[Mb-civic] The paradox of fuel efficiency - Jeff Jacoby - Boston
Globe
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Wed Sep 21 04:14:28 PDT 2005
The paradox of fuel efficiency
By Jeff Jacoby, Globe Columnist | September 21, 2005
IT DIDN'T take Hurricane Katrina to move the issue of fuel efficiency
into the spotlight. For decades, automakers have been urged to produce,
consumers have been urged to drive, and the government has been urged to
mandate more fuel-efficient cars. If the vehicles on our roads got more
miles to the gallon, we have been told again and again, we could
dramatically reduce the amount of oil we depend on -- and from that
would flow benefits equally dramatic:
America's foreign policy would be strengthened, it is said, since we
would no longer have to appease the unsavory regimes that control most
of the world's crude oil. The economy would surge as money now spent on
fuel was channeled to more productive uses. Mother Earth would be better
off, since less fuel would mean less pollution and less drilling for
oil. And at a time of $3-a-gallon gasoline, motorists would have
particular reason to rejoice: Higher-mileage cars would need fewer
expensive fill-ups.
Late last month, with Katrina still days away, the Bush administration
proposed new regulations mandating improved gas mileage for pickup
trucks, minivans, and some SUVs. Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta
said the plan would save 10 billion gallons of gasoline by 2011. Critics
dismissed his proposal as either trifling (''almost embarrassingly
inadequate" -- Eric Haxthausen, Environmental Defense), or dangerous
(''higher fuel efficiency standards increase traffic deaths" -- Sam
Kazman, Competitive Enterprise Institute). But the basic idea -- that
higher fuel efficiency can mean lower American gasoline use -- no one
seemed to challenge.
If better mileage had political sex appeal before the hurricane, it had
even more of it afterward. In Boston, Mayor Thomas Menino called a press
conference to announce that the city's 450 diesel-powered cars would be
replaced with more-efficient vehicles that run on biodiesel fuel. He
promised to trade in his mayoral SUV -- a Ford Expedition -- for
something smaller and more fuel-efficient. Then, ''as television cameras
rolled," The Boston Globe reported, ''he climbed into the Public Health
Commission's new Ford Escape hybrid SUV and drove away across the plaza."
Lawmakers have gotten into the act too. A bill introduced in the
Massachusetts Legislature would shower benefits on drivers of
fuel-efficient vehicles. Among them: a $2,000 tax deduction, the right
to drive solo in carpool lanes, and lower fees at parking meters.
All of which might be worth considering if using fuel more efficiently
really would result in less fuel being used. But it won't. It will
result in more fuel being used.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2005/09/21/the_paradox_of_fuel_efficiency/
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://www.islandlists.com/pipermail/mb-civic/attachments/20050921/fed854ac/attachment.htm
More information about the Mb-civic
mailing list