Pursuing Alternative Forms of Energy
Record high prices at American gas pumps and continued
trouble-brewing in the Middle East, Nigeria, and other areas of
importance to the oil-driven economy have made it clear to
Americans that we are in need of developing many new avenues of
energy supply and production. In short, we need to reduce our
dependency on oil, for it is ultimately finite and, frankly,
the cheap sources of oil (not all oil—just the stuff that is
cheap to remove from the earth) are running out. Energy
consultants and analysts are insistent that cheap oil has
“peaked” or is very soon going to peak. What this means
for us is an expensive future—unless we can find new sources of
powering our mechanized and electronic civilization, new
sources which are alternatives to oil.
We must also switch to alternative forms of energy because
our present forms are too damaging to the atmosphere. While
this write does not believe that the global warming trend is
much, if at all, sustained by the activities of mankind (in
short, it's a natural cycle and there's nothing we can do about
it except prepare for the effects of it), we certainly do
contribute at present to the destruction of the environment and
to things like air pollution with our energy sources as they
are. Coal is another source of energy that we need to wean
ourselves off of—again, it is finite, and it is filthy, and the
mining of it is dangerous and environmentally disruptive. We
can also explore new, streamlined methods for producing
electricity that we presently generate so much of via
hydro-power so that we are less disruptive of the environment
when we have need of constructing things such as large
dams.
Developing nations which have turned industrialized in
recent decades especially will need the benefits of alternative
energy research and development, for they are presently doing
much more environmental damage than the United States. The
United States, Japan, and some European nations have been
implementing studies into and programs for the development of
alternative energy sources, and are therefore already leading
the way in doing less environmental damage. The developing
nations such as China and India need to look to Japan and the
West as examples of what research and development to give
government backing and private investment currency to. We could
also add great robustness to our own economy by being at the
forefront of such alternative energy sources development and
then marketing the technologies and services to nations like
India, China, Brazil, and so on and so forth.
Biofuels from things like “supertrees” and soybeans, refined
hydroelectric technology, natural gas, hydrogen fuel cells, the
further building of atomic energy plants, the continued
development of solar energy photovoltaic cells, more research
into wind-harnessed power—all of these are viable energy
sources that can act as alternatives to the mammoth amounts of
oil and coal that we presently are so dependent on for our very
lifestyles. The energy of the future is green.
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