The New York Times reports that "overwhelmingly, Americans think the nation needs a fundamental overhaul of its energy policies, and most expect alternative forms to replace oil as a major source within 25 years. Yet a majority are unwilling to pay higher gasoline prices to help develop new fuel sources."
My
friend Boston University economist Cutler Cleveland points out that our
so-called "concern" with energy policy rings hollow given these
astonishing facts:
• The percentage of people who commute alone in car: 25% increase
• The number of miles driven per car: 23% increase
• The percentage of households with three or more cars: 65% increase
• The miles driven per household: 50% increase
• The average size of household: 17% decrease.
And
now, with nightly news of an increasingly imperiled coastline, we're
willing to do almost anything to prevent a repeat of the BP oil
fiasco -- anything, it seems, but pay more at the pump. Profligate fossil
fuel consumption is not an addiction, it's a bad habit enabled by low
price. Cheap fuel has become an American entitlement, but it's time to
stop pretending it's embedded in our societal DNA.
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