Pickens: "There's No Way We Can Drill Our Way Out of It"

I just got off a bipartisan blogger call with T. Boone Pickens ahead of his post-debate online rally along with Carl Pope of the Sierra Club, and to me the most interesting statement made by the Texas oil man-cum-energy independence advocate was the following: "There's no way we can drill our way out of it."

During the call, I asked Pickens about his focus on the production side rather than the consumption side of the energy market. If, in other words, America consumes between a fifth and a quarter of the world's energy production but produces only a fraction of that amount, can upping our drilling, our creation of wind farms and the like really make a big difference.

Pickens responded by saying that any increase in production will make a difference, in effect that closing the gap between production and consumption is important. Nevertheless, even as Pickens said that the focus of his effort is not on conservation, decreasing consumption is important. And to underscore the point, he did clearly say that "there's no way we can drill our way out of" the energy crisis.

To me, this says wonders. The Republicans are running on a "Drill, baby, drill" platform -- even Sarah Palin used those very words during the Vice Presidential debate -- but even a Texas oil man who has been among the strongest supporter of the GOP and conservative efforts admits that this is not a solution. Perhaps, then, it shouldn't be such a surprise that voters trust Barack Obama over John McCain on the question of handling the issue of energy.

Anyway, the call overall was interesting, and I'm assuming that others will be posting on it as well. For those who want to be a part of the online town hall tomorrow night following the debate, click here.



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Re: Pickens: "There's No Way We Can Drill (none / 0)

You should ask Pickens if natural gas is so cheap, why the heck is my heating bill going to skyrocket this winter?  I heat my house with natural gas...

He's nothing more than a profiteer...  Natural gas isn't any cheaper than oil... the only difference is that Pickens owns natural gas drills...


"This was never part of our arrangement, Specter" "I am altering the deal! Pray I don't alter it any further!" "This deal keeps getting worse all the time!"
by LordMike on Mon Oct 06, 2008 at 05:13:13 PM EST

Re: Pickens: (none / 0)

So, the Sierra Club doesn't care about Global Warming?

I'm just trying to figure out why they're supporting Pickens and his Natural Gas Fueled plan.

Is that their policy?


by Bush Bites on Mon Oct 06, 2008 at 05:44:29 PM EST

Pickens can afford a big megaphone, but (none / 0)

he also funded the Swift Boat Veterans back in 2004.  Be careful when associating with this guy.

If and when Pickens admits publicly that he himself is complicit in propagating the policies that led us to the point of crisis, then maybe he can be listened to with some credence given, but not now.


by GreginFL on Mon Oct 06, 2008 at 05:45:59 PM EST

Re: Pickens: (none / 0)

And has pretty much moved out of oil and into Big Wind (along with several other major power companies).  What Pickens wants is still a power monopoly that controls pricing and acts as a gatekeeper to keep out new technologies and small companies until/unless they can be absorbed into the beast.


by markt on Mon Oct 06, 2008 at 05:56:00 PM EST

Re: Pickens: (none / 0)

Um, Pickens is focusing on production because he makes a shit load of money of people's consumptions and energy conservation wouldn't lead to gigantic subsides for his companies...


by js noble on Mon Oct 06, 2008 at 05:58:08 PM EST

Energy (none / 0)

If we really want change we have to upgrade the national power grid, and then decentralize the generation.  Small scale-home scale-photovoltaic solar is the red headed step child congress and Big Power ignore.  Bushco spent $500 billion on a war when that could have made over 16.5 million single family homes net power generators AND paid for the national grid upgrade instead.  That $700 billion bailout?  Another 21+ million single family homes.  Add in the hundreds of millions given to companies like ADM for corn based ethanol: somebody explain to me how a net energy loser like CBE gets a front row seat to renewable energy spending.  

Our government has already spent our energy future on wars and wall street.  And they wonder why our approval rating of them is so low...


by markt on Mon Oct 06, 2008 at 06:06:05 PM EST

Re: Energy (none / 0)

excellent comments here.  I'm not 100% convinced that small-scale individual cells will be better than stuff like the "laser-printed" cells designed for large solar installations.  But that's almost beside the point - if only that was what our debate was down to - which of several efficient and sustainable technologies to push more.


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by edparrot on Mon Oct 06, 2008 at 06:25:35 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Sorry, I get a little miffed (none / 0)

Big Power tithes about 10% back to politicians on both sides at all levels of government to keep their party rolling at our expense.  


by markt on Mon Oct 06, 2008 at 06:09:55 PM EST

Re: Pickens: oil (none / 0)

What Democrats need to do is do a simulation of what will happen if we drill. What are the stats on the amount of oil we can get. What are the risks of the environmental damage. What percentage will that increased oil production be part of the entire oil demand.

DEmocrats need to make things simple for the voters with easy to understand illustrations. Just saying the environment will suffer is stupid.

Combat the Drill Baby Drill mantra with facts on what the real affect will be on daily life and how little it will be. Then the DEmocratic party needs to get together and share the message. Repetition and message discipline is the key.


by Pravin on Mon Oct 06, 2008 at 06:44:55 PM EST

StateDemocracy.org Equips You for the 2008 Electio (none / 0)

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by timothy moriarty on Tue Oct 07, 2008 at 07:13:43 AM EST


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