"Our dependency on oil should be broken by 2020," said Mona Sahlin,
minister of sustainable development. "There shall always be better
alternatives to oil, which means no house should need oil for heating,
and no driver should need to turn solely to gasoline."


Sadly, the US will probably be oil dependent until it runs out.  The
CICBush43 budget proposal in 2007 for alternative energy research
merely restores the cuts he made from Clinton funding levels which
were miniscule to start with.  It amounts to about one fifth the cost
of building ONE nuclear power plant whose fuel wastes will require
millions in yearly costs to store...for virtually forever.  Aside from
the new law that permits tax credits for installation of solar and
energy saving equipment by homeowners starting this year, CICBush43 is
not dedicated, on a realistic national level, to alternative energy.
He is most focused on industrialists who build nuclear power plants
and his oil patch buddies who will continue to earn gigantic profits
out of our pockets for many decades.

David Bier

http://www.guardian.co.uk/oil/story/0,,1704954,00.html

Sweden plans to be world's first oil-free economy

· 15-year limit set for switch to renewable energy
· Biofuels favoured over further nuclear power

John Vidal, environment editor
Wednesday February 8, 2006

Guardian

Sweden is to take the biggest energy step of any advanced western
economy by trying to wean itself off oil completely within 15 years -
without building a new generation of nuclear power stations.

The attempt by the country of 9 million people to become the world's
first practically oil-free economy is being planned by a committee of
industrialists, academics, farmers, car makers, civil servants and
others, who will report to parliament in several months.

The intention, the Swedish government said yesterday, is to replace
all fossil fuels with renewables before climate change destroys
economies and growing oil scarcity leads to huge new price rises.

"Our dependency on oil should be broken by 2020," said Mona Sahlin,
minister of sustainable development. "There shall always be better
alternatives to oil, which means no house should need oil for heating,
and no driver should need to turn solely to gasoline."

According to the energy committee of the Royal Swedish Academy of
Sciences, there is growing concern that global oil supplies are
peaking and will shortly dwindle, and that a global economic recession
could result from high oil prices.

Ms Sahlin has described oil dependency as one of the greatest problems
facing the world. "A Sweden free of fossil fuels would give us
enormous advantages, not least by reducing the impact from
fluctuations in oil prices," she said. "The price of oil has tripled
since 1996."

A government official said: "We want to be both mentally and
technically prepared for a world without oil. The plan is a response
to global climate change, rising petroleum prices and warnings by some
experts that the world may soon be running out of oil."

Sweden, which was badly hit by the oil price rises in the 1970s, now
gets almost all its electricity from nuclear and hydroelectric power,
and relies on fossil fuels mainly for transport. Almost all its
heating has been converted in the past decade to schemes which
distribute steam or hot water generated by geothermal energy or waste
heat. A 1980 referendum decided that nuclear power should be phased
out, but this has still not been finalised.

The decision to abandon oil puts Sweden at the top of the world green
league table. Iceland hopes by 2050 to power all its cars and boats
with hydrogen made from electricity drawn from renewable resources,
and Brazil intends to power 80% of its transport fleet with ethanol
derived mainly from sugar cane within five years.

Last week George Bush surprised analysts by saying that the US was
addicted to oil and should greatly reduce imports from the Middle
East. The US now plans a large increase in nuclear power.

The British government, which is committed to generating 10% of its
electricity from renewable sources by 2012, last month launched an
energy review which has a specific remit to consider a large increase
in nuclear power. But a report by accountants Ernst & Young yesterday
said that the UK was falling behind in its attempt to meet its
renewables target.

"The UK has Europe's best wind, wave and tidal resources yet it
continues to miss out on its economic potential," said Jonathan Johns,
head of renewable energy at Ernst & Young.

Energy ministry officials in Sweden said they expected the oil
committee to recommend further development of biofuels derived from
its massive forests, and by expanding other renewable energies such as
wind and wave power.

Sweden has a head start over most countries. In 2003, 26% of all the
energy consumed came from renewable sources - the EU average is 6%.
Only 32% of the energy came from oil - down from 77% in 1970.

The Swedish government is working with carmakers Saab and Volvo to
develop cars and lorries that burn ethanol and other biofuels. Last
year the Swedish energy agency said it planned to get the public
sector to move out of oil. Its health and library services are being
given grants to convert from oil use and homeowners are being
encouraged with green taxes. The paper and pulp industries use bark to
produce energy, and sawmills burn wood chips and sawdust to generate
power. 






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