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Froma Harrop
Froma Harrop
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Where 'Personal Virtue,' Market Meet

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In June 2000, newspapers ominously noted that oil had "surged" to more than $31 a barrel and that, come summer, gas might average a lofty $1.50 a gallon. Nonetheless, the gas-guzzlers were flying off the lots.

A year later, gas topped $2 a gallon. That "high" price was deemed politically problematic for the new President Bush. But rather than encourage Americans to burn less oil, Vice President Dick Cheney famously remarked that saving energy was a "sign of personal virtue," not a basis for "a sound energy policy." The guzzlers continued to fly.

As the price moved past $40 a barrel, $50, $60, economists kept wondering when Americans would start reacting to the higher costs and cut energy use. Now the price of oil is "flirting" with $100 a barrel, and a gallon of gas has zoomed past $3.

And it's happened. Americans have responded. People who don't need trucks to visit the mall are looking for more fuel-efficient vehicles, and the guzzlers are sitting on the lots. Seems to be a recent change.

To find out how recent, I consulted an oil-price analyst — not just any energy expert, but Henry Groppe, a Houston-based veteran and independent thinker. "All our work indicates consumption has actually been flat these three years," he said.

In 1980, when the Iranian revolution sent oil prices soaring, everyone else — Exxon, Shell, the U.S. Department of Energy — predicted that a barrel of oil would soon cost $80, $85, $100 a barrel. In a contrarian forecast, now legend, Groppe said that oil would fall below $15 a barrel. And that's what happened.

Why did his firm, Groppe, Long & Littell, expect the price collapse? "We thought there would be a significant drop in consumption," he said.

Groppe sees consumption dropping now.

"Everybody is still in denial about the magnitude of the changes." He predicts the annual average price of oil will fall back to $60 to $80 a barrel in the next several years.

The faulty forecasts, Groppe says, reflect a reliance on the flawed work of the International Energy Agency. His group gathers its own data.

For example, the IEA last year forecast a major rise in production by nations outside of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. The actual increase was tiny.

"The Saudis made a mistake taking the IEA forecast seriously and cutting production when they should not have done it," Groppe said.

That raised prices to the point where consumers started using less energy. The Saudis want us hooked.

As for the Americans' part in this, Groppe thinks that "the most important thing is more efficient usage — particularly greater mileage performance of our vehicles."

President Clinton pushed for higher fuel efficiency standards but was stopped by the Republican Congress. Bush, meanwhile, has never worked on the demand side of the oil market — the one thing that Americans could have influenced — while OPEC continued to manipulate the supply.

Last week, the gas pump flashed past $45 and I gasped. After all, it was only a Honda Accord. How many twenties were the Navigators sucking up?

Fuel economy was one reason I bought the Accord eight Aprils ago. A friend questioned my concern. "Gas is cheap," he shrugged. But it wasn't just the money. It was the environment. It was that we had recently sent half a million Americans to the Gulf to liberate Kuwait's oil fields from Saddam.

As happened in the '80s, conservation may again depress the price of oil. Saving energy sounds like more than "personal virtue" to me. It sounds like a sound energy policy — unlike the one we've had these last seven years.

To find out more about Froma Harrop, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2007 THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL CO.

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


Comments

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I agree almost 100% with this post, particularly the personal virtue and energy efficiency being a good energy policy. After all, I don't want to fund both sides of the war in Iraq. I also agree that the IEA has been misleading us. However, during the 1980 oil price spike, prices collapsed afterwards because of 3 reasons (you look too young to remember this, but Groppe should know better). Those reasons are increased fuel economy (start of CAFE for one), resumption of oil from Iran as the embargo was lifted, and our economy in recession (largely because of the energy costs).
This time around fuel economy looks to be slowly improving, and should increase even more with reasonable options out there like the Prius (for most needs) and Ford Explorer Hybrid (for larger needs) and Smart car or Versa, etc. (for smaller needs). But this time OPEC can't magically turn on the spigot anymore. You almost said as much - they want us hooked on their oil. In times past, OPEC has said $35-$40/barrel was the target price. Above that and conservation and alternative fuels start looking too attractive. Also, heavy oils like Canada tar sands are now cost effective, as well as Venezuela heavy crude. The latter tips the balance of power in OPEC away from the Middle East as Venezuela's proven reserves increase ('proven reserves' are based on oil that can be economically extracted, not on the total oil found). So OPEC would produce more if they could, but they can't. We don't know the real state of their fields, but it doesn't look good (for U.S. consumers).
Other producers are spending as much as they can to find more oil, but what they find isn't cheap. Peak oil production really is going to happen, and the first sign of it is expensive oil. The era of cheap oil is permanently over, unless we get in a recession that puts the early 80's to shame. So we might get back to $60/barrel or lower, but not before we hit sustained $150/barrel (there could be some short-term swings getting to the sub-80's due to volatility and uncertainty in the market). The sooner we prepare for peak oil, the better, but I think we missed a critical decade . This should be our top national priority right now if we want to remain a superpower, but our leaders are fiddling while Rome is becoming a tinderbox.
Comment: #1
Posted by: nerfer
Fri Dec 7, 2007 4:31 PM
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