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Invited oral testimony (limited to 5 minutes) given
by A.A. Bartlett to the Subcommittee on Energy of the Science Committee of
the U.S. House of Representatives, May 3, 2001, in Room 2318 of the
Rayburn House Office Building in Washington, D.C. We were allowed to
submit longer written testimony, and the written testimony could be revised
after the hearing. As of the date of this mailing, I am still working on the
revision of my written testimony.
Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee:
My name is Albert A. Bartlett. I am Professor Emeritus at
the University of Colorado at Boulder where I have been a member of the Faculty
of the Department of Physics since 1950.
Ooooooooooo
Our national energy situation is a mess!
For years we have seen recommendations from the Department
of Energy that suggest that the leaders of the Department have little
scientific understanding of the problems of energy.
We have seen the President of the United States sending his
Secretary of Energy on bended knee to plead with OPEC leaders to increase
petroleum production so as to keep our gasoline prices from rising. For a
country that boasts that it is the worlds only superpower, this is
profoundly humiliating.
Gasoline prices are rising. California currently has an
electrical energy crisis that is likely to spread. Natural gas prices are
rising rapidly, which poses real economic hardship for millions of American
home owners who depend on natural gas to heat their homes in the winter.
The only energy proposals we see are for short-term fixes,
sometimes spread over a few years, that seem to ignore the important real-world
realities of resource availability and consumer costs.
For years, scientists have warned that fossil fuels
resources are finite and that long-range plans should be made. These plans must
recognize that growing rates of consumption of fossil fuels will lead,
predictably, to serious shortages that are now starting to appear.
For years we have heard learned opinions from non-scientists
that resources are effectively infinite; that the more of a resource that we
consume the greater are the reserves of that resource; and that the human
intellect is our greatest resource because the human mind can harness science
and technology to solve all of our resource shortages.
There seem to be two cultures; science and non-science. Each
has its own Ph.D. experts and think tanks. Each has its
own lobbyists who argue vigorously that their path is the proper path to
achieve a sustainable society. So lets compare the two recommended paths.
The centerpiece of the scientific path is conservation;
hence it is appropriate to call this path the Conservative Path. On
this path the federal government is called on to provide leadership plus strong
and reliable long-term support toward the achievement of the following goals.
The U.S. should:
1) Have an energy planning
horizon that addresses the problems of sustainability through many future
decades. 2) Have programs for the continual
and dramatic improvement of the efficiency with which we use energy in all
parts of our society. Improved energy efficiency is the lowest cost energy
resource we have. 3) Move toward the rapid
development and deployment of all manner of renewable energies throughout our
entire society. 4) Embark on a program of
continual reduction of the annual total consumption of non-renewable energy in
the U.S. 5) Recognize that moving quickly to
consume the remaining U.S. fossil fuel resources will only speed and enlarge
our present serious U.S. dependence on the fossil fuel resources of other
nations. This will leave our children vitally vulnerable to supply disruptions
that they wont be able to control. 6)
Finally, and most important, we must recognize that population growth in the
U.S. is a major factor in driving up demand for energy. This calls for
recognizing the conclusion of President Nixons Rockefeller Commission
Report (Commission on Population Growth and the American Future, 1972). The
Commission concluded that it could find no benefit to the U.S. from further
U.S. population growth.
In contrast, the non-scientific path suggests that resources
are effectively infinite, so we can be as liberal as we please in their use and
consumption. Hence this path is properly called the Liberal Path.
The proponents of the Liberal Path recommend that the U.S. should:
1) Make plans only to meet
immediate crises, because all crises are temporary;
2) Not have government promote improvements
in energy efficiency because the marketplace will provide the needed
improvements. 3) Not have government programs
to develop renewable energies because, again, the marketplace can be counted on
to take care of all of our needs. 4) Let
fossil fuel rates continue to increase because to do otherwise might hurt the
economy. 5) Dig and Drill. Consume our
remaining fossil fuels as fast as possible because we need them.
Dont worry about our children. They can count on having the advanced
technologies they will need to solve the problems that we are creating for
them. 6) Claim that population growth is a
benefit rather than a problem, because more people equals more brains.
We should not be confused by the conflicting expertise that
supports each of these two paths because there is a very fundamental truth:
For every Ph.D. theres an equal and opposite Ph.D.
For our U.S. energy policy, we must choose between the
Conservative and the Liberal Paths. The paths are the exact opposites of each
other. Each is advocated by academically credentialed experts. On what basis
can we make an intelligent choice?
There is a rational way to choose. If the path we choose
turns out to be the correct path, then theres no problem. The problems
arise in case the path we choose turns out to be the wrong path. It follows
then that we must choose the path that leaves us in the less precarious
position in case the path we choose turns out to be the wrong one.
So there are two possible wrong choices that we must
compare.
If we choose the Conservative Path that assumes finite
resources, and our children later find that resources are really infinite,
then no great long-term harm has been done.
If we choose the Liberal Path that assumes infinite
resources, and our children later find that resources are really finite,
then we will have left our descendants in deep trouble.
There can be no question. The Conservative Path is the
prudent path to follow.
However, it is the Liberal Path that we are so eagerly
taking today.
If resources turn out to be infinite, then we will be OK on
the Liberal Path. But if resources turn out to be finite, then todays
choice of the Liberal Path will create enormous and critical problems for our
children.
See the basic text and graphs of Campbell's lecture in
Germany at: http://energycrisis.org/de/lecture.html
See his splendid 50 minute RealAudio lecture at: http://www.rz.tu-clausthal.de/realvideo/event/peak-oil.ram
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