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Americans Gaining Energy Independence With U.S. as Top Producer

By Rich Miller, Asjylyn Loder and Jim Polson

The U.S. is the closest it has been in almost 20 years to achieving energy self-sufficiency, a goal the nation has been pursuing since the 1973 Arab oil embargo triggered a recession and led to lines at gasoline stations.

Domestic oil output is the highest in eight years. The U.S. is producing so much natural gas that, where the government warned four years ago of a critical need to boost imports, it now may approve an export terminal. Methanex Corp., the world’s biggest methanol maker, said it will dismantle a factory in Chile and reassemble it in Louisiana to take advantage of low natural gas prices. And higher mileage standards and federally mandated ethanol use, along with slow economic growth, have curbed demand.

The result: The U.S. has reversed a two-decade-long decline in energy independence, increasing the proportion of demand met from domestic sources over the last six years to an estimated 81 percent through the first 10 months of 2011, according to data compiled by Bloomberg from the U.S. Department of Energy. That would be the highest level since 1992.

“For 40 years, only politicians and the occasional author in Popular Mechanics magazine talked about achieving energy independence,” said Adam Sieminski, who has been nominated by President Barack Obama to head the U.S. Energy Information Administration. “Now it doesn’t seem such an outlandish idea.”

The transformation, which could see the country become the world’s top energy producer by 2020, has implications for the economy and national security — boosting household incomes, jobs and government revenue; cutting the trade deficit; enhancing manufacturers’ competitiveness; and allowing greater flexibility in dealing with unrest in the Middle East.

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2 comments

  1. fake amish

    would love your opinion on this story, wood. reads like a 0bama campaign ad. hard to believe this is not political bullshit. gasoline demand has crashed. we blocked drilling in the gulf(right?) blocked a pipeline but we are on the road to energy independence. since when?

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    • Woodshedder

      Fake, well the are using “Energy Independence” in a way that makes people think “petroleum independence.”

      They set up the trick by having a first paragraph that speaks of the oil embargo, but for the most part, the article is talking about independence due to America’s vast natural gas supplies, and secondarily due to rising vehicle mileage efficiencies and the recession.

      If their numbers are correct (and I have no reason to believe they aren’t) crude oil production is up.

      I can’t prove it without doing some research, but I would bet that the biggest reason that our supply is closer to meeting our demand is that the recession absolutely crushed demand.

      All in all, I think it is good article.

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