The World After Oil
As the planet warms up, eco-friendly fuels can't get here fast enough
- By Eric Jaffe
- Smithsonian.com, April 01, 2007, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
Despite some bumps along the ethanol road, the Brazilian model is considered a success. Today about 40 percent of the country's transportation fuel is ethanol; in the United States, that figure is 3 percent. "The one lesson I take from this is, consistency counts," says Sandalow.
Consistency, and maybe a whole lot of coercion. Atmospheric change has grown so bad, says Kammen, that we no longer have the luxury of waiting until alternative fuels suit our lifestyle. The world must cut its carbon emissions from 7 billion tons to 2 billion in the next 40 years. If some monumental natural disaster occurs before that time—say, a massive chunk of Antarctic ice falls into the ocean—our window will shrink even more. We have to change, or be compelled to change, now. "We're going to need the next big step, that horrible tax word," he says. "We're going to have to tax that which we don't want, and what we don't want is carbon."
Kammen's plan, which he laid out in a recent Los Angeles Times op-ed and described to me later, reflects a person mindful of a reward-seeking society in which people are willing to charge thousands of dollars on their credit card to earn a plane ticket that, purchased alone, would have run a few hundred. In Kammen's proposal, when a person uses fossil fuel instead of carbon-neutral energy, he or she would have to pay a tax. "So," he writes, "the owner of a gasoline-powered Hummer who drives it 10,000 miles a year would pay $200 a year, and a Prius driver would pay $50." But instead of plumping Uncle Sam's pockets, this money—estimated at $555 a year for an average person—would be available for spending on eco-friendly products like solar panels or fast-growing trees. If you wished, he writes, "you could pool your 'cooling tax' money with your neighbors and build a windmill to supply your town with electricity."
As oddly enjoyable as this plan sounds, the situation likely won't reach this point. In early April, the Supreme Court ruled 5 to 4 that the Environmental Protection Agency, which has refused to acknowledge that greenhouse gases contribute to climate change, has the authority to regulate these gases. This decision, the first by the Court to address global warming, means that the agency must take one of two actions: deny that greenhouse gases damage the environment—a stance that would conflict with their internal documents, says Kammen—or develop strategies to reduce harmful emissions. Whatever it decides, inaction is no longer an option.
The Future Today
Decades from now, when alternative fuels have become everyday fill-ups, emissions might not even be a consideration. The car of 2050, says Kammen, will be a "plug-in hybrid," running off the electricity of batteries lodged in the doors. (They can double as side air bags, he says.) The back-up fuel supply will be biodiesel. "That's pretty close to no emissions," he says. "That legitimately gets 350 miles to the gallon."
For now, though, electricity remains too difficult to harness economically, so some of us are stuck pumping grease into the refitted trunk of a Mercedes recently covered with a fresh coat of bumper sticker. Still behind schedule, the challengers waited outside for the staff of Hard Rock Café to bring out fresh fuel from the deep fryers. The line of field-trippers now curled around the block, and the bored bystanders filled the time with commentary. "It makes your car smell like French Fries," explained one woman who appeared to be a chaperone.
Horgan, Ben Shaw, the Norwegian film crew and a garbage collector who had parked his truck in the middle of the street to watch the proceedings stuck their heads in the trunk of the white Mercedes. Shaw glanced up at the onlookers. "How many people can you fit in Ford's Theatre?" he asked. "It doesn't look that big." Inside the trunk, right where a spare tire should be, an elaborate ensemble of tubes and filters and pumps seemed as daunting as the task ahead. No one knew how long the mustard Mercedes would hold up, and the van's reliability was untested; it had just been purchased a day earlier. Only Suzanne Hunt's VW Rabbit seemed fit for the journey.
But if any of the challengers had reservations, none expressed them. "Some people are worried about our safety on the trip," said Hunt. "But most of the response is, I want to come with you." Soon, someone plopped down a black bucket of grease. Without pause, without a moment of hesitation despite the unpredictable road ahead, the biofuel brigade dove right in. A bit behind schedule, but gripping everyone in eyeshot, the challenge had officially begun.
Posted April 20, 2007
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Comments (5)
Yes the future is here.
The gas and petroleum is getting expensive at the level that other energy sources are cheaper.
We also can make the cars working with normal oil as showed in
http://vegeoil.com
Posted by Vegeoil on March 18,2010 | 08:38 PM
whats even funnier is that back in 1920 or 1930 i cant remembr which, we used to use HEMP (marijuana) for paper, OIL, and many other things untill the jelous oil compaanies spent millions of dollars lobbying to make it illegal... now look... we are trying to get rid of oil. why not use HEMP which is... grown... green... COMMON SENSE PEOPLE WAKE UP!!!!
Posted by UNKNOWN on March 18,2010 | 06:38 PM
Good article, unfortunately it is too short to address the problem of net energy produced by a fuel and it's relationship to our current oil based world economy and culture and climate change. Don't forget that we are probably at peak oil around now and may soon be on the downslope of Hubbert's curve for world oil production. If you really are interested, and not afraid, in learning what the future has a good chance of being like I would suggest reading John Michael Greer's books. He has incredible insight and rigorous discipline in his logic. Peace be with you all, jesubmar
Posted by Jesubmar on March 18,2010 | 05:39 PM
I'd like to see more detailed coverage about battery electric cars. They are already proving to be a better solution, everything can be run off the grid, or powered at home. People don't understand this potential because not enough media institutions write about it, and if they do, it's usually not fact-based or intelligently covered. I know Smithsonian can do that though!
Posted by meanderingthemaze on March 18,2010 | 01:33 PM
I believe this article is truely interesting. I never even knew half of the things, both pros and cons about oil, and our future if what is happenning to it keeps going on. It was fun to learn somthing new. Thank you, Smithsonian!
Posted by yamilette on March 18,2008 | 12:14 PM