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Oil Independence: Achievable National Goal or Empty Slogan?...

by David L Greene, Paul N Leiby, Philip Patterson, Steven Plotkin, Margaret Singh
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Publication Date
Page Numbers
47 to 53
Volume
2017
Conference Name
Transportation Research Board's 86th Annual Meeting
Conference Location
Washington, Virginia, United States of America
Conference Sponsor
Transportation Research Board
Conference Date
-

Oil independence has been a goal of U.S. energy policy for the past 30 years yet has never been rigorously defined. A rigorous, measurable definition is proposed: to reduce the costs of oil dependence to less than 1% of GDP in the next 20 to 25 years, with 95% probability. A simulation model incorporating the possibility of future oil supply disruptions and other sources of uncertainty is used to test whether two alternative energy policy strategies, Business as Usual and an interpretation of the strategy proposed by the National Commission on Energy Policy (NCEP), can achieve oil independence for the United States. Business as Usual does not produce oil independence. The augmented NCEP strategy comes close to achieving oil independence for the U.S. economy within the next 20-25 years but more is needed. The success of the strategy appears to be robust regardless of how the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) responds to it. Expected annual savings are estimated to exceed $250 billion per year by 2030.