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In his State of the Union speech earlier this year,
President Bush said America is 'addicted to oil.' Correct, but hardly a
surprise.
We generally think of oil products as the stuff that powers
cars, trucks, SUVs, planes and trains. However, transportation accounts for
only about half of the petroleum we use.
What we rarely think of is all the other products in which
oil is a key ingredient, such as lipstick.
Petrochemicals are also used in the
aspirin that relieves headaches and prevents heart attacks, the crayons our
kids use -even diapers, DVDs, cameras, bandages, balloons and golf balls.
Three-dollar gasoline is one thing, but consider what our
lives would be like without deodorant, perfume or toothpaste (yuck). Can you
imagine no vitamins, antiseptic, house paint, syringes, pacemakers, baby
strollers, garbage bags, candles or panty hose (Well, actually, I could do
without panty hose.)
But you get my point. Petroleum is used much more in our
daily lives than in just filling our gas tanks.
Actually, we're addicted to 'foreign'oil. Today we import
about 60 percent of our oil and petroleum products-much of it from unfriendly
countries such as Venezuela.
There are other options. America has ample reserves of oil
and gas but much of it is locked on federal lands. Only Congress can vote to
open these lands to exploration. This June, the U.S. House of Representatives
passed the Deep Ocean Energy Resources Act to allow exploration in the deep
waters off our coasts, while giving states the authority to determine how close
exploration is allowed. The Senate, however, is waffling on the terms of the
bill.
In May, the U.S. House voted to open just 2,000 coastal
acres of the 19 million-acre Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) to oil
exploration. The U.S. Geological Survey estimates that this area could produce
enough oil to supply us with 1.5 million barrels of oil per day lasting 25
years at a minimum. That's enough to replace 30 years of imports from Saudi
Arabia-and plenty of lipstick.
The U.S. Senate, however, hasn't voted for a stand-alone
bill to open ANWR since 1995, when President Clinton vetoed it.
Being 'price gouged' on sunscreen Thank the U.S. Senate for
keeping us addicted to foreign oil.

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