Oil prices pose no big risk to US

Published April 28, 2006

WASHINGTON: Record high oil prices pose a risk to the United States but may be blessing in disguise by forcing the world’s biggest consumer of oil to look at conservation and alternative energy.

The jump in crude oil to records above 73 dollars a barrel, and resulting surge in gasoline to over three dollars a gallon (3.8 liters) has created intense worries about US economy.

Companies such as Wal-Mart have expressed concerns about energy costs being passed through to many goods while also crimping consumer spending.

“With the consumer, the transport sector and low-end retailers set to be buffeted by these price spikes, we may in the process of seeing the knockout blow being delivered to the consumer and the economy, but it’s too soon to say for sure,” says John Kilduff, analyst at Fimat USA.

Yet the crisis may also be an opportunity. It has led to more talk, even from President George W. Bush, about energy alternatives.

“Keeping America competitive requires affordable energy,” Bush said in his January State of the Union message. “And here we have a serious problem: America is addicted to oil, which is often imported from unstable parts of the world.”

Although the United States is the third largest oil producer behind Saudi Arabia and Russia, it remains the biggest importer as well to meet the country’s vast energy needs.

It is the potential for a conflict with Iran — the fourth largest oil producer and in Bush’s eyes part of the “axis of evil” — that has led to the recent surge in oil prices.

Bush is not the first US president to talk about energy problems. In 1977, president Jimmy Carter donned a cardigan at the White House in a televised address to urge Americans to cut back on heating.

The current president is touting alternatives such as switch grass, ethanol and clean coal, and has pressed on several occasions for new nuclear electric plants.

No nuclear plants have been authorized in the US since the Three Mile Island accident in 1979, although the last one came into service a decade ago.—AFP

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