On September 20, 2004, the Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI) released its
study, "Winning the Oil Endgame: Innovation for Profits, Jobs, and
Security," a Pentagon-co-funded blueprint for making the United States
oil-free. The plan outlines how American industry can restore competitive
and boost profits by mobilizing modern technologies and smart business
strategies to displace oil more cheaply than buying it.
"Winning the Oil Endgame" proves that at an average cost of
$12 per barrel in (in 2000 dollars), the United States can save half its
oil usage through efficiency, then substitute competitive biofuels and
saved natural gas for the rest -- all this without taxation or new federal
regulation.
"Winning the Oil Endgame" shows that by 2015, the United States
can save more oil than it gets from the Persian Gulf; by 2025, use less
oil than in 1970; by 2040, import no oil; and by 2050, use no oil at all.
Because saving and substituting oil costs less than buying it, the study
finds a net savings of $70 billion a year.
“Winning the Oil Endgame” offers a coherent strategy for
ending oil dependence, starting with the United States but applicable
worldwide. There are many analyses of the oil problem. This synthesis
is the first roadmap of the oil solution—one led by business for
profit, not dictated by government for reasons of ideology. This roadmap
is independent, peer-reviewed, written for business and military leaders,
and co-funded by the Pentagon. It combines innovative technologies and
new business models with uncommon public policies: market-oriented without
taxes, innovation-driven without mandates, not dependent on major (if
any) national legislation, and designed to support, not distort, business
logic.
Two centuries ago, the first industrial revolution made people a hundred
times more productive, harnessed fossil energy for transport and production,
and nurtured the young U.S. economy. Then, over the past 145 years, the
Age of Oil brought unprecedented mobility, globe-spanning military power,
and amazing synthetic products.
But at what cost? Oil, which created the sinews of American strength,
is now becoming an even greater source of weakness: its volatile price
erodes prosperity; its vulnerabilities undermine security; its emissions
destabilize climate. Moreover the quest to attain oil creates dangerous
new rivalries and tarnishes America's moral standing. All these costs
are rising. And their root causes—most of all, inefficient light
trucks and cars—also threaten the competitiveness of U.S. automaking
and other key industrial sectors.
The cornerstone of the next industrial revolution is therefore winning
the Oil Endgame. And surprisingly, it will cost less to displace all of
the oil that the United States now uses than it will cost to buy that
oil. Oil's current market price leaves out its true costs to the economy,
national security, and the environment. But even without including these
now "externalized" costs, it would still be profitable to displace
oil completely over the next few decades. In fact, by 2025, the annual
economic benefit of that displacement would be $130 billion gross (or
$70 billion net of the displacement's costs). To achieve this does not
require a revolution, but merely consolidating and accelerating trends
already in place: the amount of oil the economy uses for each dollar of
GDP produced, and the fuel efficiency of light vehicles, would need only
to improve about three-fifths as quickly as they did in response to previous
oil shocks.
The study focuses on cars and light trucks (SUVs, pickups, and vans).
These vehicles account for nearly half of projected 2025 oil use. The
report demonstrates that ultra-light, ultra-strong materials like carbon-fiber
can halves vehicles' weight, increase safety, and boost efficiency to
about 85 mpg for a midsize car or 66 mpg for a midsize SUV. BMW has confirmed
that carbon-fiber auto bodies weigh only half as much as steel and have
exceptional crash performance; the resulting fuel savings can be like
buying gasoline for 56 cents a gallon.
"Winning the Oil Endgame" also predicts that to fight better
and save money, the Pentagon -- the world's largest oil buyer -- will
accelerate the market emergence of super-efficient land, sea, and air
platforms. A more efficient and effective military can protect American
citizens instead of foreign oil, while moving to eliminate oil as a source
of conflict.
The report says that by 2015, more efficient vehicles, buildings, and
factories will turn oil companies into bread-based energy companies that
embrace biofuels as a new product line. "Winning the Oil Endgame"
demonstrates how cellulosic biofuels (wood-based rather than from starchy
or sugary plants like corn) can replace one-fifth of current oil use,
more than triple farm income, and create 750,000 agricultural jobs. Europe
produces 17 times more biodiesel than does the U.S. The EU has shifted
farmers from subsidies to durable revenues, and now oil companies compete
to sell their petroleum-free fuel.
"Winning the Oil Endgame" demonstrates half of U.S. natural
gas can be saved at less than a fifth of its current price. Two-thirds
of that figure comes from saving electricity, especially at peak times
when it's inefficiency produced from natural gas. This step alone could
return natural gas to abundance within a few years, cutting gas and power
bills by $55 billion per year.
Saving half the oil America uses, and substituting cheaper alternatives
for the other half, requires four integrated steps:
a.) Double the efficiency of using oil.
The U.S. today wrings twice as much work from each barrel of oil as it
did in 1975; with the latest proven efficiency technologies, it can double
oil efficiency all over again. The investments needed to save each barrel
of oil will cost only $12 (in 2000 $), less than half the officially forecast
$26 price of that barrel in the world oil market. The most important enabling
technology is ultra-light vehicle design. Advanced composite or lightweight-steel
materials can nearly double the efficiency of today's popular hybrid-electric
cars and light trucks while improving safety and performance. The vehicle's
total extra cost is repaid from fuel savings in about three years; the
ultra-lighting is approximately free. Through emerging manufacturing techniques,
such vehicles are becoming practical and profitable; the factories to
produce them will also be cheaper and smaller.
b.) Apply creative business models and public policies to speed the profitable
adoption of super-efficient light vehicles, heavy trucks, and airplanes.
Combined with more efficient buildings and factories, these efficient
vehicles can cut the official forecast of oil use by 29% in 2025 and another
23% soon thereafter—52% in all. Enabled by a new industrial cluster
focusing on lightweight materials, such as carbon-fiber composites, such
advanced-technology vehicles can revitalize these three strategic sectors
and create important new industries.
c.) Provide another one-fourth of U.S. oil needs by a major domestic
biofuels industry.
Recent advances in biotechnology and cellulose-to-ethanol conversion
can double previous techniques' yield, yet cost less in both capital and
energy. Replacing fossil-fuel hydrocarbons with plant-derived carbohydrates
will strengthen rural America, boost net farm income by tens of billions
of dollars a year, and create more than 750,000 new jobs. Convergence
between the energy, chemical, and agricultural value chains will also
let versatile new classes of biomaterials replace petrochemicals.
d.) Use well-established, highly profitable efficiency techniques to
save half the projected 2025 use of natural gas, making it again abundant
and affordable, then substitute part of the saved gas for oil.
If desired, the leftover saved natural gas could be used even more profitably
and effectively by converting it to hydrogen, displacing most of the remaining
oil use—and all of the oil use if modestly augmented by competitive
renewable energy.
These four shifts are fundamentally disruptive to current business models.
They are what economist Joseph Schumpeter called "creative destruction,"
where innovations destroy obsolete technologies, only to be overthrown
in turn by ever newer, more efficient rivals. In The Innovator's Dilemma,
Harvard Business School professor Clayton Christensen explained why industry
leaders often get blindsided by disruptive innovations—technological
game-changers—because they focus too much on today's most profitable
customers and businesses, ignoring the needs of the future. Firms that
are quick to adopt innovative technologies and business models will be
the winners of the 21st century; those that deny and resist change will
join the dead from the last millennium. In the 108-year history of the
Dow Jones Industrial Average, only one of 12 original companies remains
a corporate entity today—General Electric. The others perished or
became fodder for their competitors.
What policies are needed?
American companies can be among the quick leaders in the 21st century,
but it will take a cohesive strategy-based transformation, bold business
and military leadership, and supportive government policies at a federal
or at least a state level. “Winning the Oil Endgame” charts
these practical steppingstones to an oil-free America:
Recommended policy innovations include:
* Revenue-neutral feebates - rebates for buyers of efficient cars, paid
for by fees on inefficient ones:
Revenue- and size-neutral "feebates" can shift customer choice
by combining fees on inefficient vehicles with rebates to efficient vehicles.
The feebates apply separately within each vehicle-size class, so freedom
of choice is unaffected. Indeed, choice is enhanced as customers start
to count fuel savings over the vehicle's life, not just the first few
years, and this new pattern of demand pulls super-efficient but uncompromised
vehicles from the drawing-board into the showroom.
* Low-income access to affordable mobility -- a new nationwide initiative
to buy efficient cars in bulk and lease or sell them to low-income drivers
at terms they can afford:
A scrap-and-replace program can lease or sell super-efficient cars to
low-income Americans—on terms and with fuel bills they can afford—while
scrapping clunkers. This makes personal mobility affordable to all, creates
a new million-car-a-year market for the new efficiency technologies, and
helps clean our cities' air.
* R&D investment incentives and temporary loan guarantees to help
financially weakened U.S. automakers retrain and retool faster; and
To support U.S. automakers' and suppliers' need to invest about $70 billion
to make advanced technology vehicles, federal loan guarantees can help
finance initial retooling where needed; the investments should earn a
handsome return, with big spin-off benefits.
* Temporary federal loans guarantees to U.S. airlines for buying very
efficient new airplanes - provided that for every plane thus financed,
an inefficient one is scrapped.
Similar but simpler policies—loan guarantees for buying efficient
new airplanes (while scrapping inefficient parked ones), and better information
for heavy truck buyers to spur market demand for doubled-efficiency trucks—can
speed these oil-saving innovations from concept to market.
Military needs for agility, rapid deployment, and streamlined logistics
can drive Pentagon leadership in developing key technologies.
Implementing smart government procurement and targeted technology acquisition
(the "Golden Carrot") for aggregated buyers will accelerate
manufacturers' conversion, while a government-sponsored $1-billion prize
for success in the marketplace, the "Platinum Carrot," will
speed development of even more advanced vehicles.
Other policies can hasten competitive evolution of next-generation biofuels
and biomaterials industries, substituting durable revenues for dwindling
agricultural subsidies, and encouraging practices that protect both topsoil
and climate.
Unlike previous proposal to force oil savings through government policy,
the study’s proposed transition beyond oil is led by business for
profit. The recommendations are market-based, innovation-driven without
mandates, and designed to support, not distort, business logic. They're
self-financing and would case the federal deficit to go down, not up.
What happens to the oil industry? The transition beyond oil is already
starting to transform oil companies like Shell and BP into energy companies.
Done right, this shift can profitably redeploy their skills and assets
rather than lose market share. Biofuels are already becoming a new product
line that leverages existing retail and distribution infrastructure and
can attract another $90 billion in biofuels and biorefining investments.
By following this roadmap, the U.S. would set the stage by 2025 for the
checkmate move in the Oil Endgame—the optional but advantageous
transition to a hydrogen economy and the complete and permanent displacement
of oil as a direct fuel. Oil may, however, retain or even gain value as
one of the competing sources of hydrogen.
How big is the prize?
Investing $180 billion over the next decade to eliminate oil dependence
and revitalize strategic industries can save $130 billion gross, or $70
billion net, every year by 2025. This saving, equivalent to a large tax
cut, can replace today's $10-billion-a-month oil imports with reinvestments
in ourselves: $40 billion would pay farmers for biofuels, while the rest
could return to American communities, businesses, and children.
Several million automotive and other transportation-equipment jobs now
at risk can be saved, and one million net new jobs can be added across
all sectors. U.S. automotive, trucking, and aircraft production can again
lead the world, underpinned by 21st century advanced-materials and fuel-cell
industries.
A more efficient and deployable military could refocus on its core mission—protecting
American citizens rather than foreign supply lines—while supporting
and deploying the innovations that eliminate oil as a cause of conflict.
Carbon dioxide emissions will shrink by one-fourth with no additional
cost or effort.
The rich-poor divide can be drastically narrowed at home by increased
access to affordable personal mobility, shrinking the welfare rolls, and
abroad by leapfrogging over oil-dependent development patterns.
The U.S. could treat oil-rich countries the same as countries with no
oil. Being no longer suspected of seeking oil in all that it does in the
world would help to restore U.S. moral leadership and clarity of purpose.
While the $180-billion investment needed is significant, the United States'
economy already pays that much, with zero return, every time the oil price
spikes up as it has done in 2004. (And that money goes into OPEC's coffers
instead of building infrastructure at home.) Just by 2015, the early steps
in this proposed transition will have saved as much oil as the U.S. gets
from the Persian Gulf. By 2040, oil imports could be gone. By 2050, the
U.S. economy should be flourishing with no oil at all.
How does the country get started? Every sector of society can contribute
to this national project. Astute business leaders will align their corporate
strategies and reorganize their firms and processes to turn innovation
from a threat to a friend. Military leaders will speed military transformation
by promptly laying its foundation in super-efficient platforms and lean
logistics. Political leaders will craft policies that stimulate demand
for efficient vehicles, reduce R&D and manufacturing investment risks,
support the creation of secure domestic fuel supplies, and eliminate perverse
subsidies and regulatory obstacles. Lastly, we, the people, must play
a role—a big role—because our individual choices guide the
markets, enforce accountability, and create social innovation.
America’s energy future is choice, not fate. Oil dependence is
a problem the U.S. need no longer have—and it's cheaper not to.
U.S. oil dependence can be eliminated by proven and attractive technologies
that create wealth, enhance choice, and strengthen common security. This
could be achieved only about as far in the future as the 1973 Arab oil
embargo is in the past. When the U.S. last paid attention to oil, in 1977–85,
it cut its oil use 17% while GDP grew 27%. Oil imports fell 50%, and imports
from the Persian Gulf by 87% in just eight years. That exercise of dominant
market power—from the demand side—broke OPEC's ability to
set world oil prices for a decade. Today the U.S. can rerun that play,
only better. The obstacles are less important than the opportunities if
Americans replace ignorance with insight, inattention with foresight,
and inaction with mobilization. American business can lead the nation
and the world into the post-petroleum era, a vibrant economy, and lasting
security—if Americans just realize that they are the people they
have been waiting for.
# # # # # # #
This peer-reviewed RMI study is based on its five coauthors' 70 years
of combined energy experience, mainly in the private sector and on extensive
industry input. The Pentagon and diverse foundations and private donors
funded the research. RMI's thoroughly documented 329-page report is introduced
in forewards by former Secretary of State, Treasury, and Labor George
P. Schultz (an ex-Marine who also chaired the Bechtel Corporation and
by oil geologist and former Shell Chairman Sir Mark Moody-Stuart. The
report, its executive summary, and its technical back-up can be downloaded
free from http://oilendgame.com.
Rocky Mountain Institute, located in Old Snowmass, Colorado, is an independent
entrepreneurial, nonprofit organization engaged in research and consulting.
RMI fosters the efficient and restorative use of resources to make the
world secure, just, prosperous, and life-sustaining. For more information,
please visit http://www.rmi.org.
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