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US Energy Task Force Report

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US Energy Task Force Report

Unread postby Free » Thu 01 Dec 2005, 15:16:34

Sorry in case this has been posted before, but personally I have never seen this document and found it amazing to say the least. Is this identical to the infamous Cheney-Task Force?


STRATEGIC ENERGY POLICY
CHALLENGES FOR THE 21ST CENTURY

For many decades now, the United Sates has been without an energy policy. Now, the consequences of not having an energy policy that can satisfy our energy requirements on a sustainable basis have revealed themselves in California. Now, there could be more Californias in America’s future. President George W. Bush and his administration need to tell these agonizing truths to the American people and thereby lay the basis for a new and viable U.S. energy policy.

That Americans face long-term energy delivery challenges and volatile energy prices is the failure of both Democrats and Republicans to fashion a workable energy policy. Energy policy was allowed to drift by both political parties despite its centrality to America’s domestic economy and to our nation’s security. It was permitted to drift despite the fact that virtually every American recession since the late 1940s has been preceded by spikes in oil prices. The American people need to know about this situation and be told as well that there are no easy or quick solutions to today’s energy problems. The president has to begin educating the public about this reality and start building a broad base of popular support for the hard policy choices ahead.

This recommendation sits at the core of an Independent Task Force Report sponsored by our two organizations. The Task Force was chaired by Edward L. Morse, a widely recognized authority on energy, and ably assisted by Amy Myers Jaffe of the James A. Baker Institute for Public Policy of Rice University. The Task Force included experts from every segment of the world of energy – producers, consumers, environmentalists, national security experts and others.

There are no easy Solomonic solutions to the energy crises, only hard tradeoffs between legitimate and competing interests. Tightening environmental regulations, among other factors, have discouraged the rapid expansion of badly needed energy infrastructure in many U.S. locations. But Americans are also demanding a cleaner environment and cleaner energy.


http://www.rice.edu/energy/publications ... _Final.pdf
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