By John DeFore
California leads the nation in efforts to curb its addiction to oil, according to a report issued this week by the Natural Resources Defense Council.
The group’s second annual report is mainly intended to measure each state’s relative vulnerability to rising oil prices, suggesting that while “the federal government has a responsibility to take strong and necessary actions to reduce our oil dependence,” the varied experience of individual state governments “presents our nation’s leaders with an opportunity to gauge the most effective measures and adopt them.”
The report tallies state efforts in four general categories (clean/efficient vehicle use, research and development, clean fuels, and smart growth/transit), most of which are broken into sub-categories of legislative action. California is the only state to take all of the suggested actions in three of the four categories (perhaps unsurprisingly, it comes up short in the smart growth/transit arena), placing it just ahead of competitors New York and Connecticut. (Alaska, perhaps counting on all that oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, is doing the least to curb dependency.)
California stood out as the only state to have adopted a low-carbon fuel standard, designed to reduce the intensity of auto-fuel pollution, which was implemented by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger last year; the defense council notes that states such as Massachusetts are considering those measures but have yet to enact them.
The council measures a state’s vulnerability as the percentage of an average driver’s income going to gasoline, and even that basic data may be an eye-opener: In Mississippi, the most vulnerable state, drivers spent nearly 8 percent of their income filling their tanks (an average of nearly $2,300 per driver) — and that figure is based on 2007 spending, before the price increases seen this year. Connecticut drivers spent the least, at 3.17 percent, while Californians fell in the middle at 5.38 percent.
© Photo by Vasyl Dudenko | Dreamstime.com
Copyright © 2008 | Distributed by Noofangle Media











0 responses so far ↓
There are no comments yet...Kick things off by filling out the form below.
You must log in to post a comment.