Post on 01-Nov-2014
description
CRITICAL ENERGY CHOICES FOR THE SECOND OBAMA ADMINISTRATION Five Key Issues the United States Must Face in Energy, Climate & Security
Cri%cal Energy Choices: Obama’s Second Term
In Brief: • Energy is the lifeblood of a modern economy. How America uses, generates, and produces that energy is decided by a combina%on of economic and poli%cal choices. • The ques%ons the next President will face are more complex and difficult than ever before: climate change, na%onal security, prices, and new technologies all intersect to ensure very few “win-‐win” choices. • Over the last four years, the United States has seen the beginnings of a great change in how it uses and produces energy. Long-‐Term Challenges Remain in Five Key Areas: -‐How to Use America’s New-‐Found Fossil Fuel Abundance -‐How to Address Climate Change -‐Stability in the Middle East – Stemming Disaster -‐Renewable Energy -‐ScienMfic Research into Next GeneraMon Energy
America’s New Fossil Fuel Abundance
Natural Gas • Advances in hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling
have revolu%onized the natural gas industry. • In 2011, the U.S. produc%on of 28 trillion cubic feet of
natural gas was the highest on record, and it makes America by far the largest producer of natural gas in the world.
• The next administra%on will need to make important decisions regarding whether to license natural gas exports, use LNG in the transporta%on or manufacturing sectors, or an en%rely new approach.
Oil ProducMon • With huge increases in produc%on in North Dakota and
Texas, U.S. oil produc%on has reached its highest levels since the 1990s.
• President Obama will need to make a decision on the Keystone XL pipeline.
BUT: In the long term, dependence on fossil fuels harms our economy. It leaves us vulnerable to vola%le prices, contributes to climate change, and undermines our foreign policy.
How to Address Climate Change
Climate Change is Fact • Climate change is scienMfic fact; it is real and
poses a clear danger not only to the United States but to the en%re world.
• Since the beginning of the industrial revolu%on, carbon dioxide (CO2) concentraMon in the atmosphere has risen 40% due to man-‐made emissions of fossil fuels. Global temperatures have also increased.
• Decisions on how strictly to legislate and enforce pollu%on limits have significant impacts on decisions about how to produce energy. have also increased.
• The administra%on must determine its involvement with interna%onal climate change nego%a%ons, including the United NaMons Framework ConvenMon on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the Copenhagen Accord.
These challenges require long-‐term focus and decision-‐making that will not always be popular.
Threats to Energy Stability in the Middle East
Iran: Nearly 35% of seaborne traded oil travels through the Straits of Hormuz, which Iran has threatened to cut off in the event of a conflict.
The Arab Spring: Unrest puts global oil markets at risk. The same condi%ons that led to popular revolt s%ll exist. Analysts consider Kuwait and Oman, both major oil producing countries, as being vulnerable to these uprisings.
Terrorism: Terrorist groups, including Al-‐Qaeda and its affiliates, have demonstrated their interest in disrupMng oil flows in the past in order to inflict economic damage on its foes.
Stemming Disaster in the Middle East
The Middle East sAll looms large in the energy world, comprising 30% of world oil producAon and over 60% of total proven reserves.
Diversifying Our Energy Security
• Renewable energy has made significant progress in recent years: – From June 2011-‐2012, electricity genera%on from solar grew by
94.7%. – The share of electricity generated from non-‐hydro renewable
energy doubled between 2008 and 2012, from 3% of the total to 6%.
– The average price of solar panels has declined by about 75% and the costs of wind power have halved in the last three years.
– In 2009, the Secretary of the Navy, Ray Mabus announced the goal of supplying 50% of the Navy’s energy needs from renewables.
How to CreaMng A Market For Renewables?
• A naMonal renewable por`olio standard (RPS), carbon pricing or clean energy standard would create market demand for renewable energy.
Renewable Energy in the United States
Renewable energy in the transportaAon and electric power sectors will improve America’s energy security, support economic growth, and reduce the threat of climate change.
A set of Wind Turbines in California
Science and American Security
• Recent data reveals a startling research and development (R&D) investment gap, indicaMng that America is falling behind: – The United States’ total R&D spending is currently about 2.85% of
GDP; which puts the U.S. in 9th place globally, behind countries like Japan, Korea, Sweden, and Denmark.
• Fusion energy holds the promise of next genera%on energy technologies that can produce power that is safe, clean, reliable and abundant.
• Decisive leadership is needed in order to ensure that scienMfic research receives sufficient investment.
Research into Next GeneraMon Energy
NIF Laser Bay-‐-‐Seen from above, each of NIF’s two idenAcal laser bays has two clusters of 48 beamlines, one on either side of the uAlity spine running down the middle of the bay. Credit: Lawrence Livermore NaAonal Laboratory
PPPL LTX-‐-‐A view through the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory’s Lithium Tokamak Experiment (LTX) by Elle Starkman/Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory Office of CommunicaAons
America’s Energy Choices: 2012 EdiMon March, 2012 hnp://bit.ly/zVV3lZ Pay Now, Pay Later: A State-‐by-‐State Assessment of the Costs of
Climate Change May, 2011, hnp://bit.ly/wy8ZUt
Ending Our Dependence on Oil May, 2010, hnp://bit.ly/QrOvjg
Offshore Oil Drilling in the ArcMc August, 2012, hnp://bit.ly/MWZvnn
CounteracMng Chinese Hegemony in the South China Sea August, 2012, hnp://bit.ly/RmrZ6
Cause and Effect: U.S. Gasoline Prices April, 2012, hnp://bit.ly/IiKQMT
Climate Change and ImmigraMon: Warnings for America’s Southern Border September, 2010, hnp://bit.ly/SxGghm
ArcMc Climate and Energy August, 2012, hnp://bit.ly/Qy5cTt
A New Discourse: Climate Change in the Face of a Shieing U.S. Energy Por`olio August, 2012, hnp://bit.ly/MbOTKV
Bio Fuels and NaMonal Security March, 2012, hnp://bit.ly/yjmEWd
FURTHER READING
www.americansecurityproject.org