PHILADELPHIA – Gov. Edward G. Rendell and former director of the CIA James Woolsey today called America’s growing dependence on foreign oil one of the greatest threats to the nation’s security and economy.
“As a nation, we import more than 60 percent of our liquid fuel supplies,” said Rendell during a press conference at the Independence Visitors Center. “That kind of dependence on foreign oil leaves us exposed to political upheaval or hostile agendas from elsewhere in the world.
“It is intolerable that our economy and way of life are so much at the mercy of foreign nations,” he said. “We need to act now and spur the development of biofuels here at home. Instead of Pennsylvanians sending $30 billion each year overseas to buy gas and fuels, we can invest that money here and support our farmers who grow the crops that produce ethanol and biodiesel, the new manufacturers that refine the oils and the trucking and rail industries that ship it.”
In his remarks, Woolsey expanded on the threat a dependence on Middle Eastern oil presents to the U.S, and how a change in the way the nation borrows to finance oil purchases could benefit the country.
“The national security reasons to destroy oil’s strategic role in our economy are substantial,” said Woolsey. “More than two-thirds of the world’s proven reserves of conventional oil lie in the turbulent states of the Persian Gulf, as does much of oil’s international infrastructure. Increasing dependence on this part of the world for our transportation needs is subject to a wide range of perils.”
Woolsey was CIA director from 1993 to 1995 and has held Presidential appointments in two Republican and two Democratic administrations. He currently co-chairs the Committee on the Present Danger with former Secretary of State George Shultz. He is also chairman of the advisory boards of the Clean Fuels Foundation and serves on the National Commission on Energy Policy.
“I believe every state needs to do what it can to protect national security,” Rendell said. “That’s why I proposed the Energy Independence Strategy, which is a comprehensive plan designed to save consumers $10 billion in energy costs over the next 10 years, increase Pennsylvania’s alternative and renewable energy production capacity, reduce the state’s dependence on foreign fuels and create more jobs.”
The strategy, which Rendell unveiled in February, includes the PennSecurity Fuels Initiative, which requires 1 billion gallons of biofuels to be produced and consumed within Pennsylvania by 2017 — an amount equal to what will be imported from the Persian Gulf by that time.
Beginning Sept. 17, Governor Rendell and the Pennsylvania General Assembly will resume working together in a special session devoted to the Energy Independence Strategy.
For more information on Governor Rendell’s PennSecurity Fuels Initiative and the entire Energy Independence Strategy, visit here and click on the “Fueling Energy Savings” icon.