首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Even if prices shoot back toward $50 a barrel, that won’t wean the world from oil. Only government can do that. Is the inter
Even if prices shoot back toward $50 a barrel, that won’t wean the world from oil. Only government can do that. Is the inter
admin
2012-02-24
30
问题
Even if prices shoot back toward $50 a barrel, that won’t wean the world from oil. Only government can do that.
Is the internal-combustion engine dead? Listening to all the voices calling hybrid vehicles the future of transportation, you might think so. Alternative energy is back in style among the chattering classes. But oil prices would have to go a lot higher to make so-called renewables—such as solar and wind energy—commercially viable. That means their future won’t be decided by changing consumer tastes or market conditions, but by government policy.
These are facts. Any oil company will use Whatever energy source makes economic sense, since its basic mission is not to pump oil. It’s to create value from energy. We figure the cost of one kilowatt of solar power at a minimum of five times the cost of oil power, even when oil is hovering near $50 a barrel—the recent record high, which we never expected to hold up for long. Solar power is even less competitive against cheaper fossil fuels like coal and natural gas, and relies on mature technology. A radically new technology—perhaps replacing the silicon in photovoltaic cells with polymers—will be needed to make solar cost-effective. That day is at least 20 years off. Wind is closer than solar to becoming competitive with fossil fuels, but its capacity to supply large amounts of energy is limited. And even the most modern windmills have inspired a popular backlash on esthetic grounds.
Many energy industrialists think nuclear is the answer, but they rely on a misleading analysis of its cost competitiveness. Even if you ignore the political concerns surrounding nuclear waste, producers often fail to correctly calculate the real price of electricity produced from nuclear energy. It costs about as much to close a nuclear plant as it does to build a new one, which is why nuclear power companies are now lobbying worldwide to delay planned plant closings. Moreover, it seems the height of folly to think that highly sensitive industrialized countries, where not-in-my-backyard outrage flourishes, will make it possible to site a single new plant, let alone create an entire energy-development plan.
There’s also a lot of fuzzy talk about things like hybrid homes and cars. Many analysts note that while consumers still pay a lot more for hybrid cars than they can make back in gas savings, this gap is closing. What this line of reasoning ignores is that no technology competes only against itself, and combustion engines are rapidly evolving, too. The rush to innovate is led by the makers of diesel engines, which nearly match the gas efficiency of hybrids, but at much lower cost to consumers. Diesel also cuts greenhouse emissions by 30 to 40 percent compared with gas.
The conclusion is that even with real oil prices at their highest levels in 20 years, no alternative can compete head-to-head with fossil fuels on a scale broad enough to challenge their market dominance. Given this outlook, market forces won’t wean society away from oil, gas and coal. Only government can do this. And since the late 1970s and early 1980s, public funding for R&D in the energy sector has been halved in the United States and Europe. Incentives and subsidies to produce alternative energy sources have fallen throughout the developed world with only a few exceptions— Japan, Germany, Denmark and a few others. This is why, for example, the bulk of U.S. solar hardware is exported to Germany and Japan.
In the United States, public policy continues to support America’s love of the sport utility vehicle, which is the major factor behind the continued surge of American oil demand. An absurd loophole allows SUVs to be considered light trucks—and thereby not subject to passenger-vehicle emission requirements. The average total (federal plus local) tax on gas is 25 percent, compared with 50 percent in Japan and more than 70 percent in Western Europe, which partly explains why an American consumes twice the energy of a European. Yet any attack on this policy structure is seen as an attack on the American lifestyle, a quick form of career suicide for politicians.
Europe also faces large (but very different) obstacles to the adoption of new energy sources. For example, high gasoline taxes do encourage conservation, but they also count as the third or fourth largest source of revenue for most European governments. This gives policymakers a double-edged incentive to maintain the fossil-fuel status quo, because a transition to cleaner alternatives would cut their tax income, while raising outlays to subsidize the transition.
Yet the road to a society less dependent on oil is clear. If politicians were serious about these goals, the solution would be at hand: a mix of tax increase on oil products; more rigid mileage and emissions standards for automakers, and incentives to retire old cars and buy cleaner new ones. The transportation sector is crucial, since it will account for about 80 percent of the growth in world oil consumption over the next 25 years. These measures would motivate automakers to step up research, development and production of new cars and encourage consumers to buy them. But knowing the best road doesn’t guarantee that society will take it.
What does the last paragraph suggest?
选项
A、It is not likely that new energy resources will be adopted.
B、More tax will be levied on oil products.
C、People will become less dependent on oil.
D、People will buy cleaner new cars.
答案
A
解析
本段最后一句表达了作者的看法,即新型能源很难被人们使用。故选项A为正确答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/ssiO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
Well-traveledAmericanbusinesspeopleareincreasinglyrealizingthattheymusttakeintoconsiderationthevariationsincultu
ThelargestoftheracialandethnicminoritiesintheU.S.isthe______.
Sometimesoon,accordingtoanimal-rightactivities,agreatapewilltestifyinanAmericancourtroom.Speakingthroughavoice
A、willingtoresumeitsarmedcampaignagainsttheTurkishgovernment.B、anxioustopreventarebelleaderfrombeingsentenced
______isthecoreoftheEnglishGovernment.
Accordingtothebestevidencegatheredbyspaceprobesandastronomers,Marsisaninhospitableplanet,moresimilartoEarth’s
Canada’sEducationSystemTheCanadiangovernmentprovides【1】publiceducationforallstudentsfromKindergartentoGrade12.
Itisfrequentlyassumedthatthemechanizationofworkhasarevolutionaryeffectonthelivesofthepeoplewhooperatethene
Stratford-on-Avon,asweallknow,hasonlyoneindustry—WilliamShakespeare—buttherearetwodistinctlyseparateandincre
Adeputysheriff’sdashmountedcameracaptureshistornadochase.Racingjustminutesbehindthemonsterstormhelooksfordam
随机试题
可与RF结合的是
缠腰火丹肝经郁热证的用方是缠腰火丹气滞血瘀证的用方是
强心苷类药物中,不属于速效强心苷的药物有
下列说法错误的是( )。
在分析国家风险的方法中,()是综合了对政治社会因素的定性分析和对经济金融因素的定量分析。根据标准化的国家风险评估报告,它结合部分经济统计,对不同国家的贷款风险做出比较。
以下属于理财顾问服务的是()。
材料四:阅读下面的短文。完成76—80题。在地面上,行走是指用双腿克服地球引力,轮流迈步,从一处地面走向另一处地面。但在太空轨道飞行的失重环境中.失重将行走的概念完全搞乱了。在航天器密封座舱中行走,只要用脚、手或身体任何部位触一下舱壁或任何固定的
材料一:党的十六大报告指出:经过全党和全国各族人民的共同努力,我们胜利实现了现代化建设“三步走”战略的第一步、第二步目标,人民生活总体达到了小康水平。必须看到,我国正处于并将长期处于社会主义初级阶段,现在达到的小康还是低水平的、不全面的、发展很不平衡的小康
德国十一月革命
20世纪初期,以孙中山为首的资产阶级革命派与以康有为、梁启超为首的改良派展开了激烈的争论。二者虽然存在着原则性的分歧,但是亦有共通之处()
最新回复
(
0
)