-Caveat Lector-

Euphorian spotted this on the Guardian Unlimited site and thought you should see it.

To see this story with its related links on the Guardian Unlimited site, go to 
http://www.guardian.co.uk

Car wars
The US economy needs oil like a junkie needs heroin - and Iraq will supply its next fix
Ian Roberts
Friday January 17 2003
The Guardian


War in Iraq is inevitable. That there would be war was decided by North American 
planners in the mid-1920s. That it would be in Iraq was decided much more recently. 
The architects of this war were not military planners but town planners. War is 
inevitable not because of weapons of mass destruction, as claimed by the political 
right, nor because of western imperialism, as claimed by the left. The cause of this 
war, and probably the one that will follow, is car dependence.

The US has paved itself into a corner. Its physical and economic infrastructure is so 
highly car dependent that the US is pathologically addicted to oil. Without billions 
of barrels of precious black sludge being pumped into the veins of its economy every 
year, the nation would experience painful and damaging withdrawal.

The first Model T Ford rolled off the assembly line in 1908 and was a miracle of mass 
production. In the first decade of that century, car registrations in the US increased 
from 8,000 to almost 500,000. Within the cities, buses replaced trams, and then cars 
replaced buses. In 1932, General Motors bought up America's tramways and then closed 
them down. But it was the urban planners who really got America hooked. Car ownership 
offered the possibility of escape from dirty, crowded cities to leafy garden suburbs 
and the urban planners provided the escape routes.

Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, America "road built" itself into a nation of 
home-owning suburbanites. In the words of Joni Mitchell: "They paved paradise and put 
up a parking lot." Cities such as Los Angeles, Dallas and Phoenix were moulded by the 
private passenger car into vast urban sprawls which are so widely spread that it is 
now almost impossible to service them economically with public transport.

As the cities sprawled, the motor manufacturing industry consolidated. Car-making is 
now the main industrial employer in the world, dominated by five major groups of which 
General Motors is the largest. The livelihood and landscape of North Americans were 
forged by car-makers.

Motor vehicles are responsible for about one-third of global oil use, but for nearly 
two-thirds of US oil use. In the rest of the world, heating and power generation 
account for most oil use. The increase in oil prices during the 1973 Arab oil embargo 
encouraged the substitution of other fuels in heating and power generation, but in the 
transport sector there is little scope for oil substitution in the short term.

Due to artificially low oil and gasoline prices that did not reflect the true social 
costs of production and use, there was little incentive to seek alternative energy 
sources. The Arab oil embargo temporarily stimulated greater fuel efficiency with the 
introduction of gasoline consumption standards, but the increasing popularity of 
gas-guzzling sports utility vehicles over the past decade has substantially reduced 
the average fuel efficiency of the US car fleet.

The US transportation sector is almost totally dependent on oil, and supplies are 
running out. It is estimated that the total amount of oil that can be pumped out of 
the earth is about 2,000 billion barrels and that world oil production will peak in 
the next 10 to 15 years. Since even modest reductions in oil production can result in 
major hikes in the cost of gasoline, the US administration is well aware of the 
importance of ensuring oil supplies. Every major oil price shock of the past 30 years 
was followed by a US recession and every major recession was preceded by an oil price 
shock.

In 1997, the Carnegie commission on preventing deadly conflict identified factors that 
put states at risk. They include rapid population changes that outstrip the capacity 
of the state to provide essential services, and the control of valuable natural 
resources by a single group. Both factors are key motivators in the war with Iraq. 
Sprawling suburban America needs oil and Saddam Hussein is sitting on it.

The US economy needs oil like a junkie needs heroin and Iraq has 112 billion barrels, 
the largest supply in the world outside Saudi Arabia. Even before the first shot has 
been fired, there have been discussions about how Iraq's oil reserves will be carved 
up. All five permanent members of the UN security council have international oil 
companies that have an interest in "regime change" in Baghdad.

Car dependence is a global public health issue of which gasoline wars are only one 
facet. Every day about 3,000 people die and 30,000 people are seriously injured on the 
world's roads in traffic crashes. More than 85% of the deaths are in low and 
middle-income countries, with pedestrians, cyclists and bus passengers bearing most of 
the burden. Most of the victims will never own a car, and many are children.

By 2020, road crashes will have moved from ninth to third place in the world ranking 
of the burden of disease and injury, and will be in second place in developing 
countries. That we accept this carnage as the collateral damage in a car-based 
transport system indicates the strength and pervasiveness of car dependency. Moreover, 
car travel has reduced our walking. One-quarter of all car journeys are less than two 
miles. A 3km walk uses up about half the energy in a small bar of chocolate. The same 
distance by car expends 10 times as much energy but from the wrong source. We can make 
chocolate but oil reserves are finite.

Car use and the corresponding decline in physical activity is an important cause of 
the obesity epidemic in the US and UK, and physical inactivity increases the risks of 
heart disease, diabetes, osteoporosis and hypertension. Car-based shopping has turned 
many small towns into ghost towns and has severed the supportive social networks of 
community interaction.

The first gasoline war was waged in Kuwait and the second will be waged in Iraq. The 
world must act now to prevent the third. On the brink of war with Iraq, Tony Blair is 
playing the role of tough world leader. But transport, not Iraq, is the truly tough 
issue. His deputy, John Prescott, tried and failed to deal with car dependency and now 
the government is in policy retreat. Ken Livingstone, who does not own a car and has 
leadership qualities that Blair lacks, may with congestion charging succeed where 
others have failed, but his enemies have the support of powerful lobby groups.

Those who oppose war in Iraq must work together to prevent the conflicts that will 
follow if we fail to tackle car dependency. We must reclaim the streets, promote 
walking and cycling, strengthen public transport, oppose new road construction and pay 
the full social cost of car use. We must argue for land-use policies that reduce the 
need for car travel. We need "urban villages" clustered around public transport nodes, 
not sprawling car-dependent conurbations. We can all play our part and we must act now.

· Ian Roberts is professor of public health at the London School of Hygiene and 
Tropical Medicine
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Copyright Guardian Newspapers Limited

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