Don’t Overhype America's Energy Revolution
10/14/14
Nikos Tsafos
Energy, United States
"The danger is that the United States will try to leverage energy for political ends and trigger unintended consequences."
The
American energy “revolution” is about a decade old, although it only
went mainstream around 2010. Much has been written about its causes and
even more about its consequences—yet there is so much hype about how the
“revolution” will reshape global geopolitics, that one is hard pressed
to get a cool, honest breakdown of what has happened and what it means.
The change has indeed been remarkable, but the implications for politics
and economics are far less obvious at this time—and they will depend
largely on whether America can resist the temptation to use energy for
political ends.
The
transformation in America’s energy has been speedy and remarkable.
Since 2011, energy production has reached a new record each year: from
trough to peak, oil production has risen by 50 percent (2008-2013)
and natural gas by 34 percent (2005-2013); by contrast, coal has
declined by 16 percent as it has lost market share to gas in the power
sector. The changes in demand have been profound as well: energy use
peaked in 2007 and has since declined. The country is using less oil and
coal and more gas and renewables. Carbon emissions from energy are down 10 percent from their high point in 2007.
The
boom in oil and gas production has, first and foremost, brought on a
boom in oil- and gas-related jobs. Employment in oil and gas extraction
has risen by 80 percent since 2003; in supporting activities, jobs have
more than doubled. These jobs pay well: in oil and gas extraction,
earnings were 66 percent higher than the average in August 2014, and
wages are rising fast—after relative stagnation in the early 2000s,
hourly earnings have risen by over 50 percent in the last decade (and
they have really boomed in recent months). This is still a capital,
rather than a labor-intensive industry and so direct employment is
around 600,000 to 700,000 people (against total, nonfarm employment of
140 million in the United States). Even so, the benefits of the boom are
clearly trickling down to workers.
Read full articlehttp://nationalinterest.org/feature/don%E2%80%99t-overhype-americas-energy-revolution-11452
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