Everybody seems to have a solution to our energy problems. One solution. The only solution. And if it won???t amount to much, as opponents of drilling the OCS suggest, we shouldn???t consider it at all. Unless it is something like encouraging geothermal electric generation, in which case it should be subsidized and encouraged. I spent ten years of my career developing geothermal electric resources, ending in 1986. We discovered and developed a few geothermal sources. They were small and remote. Surely many more exist, but they too will likely be small and remote relative to our overall electric power needs. In the years since I left that endeavor there has been impressive progress in developing new geothermal sources for geothermal electric generation. But geothermal electric generation will never furnish as much energy to this country as drilling in the OCS. Yet in the great debate we will not hesitate to encourage (correctly) further geothermal development nor will we hesitate to turn our backs on other options which may similarly contribute to solving our problem.
The point of this is not so much an advocacy of drilling the OCS as illustrating the contradictions that are part and parcel of the silly arguments we use to justify our One Solution to the energy problem. Don???t develop the offshore OCS because it is too small to make a significant contribution but subsidize even smaller sources because they make us feel good. And these discussions go on with the entire array of One Solutions as if straying from our own individual understandings of the One true path would so distract us that we would be doomed to environmental and economic disaster. This kind of thinking is silly, selfish and ultimately destructive.
The solution (if such a term is even appropriate) will entail many efforts, some big and some small. In transition it should reasonably include the useful value of the old with the expected useful gains of the new. And more than anything else, it will require something from everyone including the ability to compromise and reasonably consider the merits of someone else???s One Solution.









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