![]() Top Military Leaders Want US to Reduce Oil Consumption 30% in Next 10 YearsNov. 2, 2011 - SustainableBusiness.com Top retired military leaders are calling for "immediate, swift and aggressive action" for the US to reduce oil consumption 30% over the next 10 years, saying it would significantly reduce grave security risks. America must also diversify the fuels it relies on to insulate it from the inevitable disruptions in the world's oil supply. Leaders also call for the US to vastly increase efficiency and emphasis on alternative fuels, and to develop a national, sustained energy roadmap. Even a small interruption of the daily oil supply impacts our nation's economic engine, they say. A sustained disruption would alter every aspect of our lives, including the cost of food, manufacturing goods and services, and freedom of movement. Some of the highest ranking retired military leaders released their report at U.S. House and Senate briefings today, "Ensuring America's Freedom of Movement: A National Security Imperative to Reduce U.S. Oil Dependence." The report is by the CNA research organization's Military Advisory Board. "We have seen oil shocks before. And they have been immediate and far-reaching. But at today's level of US consumption, a sustained disruption would be devastating - crippling our very freedom of movement," says General Paul Kern, USA (Ret.) who chairs the Miltary Advisory Board. "Our enemies know this fact and they exploit it at will." Citing the diverging trajectories of oil supply and demand, with countries such as China, India and other developing countries stepping on the accelerator, the leaders write, "Worldwide demand for oil is increasing at an alarming rate... Our military experience tells us transitional moments such as these are important and they come and go quickly. When the moment is ripe, we must act or fight our way out of the consequences of inaction." CNA, a non-profit that provides objective research to support policy analysis, looked at the potential economic impact of a future oil disruption in one critical industrial sector - the U.S. trucking industry. The analysis measured the effect of four different theoretical blockages in the flow of oil, each lasting 30 days, in the Strait of Hormuz, the Suez Canal, Bab el-Mandeb, and the Panama Canal. Under a worst-case scenario, 30-day closure of the Strait of Hormuz, the analysis finds that the U.S. would lose nearly $75 billion in GDP. But cutting current levels of U.S. oil dependence by 30%, the impact would be nearly zero. Oak Ridge National Lab came to the same conclusion for other industry sectors. "Currently, our collective national conscience is focused on jobs, and rightly so," he says. "Our economy is in serious trouble. But rather than divert us from the task, moving away from oil could contribute to restoring our economic strength," says Admiral Lee Gunn, US Navy (Ret.). The military would also benefit significantly from a 30% reduction in U.S. oil consumption, because it would undoubtedly require greater efficiency, which would save lives by decreasing dangerous battlefield fuel convoys. The report calls on national leaders to:
" The cost of inaction is too high," concludes Admiral Dennis McGinn, US Navy (Ret). "A 30 percent reduction in oil consumption would loosen our tether to hostile states, reduce our trade deficit, and keep the money here at home to create jobs." In 2007, the Military Advisory Board was among the first to identify climate change as a "threat multiplier" because the projected impacts of severe weather events will exacerbate existing security risks, create conflicts around limited resources and prompt mass migration. Their report: "National Security and the Threat of Climate Change;" "Powering America's Defense: Energy and the Risks to National Security;" "Powering America's Economy: Energy Innovation at the Crossroads of National Security. Learn more: Website: www.cna.org/EnsuringFreedomofMovement |
