Hike in oil prices could hurt tourism
Denny Freidenrich
The combination of foul winter weather, questions about OPEC
production, and a weaker than normal dollar are fueling another
run-up in oil and gas prices. Earlier this week, the price of crude
hit an all-time high of $57 a barrel and climbing.
It is so serious, industry experts like T. Boone Pickens, the
Texas oilman who created Mesa Petroleum, and John Cook, the head of
the petroleum division of the Energy Information Administration, are
beginning to ask the question: Is $60 a barrel for oil on the
horizon? If so, will $3 a gallon for premium be next?
All the tea leaves are pointing in this direction. If it happens
in the next several weeks, I predict fewer tourists will drive to
Laguna this summer, families will have to rethink their European
vacations, and Thursday evening surf outings to San Onofre may need
to be moved to Anita Street.
Laguna’s Mark Shyres agrees. “Typically, there is a real cause and
effect relationship between the skyrocketing cost of gasoline and
miles driven for fun and pleasure. I hope prices drop, but if they
don’t, local businesses that rely on summer tourists will need to
have a contingency plan in place.”
Shyres ought to know. His firm, Cornerstone Marketing West, has
represented some of the largest oil and gas companies in the nation.
Back in May, syndicated columnist Jeff Jacoby predicted, “The
current hyperventilating about ‘record high’ gasoline prices will be
forgotten by mid-June.”
At the time Jacoby wrote his column, oil cost about $40 a barrel.
By mid-October, crude was selling for $55 a barrel -- which made it
approximately 40% more expensive than it was last spring.
But then a funny thing happened to the price of oil (and gas) on
the way to the pump: the weather turned warmer than usual during the
holidays and prices began to drop. They fell so far, they nearly were
back to last spring’s price when all the Hanukkah and Christmas
presents were being opened.
Regardless which way the economic and political winds blow, oil
and gas prices are going to remain high until the worldwide
production of liquid fuels is stabilized and/or we devise other ways
to power large vehicles.
Amory Lovins, who, for the last 30 years, has been one of the
nation’s most influential energy thinkers, says: “Saving and
substituting for oil costs less than buying oil. Getting completely
off oil makes sense and makes money.”
Lovins runs the Rocky Mountain Institute think-tank in Snowmass,
Colorado. His latest book, “Winning the Oil Endgame,” offers a
technology-driven blueprint to wean the U.S. off petroleum within a
few decades: first, by doubling the fuel efficiency of cars, trucks
and airplanes; and then, by replacing gasoline with alternative fuels
such as ethanol and hydrogen.
According to Arnold Klann, president of Irvine’s Arkenol Fuels,
“Business models developed in the United States and commercialized
around the world produce ethanol from wood waste, paper and much of
what ends up in sanitary landfills.”
“It is estimated that the annual production of home-grown ethanol
from waste can create more than twenty billion gallons of new fuel
domestically,” he added.
If true, this means there will be an extended life of landfills, a
reliable source of energy, and a welcome price reduction at the pump.
These are outcomes that the White House, Congress and columnist
Jeff Jacoby should all be able to get their arms around.
Can you smell the fresh air now, Jeff?
* DENNY FREIDENRICH is a founder of First Strategies consulting of
Laguna Beach.
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