Former Gov. Allen discusses energy

Published: September 29, 2009, 11:11 pm ET
George Allen
Jimmy Young/The Collegian
Former Virginia Gov. George Allen speaks to students and community members in Jepson Hall Tuesday night. Allen was at Richmond to promote a conservative solution to America's energy crisis.
Collegian Reporter

Former Virginia Gov. George Allen told a group of 50 students and community members in Jepson Hall Tuesday night that the United States could be the Saudi Arabia of coal and that Virginia could be a leader in breaking America’s dependency on foreign oil.

“You’ll hear from these pompous elites, that Americans are addicted to oil,” Allen said. “Americans are not addicted to oil. Americans are addicted to freedom – the freedom and independence to move where and when we want – and I believe that Americans can keep that independence.”

Allen, who has been out of public office since losing his U.S. Senate seat to Jim Webb in 2006, was at the University of Richmond to promote a conservative solution to America’s energy crisis.

“We don’t care what our cars run on,” Allen said. “They could run on Alaska oil, Louisiana oil, vegetable oil or Coal-syn fuels, water or natural gas as long as it’s available, affordable and reliable.

“The fact is that America has these resources under our land and our waters … what has been missing is the political will to unleash those resources.”

Environmentalists who seek to inhibit Americans from tapping their natural resources are practicing questionable science, Allen said. But Americans should practice what he called “common-sense conservation” to protect the environment.

Allen heavily promoted the use of coal and liquefied synthetic coal fuel as a means to break America’s oil dependency, and he said such fuels were cleaner than oil that the United States imports. But using one form of alternative energy will not be sufficient, he said.

“We don’t need a silver bullet for our energy problem,” he said. “We need a silver buck-shot.”

Allen took questions from the crowd for half an hour after his talk, and addressed topics from cap and trade to tidal energy. Allen has been opposed to cap and trade, a bill which would limit the amount of emissions which industrial plants can release, because it would limit American competitiveness, he said.

If America adopts cap and trade China will probably not, and that will increase the rate of manufacturing jobs going to China, Allen said.

Allen did not weigh in heavily on the gubernatorial race beyond commending Republican Bob McDonnell as a friend and saying that McDonnell had an excellent energy plan. Virginia would benefit from a strong governor telling the Federal government to use off-shore oil resources, he said.

The event was organized by the University of Richmond College Republicans. Kayleigh Hall, a member of the organization, introduced Allen.

Contact reporter David Larter at david.larter@richmond.edu

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  • Scott Burger
  • petedeer
    Former Virginia Gov. George Allen told a group of 50 students and community members in Jepson Hall Tuesday night that the United States could be the Saudi Arabia of coal and that Virginia could be a leader in breaking America’s dependency on foreign oil.
    “You’ll hear from these pompous elites, that Americans are addicted to oil,” Allen said. “Americans are not addicted to oil. Americans are addicted to freedom – the freedom and independence to move where and when we want – and I believe that Americans can keep that independence.”
    The pompous elites…would that be someone like George Allen? Lets see, graduate of UVA law school, congressman, governor and senator, incidental draft dodger during the Vietnam war (student deferment given for a war he supported)…
    Allen, who has been out of public office since losing his U.S. Senate seat to Jim Webb in 2006, was at the University of Richmond to promote a conservative solution to America’s energy crisis.
    Energy crisis? What energy crisis? Oh, you mean the worldwide peaking of fossil fuel supplies like oil, natural gas and coal?
    “We don’t care what our cars run on,” Allen said. “They could run on Alaska oil, Louisiana oil, vegetable oil or Coal-syn fuels, water or natural gas as long as it’s available, affordable and reliable.
    So, what George Allen is suggesting is that we run our cars on used fry oil from McDonalds or water? Has he spoken with any mechanical engineers or scientists about this, or would they be classified as the pompous elites he so derides?
    “The fact is that America has these resources under our land and our waters … what has been missing is the political will to unleash those resources.”
    The fact is that the United States of America used to be the Saudi Arabia of oil for many years, until our own production peaked in the early 1970’s, and we subsequently developed a very serious reliance on foreign producers to meet our oil needs.
    Environmentalists who seek to inhibit Americans from tapping their natural resources are practicing questionable science, Allen said. But Americans should practice what he called “common-sense conservation” to protect the environment.
    Is George Allen referring to those left wing environmental whackos like former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, who was opposed to drilling off the coast of his state? And if Mr Allen is referring to the area of the continental shelf off the East and West Coast, what sort of amounts of oil is speaking off? Drilling dozens or even hundreds of miles offshore, in an area which no adequate seismic surveys have been done, in waters that are prone to the occasional devastating hurricane? Or perhaps he means Alaska, which also seen it’s own peak in production and is now in terminal decline?
    Allen heavily promoted the use of coal and liquefied synthetic coal fuel as a means to break America’s oil dependency, and he said such fuels were cleaner than oil the United States imports. But using one form of alternative energy will not be sufficient, he said.
    If we start cracking coal into fuel so we can fuel up our SUV’s to drive down to the local 7-11 for a Big Gulp and a bag of chips, we’ll rapidly run out whatever coal we have left, not to mention the attendant environmental destruction
    “We don’t need a silver bullet for our energy problem,” he said. “We need a silver buck-shot.”
    What we need are people who understand the energy fix this country is in to be given the opportunity in public forums to explain the depth of the problem facing this country…not out of work politicos confusing freedom with convenience.

    Pete Deer
    Charlottesville, Virginia
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