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Going Nowhere: The Price Consumers Pay for Stalled Fuel Economy Policies
Going_Nowhere.pdf
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Executive Summary
Every Memorial Day weekend, families and friends pile into their
cars and drive to the beach, national parks, and other popular tourist
destinations. This Memorial Day, with gas prices soaring above $2 per
gallon in some parts of the country, consumers will pay more for these
weekend trips than in years past.
Politicians at the federal
level are putting the blame for rising gas prices on everything from
the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to fuel
additive requirements. While OPEC clearly plays a role in determining
gas prices, this finger pointing overlooks the fundamental problem:
America is too dependent on oil. As long as demand for oil continues to
climb, consumers will remain vulnerable to price spikes at the gas
pump—whatever their cause.
In 1975, in response to the oil
embargo, Congress passed the Energy Policy and Conservation Act to
increase automobile fuel economy standards, protect consumers from high
gasoline prices and reduce our dependence on foreign oil. The law
recognized that the only way to reduce foreign oil dependence was to
reduce U.S. demand. It requires that the National Highway Traffic and
Safety Administration (NHTSA) review and increase automobile fuel
economy standards as technologically feasible. Although the technology
does exist to safely increase automobile fuel economy standards to 40
miles per gallon (mpg) in the next 10 years, NHTSA has not enacted a
meaningful increase in fuel economy in almost three decades.
As
a result, this holiday weekend, Americans will be paying more at the
gas pump and using more foreign oil than they should be, given
technology available today. Specifically:
• Americans will pay
almost twice as much at the gas pump—$72 million more—this Memorial Day
weekend than they would with a 40 mpg fuel economy standard;
• Americans will use 35.7 million more gallons of gas than they would under a 40 mpg fuel economy standard; and
•
Americans will consume 1.8 million more barrels of foreign oil this
Memorial Day weekend than they would with a 40 mpg fuel economy
standard.
The Bush administration should be looking for ways to
save consumers money at the pump and wean us from oil—foreign or
domestic—in the long term. Instead of taking advantage of automobile
technology to achieve a 40 mpg standard, the administration is pushing
an energy policy that emphasizes the technologies of yesterday and has
opposed all meaningful increases in fuel economy. In fact, the
administration has proposed new fuel economy standards that would make
it easier for gas-guzzling SUVs to get even fewer miles per gallon.
While
consumers continue to pay more at the pump, oil companies are recording
huge profits. In 2003, the top five oil companies enjoyed net profits
of $60 billion. Meanwhile, the Bush administration has done nothing to
protect consumers from oil company mergers and instead has pushed an
energy policy that rewards the oil industry with taxpayer-funded
subsidies and tax breaks.
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