Wednesday, 7 March 2012
Oil is ‘the fuel of the past,’ says President Obama By Olivier Knox
President Barack Obama on
Wednesday dismissed oil as "the
fuel of the past" as he made an
unapologetic election-year pitch
for his alternative energy industry
policies and sniped at
Republicans over painfully high
gasoline prices.
"They get out on the campaign
trail—and you and I both know
there are no quick fixes to this
problem—but listening to them,
you'd think there were," he said
at a Daimler Truck manufacturing
plant in the battleground state of
North Carolina.
Obama said that because the
United States accounts for 20
percent of the world's
consumption of oil but has only 2
percent of its petroleum reserves,
"we're not going to be able to
just drill our way out of the
problem of high gas prices.
Anybody who tells you otherwise
either doesn't know what they're
talking about or they aren't telling
you the truth."
"Here is the truth. If we are going
to control our energy future, then
we've got to have an all-of-the-
above strategy," he said in his
speech. "We've got to develop
every source of American energy
—not just oil and gas, but wind
power and solar power, nuclear
power, biofuels."
A top congressional Republican,
Senate Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell, hit Obama on his call to
end subsidies for oil companies
while directing government help
to so-called green energy firms,
some of which have political ties
to the administration.
"When it comes to rising gas
prices, the American people don't
think it's particularly fair that at a
time when they're struggling to
fill up the tank, their own tax
dollars are being used to
subsidize failing solar companies
of the president's choosing, not
to mention the bonuses that
executives at these companies
keep getting," McConnell said.
And "if higher gas prices hurt the
economy, then why in the world
is the administration calling for
higher taxes on energy
manufacturers?" said the
Kentucky lawmaker.
Obama, his hopes for a new term
threatened by high gas prices,
pushed Republicans in Congress
to support ending oil subsidies.
"We can place our bets on the fuel
of the past, or we can place our
bets on American know-how and
American ingenuity and American
workers like the ones here at
Daimler. That's the choice we
face. That's what's at stake right
now," said the president.
Obama also used the speech to
roll out some new initiatives to
promote the use of alternative
fuels and electric-powered and
other "advanced vehicles."
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment