Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

Oil Dependence - Addiction rages blindly on

Stephen Hesse

Japan Times

Thursday 10 Apr 2003

---

Too bad the Iraq war is not just about oil. It would be much easier to
fathom if it were.

Similarly, dealing with the world's oil addiction would be far easier if
it were a simple, zero-sum game, rather than a combination of grave
dependencies and threats to human and environmental security on a global
scale.

Since preparations to invade Iraq began, the Bush administration has
been unable to allay suspicions that this war is all about oil. One
after another, the rationales given have crumbled, as the United States
has failed to document links between Saddam Hussein and the Sept. 11
attacks, and United Nations weapons inspectors have come up
empty-handed, leaving world opinion justifiably suspicious.

Bush supporters, seeking to counter skepticism, have assured the world
that going to war for oil simply makes no sense. Why take oil by force
when it is so much cheaper and easier to buy it? But for observers from
Tokyo to Tehran, Bush has proven himself a man of principle at any cost.
Clearly he would rather go to war than do business with a man who
trumped his daddy. If Texans have a saying for this, it's probably
something along the lines of, "Better to kick butt and die, than to eat
humble pie."

Bush's efforts to corral public opinion with talk of democracy have only
further inflamed suspicions. Vowing to free the Iraqi people and bring
democracy to the Middle East, Bush has tried to harness the bold,
big-hearted and altruistic American rhetoric of the 20th century. More
than two years of U.S. unilateralism on the international stage have
taken their toll, however, and to the ears of the world the Bush
rhetoric smacks of thinly disguised hegemony.

On the most primitive level, Bush has never tried to hide his personal
desire to depose Saddam Hussein, and finding a reason to do so has
appeared a mere ancillary necessity. As for the oil, Bush will likely
view it as the "just" spoils of a "just" invasion, a chance to set the
corporate ledger "straight" for big oil: Iraq's national oil interests
were, until 1972, privately owned by Mobil, Exxon, BP, Royal Dutch Shell
and the French company CFP.

Beyond present concerns over the Iraq war, the larger truth about U.S.
oil policy is equally, if not more, disturbing. One commentator asserts
that the Bush administration is intent on ensuring our global economy
remains addicted to oil.

Pervasive consumption

Michael Renner, a senior researcher at the Worldwatch Institute, wrote
in the January/February World Watch magazine: "Only in the most direct
sense is the Bush administration's Iraq policy directed against Saddam
Hussein. In a broader sense, it aims to reinforce the world economy's
reliance on oil -- undermining efforts to develop renewable energy
sources, boost energy efficiency and control greenhouse-gas emissions."
If Renner is right -- and Bush's domestic and international energy
initiatives indicate that he is -- then the world community will have to
depend on "new" Europe and Asia to begin countering the "old world"
energy and environmental policies of the United States. This means first
and foremost weaning ourselves off our oil addiction.

From a long-term perspective, oil is lethal. The welfare of human
society and the global environment face no greater threat than our
pervasive consumption of petroleum. With every barrel we guzzle we
contribute to the mounting problems of plastic waste, toxic chemicals in
our air, water and soil, and advancing global warming with its resulting
climate change. Resource wars, too, are on the short list of global
threats posed by oil.

None of these dangers should come as a surprise to policymakers. In this
month's issue of The Ecologist, writer David Fleming explains that we
have known for decades that oil dependence would begin to haunt us early
in the 21st century. He cites reports from 1972, 1976 and 1980, all of
which agreed that "it would take many years to develop new sources of
energy on the necessary scale, so the sooner it started, the better."

Though awareness dawned more than two decades ago, nothing has changed.
As Fleming notes, "Nobody blinked. America, having watched its own oil
pass its peak in 1971, simply started to buy it in."

To a far greater extent than most of us realize, oil dominates our
lives. Not just the oil that fuels our cars, trucks and electricity
generation, but also the oil that the petrochemical industry processes
into everyday products. Take a look around and see how many objects you
can identify that contain no petrochemicals. Sitting over my laptop at
my dining table, I spotted just a handful, mostly food, paper and
clothing items.

Jeremy Smith, writing in the same issue of The Ecologist, notes how
plastics have even taken over our bodies. "Unhappy with our looks, we
enhance our breasts, calves and pecs with plastic . . . we weave nylon
fibers into our denuded scalps . . . slip in a contact lens . . . we've
got plastic dentures so like the real thing no one need ever know,"
Smith notes.

Looking around, it is easy to imagine that plastics have always been
with us, but they are a relatively new phenomena. Just 80 years ago,
says Smith, the fledgling petrochemical industry "took advantage of the
abundance of hydrocarbons at petrochemical refineries to develop the raw
materials for the plastinated luxuries we now 'need.' "

Though it may seem now that we have few other choices, Smith notes that
at the same time petrochemicals were taking off, "the only product to
have more uses than oil, but with none of the toxic side effects, was
banned (thanks mainly to the same people who developed the plastics
industry). That product was hemp -- the oil of which can drive cars,
create plastics or be made into soap, the fibres of which can be turned
into paper or clothes, and the seed of which is one of the most
nutritious substances known."

The development of hemp was nipped in the bud, however, when it and its
more potent cousin, marijuana, were outlawed, "thanks to the efforts of
Dupont and William Randolph Hearst (with their respective vested
interests in the plastics and paper industries)," writes Smith.

Today, hemp is being rediscovered as a "green" alternative to paper and
petrochemical products. Ironically, while hemp has proven harmless, and
marijuana arguably less dangerous than tobacco, the greed of
20th-century corporate patriarchs has ensured that our society is now
helplessly addicted to oil and petrochemicals.

Stephen Hesse welcomes readers' comments at stevehesse@hotmail.com


 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!