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Why the good news about oil prices is really the bad news.


Oil prices have fallen sharply this year. This may sound like good news, but don't kid yourself. Anything that reinforces the role of fossil fuels fossil fuel: see energy, sources of; fuel.
fossil fuel

Any of a class of materials of biologic origin occurring within the Earth's crust that can be used as a source of energy. Fossil fuels include coal, petroleum, and natural gas.
 as the world's primary energy source is bad, not good. Anything that makes it cheaper to pump greenhouse gases greenhouse gas
n.
Any of the atmospheric gases that contribute to the greenhouse effect.



greenhouse gas 
 into the atmosphere is cause for mourning rather than celebration. What we need is significantly higher oil. prices, enough to deter consumption and make us look seriously at alternatives. The sad fact is that just as oil is the lifeblood life·blood  
n.
1. Blood regarded as essential for life.

2. An indispensable or vital part: Capable workers are the lifeblood of the business.
 of Western economies, oil revenue is often the lifeblood of tyranny Tyranny
Big Brother

omnipresent leader of a totalitarian nightmare world. [Br. Lit.: 1984]

Creon

rules Thebes with cruel decrees. [Gk. Lit.: Antigone]

Gessler

Austrian governor treats Swiss despotically; shot by Tell.
: Oil-rich regimes that finance terrorism and preach intolerance intolerance /in·tol·er·ance/ (in-tol´er-ans) inability to withstand or consume; inability to absorb or metabolize nutrients.

congenital lysine intolerance
 are sustained by what we spend on gasoline and heating oil. Lower oil prices also promote more driving, which increases air pollution and highway fatalities. Then there's sprawl: Cheaper gas will. mean more far-flung, auto-dependent communities, which will bring more driving still. And all that driving means more human-induced climate change. Let's face it: Nothing but drastically higher prices will deter most of us from consuming more carbon-based energy.--Daniel Akst [9/17/06]
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Title Annotation:OPINION
Author:Akst, Daniel
Publication:New York Times Upfront
Date:Nov 13, 2006
Words:177
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