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A good thing but it would be better if energy was priced correctly in the
United States
Nov 17th 2012 | from the print edition
THE shale-gas revolution in America has been as sudden and startling as a
supertanker performing a handbrake turn. A country that once fretted about its
dependence on Middle Eastern fossil fuels is now on the verge of
self-sufficiency in natural gas. And the news keeps getting better. This week
the International Energy Agency (IEA) predicted that the United States would
become the world s largest oil producer by 2020, outstripping Saudi Arabia and
Russia.
Why has this happened? Price signals work. Oil has been costly for more than a
decade. This has spurred prospectors to look harder for unconventional fuels:
oil and gas that lie deep under the sea, buried in shale beds or stuck in
Canada s vast oil sands. They have developed whizzy technology to extract these
hydrocarbons, with such success that North America now has a gas glut. Prices
have plummeted, prompting shale-gas frackers to drill for pricier shale oil
instead. According to the IEA, America could become self-sufficient in energy
by 2035. Bolder analysts say sooner. Canada has immense potential, too. Besides
the oil sands, a recent report suggests that the province of Alberta alone may
have shale gas and oil reserves to rival America s.
The North American hydrocarbon bonanza offers big benefits, but also some
pitfalls. The economic pluses are obvious: cheap gas yields cheap electricity,
which boosts American industry, especially power-hungry sectors such as
aluminium, steel and glass. Cheap gas also buoys petrochemicals firms, which
use it to make useful stuff such as plastic. Also, America consumes some 19m
barrels of oil a day. Imported oil costs $109 a barrel. Not having to pay Saudi
Arabia for this is a boon.
The environmental scorecard is more mixed. Burning fossil fuels adds to
greenhouse-gas emissions, which cook the planet. But the dash for gas has
reduced American emissions, since gas is cleaner than coal. By contrast, in
Europe, which does have a carbon-trading system but never developed shale gas,
emissions have risen over the past three years. Europeans are shuttering
nuclear-power plants and backsliding to filthy coal.
How to use a windfall wisely
It will be years before renewable energy is cheap and reliable enough to
replace fossil fuels entirely. For now, hydrocarbons and the warming they bring
with them are necessary evils. Rather than trying to distort their supply, the
American government s job should be to let the oil and gas flow, where it is
safe; but at the same time force those who use it to pay the full costs of that
fuel including those to the environment and the planet and seek to spread the
development of alternatives.
America has got the first part of that right, especially when it comes to
encouraging innovation. Its landowners own the minerals below their turf,
giving them a huge incentive to allow exploration (unlike Europe s). There are
a few barmy rules, such as a ban on crude-oil exports, but it can still sell
the refined version. Barack Obama should approve the proposed Keystone XL
pipeline, which would carry Canadian oil to the Gulf of Mexico. Greens fear
leakages, but overland pipes are far less risky than, say, shifting oil in
trucks, and the pipe s owners would have to pay for any clean-up.
Where American energy policy is far less sensible is when it comes to the price
reflecting the true cost. Tiny petrol taxes take no account of the damaging
effects of pollution. This newspaper has long argued for a carbon tax to make
dirty energy more expensive and thus curb demand. If that happened, some of the
new oil might not be worth extracting: Canada s heavy oil, for instance, emits
about 6% more carbon dioxide than normal oil, which in turn can be 30% dirtier
than gas. The biggest bonanza from all this new energy would be if the users
paid the real cost of consuming oil and gas.
from the print edition | Leaders