gas in the Gulf of Mexico. In addition to eliminating our energy dependence on foreign sources, it would also provide long-overdue revenue to Alabama and the other Gulf States. This is untapped energy already owned by the American people.
We must also encourage diversification away from oil, with technology development that can compete in the market in its own right. The development of oil shale and coal-to-liquids technology are promising sources of domestic energy, as is hydrogen fuel and renewable energy resources such as solar, hydropower and biomass. Yet one of the most affordable untapped energy reserves the U.S. has is nuclear power. It is emissions-free, proven safe and is among the least expensive energy sources today. Yet, we continue to ignore its advantages.
In fact, in the last 30 years, we, as a nation, have blocked construction of nuclear power plants that could have helped ease the competition for energy supply and secured greater energy independence for our nation.
We need a clear path forward that includes the willingness of Americans to fully develop our own energy resources. I support all efforts to reduce consumption and develop renewable energy, but we cannot rely on those alone to solve our problems. We must continue to explore all economically viable energy sources for tomorrow.
However, we should not do so by further increasing the cost of energy today.
As your senior senator from Alabama, I assure you that I will support energy legislation that provides a plan to move the United States toward energy independence without placing an unfair burden on the wallets of Alabamians.