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Editorial: Editorial: Cedar Key News Annual Meeting March 29
March 8th, 2008

Editorial: Let School Board Know What Should Be Taught
February 15th, 2008

Editorial: What Is a Fair Tax?
February 4th, 2008

Editorial: Inconsistent Appraisals Harm Taxpayers
December 17th, 2007

Editorial: Energy Crisis?
November 30th, 2007

Editorial: Florida Water War Heat Up
October 16th, 2007

Editorial: Nobel Prizes in Medicine
October 5th, 2007

Editorial: Editorial: Same Rules for Everyone
September 22nd, 2007

Editorial: Demand Action on Bridge Repair
August 8th, 2007

Editorial: Local Response Needed to Stem Clam Poaching
July 24th, 2007

Editorial: Money, Money, Money...Votes
July 9th, 2007

Editorial: We Celebrate Independence and Clams
June 26th, 2007

Editorial: Are You Ready for Hurricane Season?
June 12th, 2007

Editorial: The Sources of Progress in Medicine
May 30th, 2007

Editorial: A New Era of Politics and Religion
May 17th, 2007

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Energy Crisis?

Energy Crisis?

Editorial

Do we have an energy crisis? No, we have a chronic energy problem. Here are some of the reasons why.

1. Demand for energy, especially oil, continues to go up. And the booming economies of China and India are just now adding to the demand.

2. The world's supply of oil can only shrink. Experts recognize an approaching peak in production, only differing on how soon the decline will start.

3. More demand and smaller supplies mean higher prices. Crude oil is now $99 and investors are expecting higher prices.

4. Oil supplies come from increasingly hostile countries and from less accessible pools. Think Iran, Kazakhstan, Sudan, Venezuela, deep off-shore.

5. Alternatives to oil such as wind, solar and nuclear power require large up-front investments. Lag times are long and technical problems are still to be solved.

Inexorable increases in oil prices have the following effects:

1. The U.S balance of payments for imports gets worse.

2. Hostile governments grow richer and have money to spend on armies and support for terrorists.

3. The centers of oil production (Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Russia, Sudan, Indonesia and Venezuela) have increasing political power concentrated at the top.

None of the above facts are the result of conspiracy. They just follow the law of supply and demand. Since the supply cannot increase, demand must be lowered. A world wide economic depression will lower demand. A depression will hit Cedar Key harder than many communities. Tourism and clam prices will go down as was seen after 9/11. A more palatable solution to reducing demand might be government incentives and/or major changes in energy consumption. Considering the slow change in consumption it is time for leaders that recognize the need to address the chronic energy problem. Look for such a leader.

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