Thursday, March 01, 2001

Here is the energy family

Here is [my] the energy family

Dad Oil, a tough and hard-working guy, who brings the bread to the house. He is quite lonely since the family, even though they like him to earn well, ignores him, considering that marketing the devil's excrement does not have enough social status. In his work, when facing difficulties such as consumption taxes, he seeks the company of the OPEC guys, even when they also seem somewhat lacking in desire.

The Hydro breast, always present with its clean and pure energy. As long as there is good communication, he does not need praise and fulfills his duties by sowing renewable warmth in the family.

The eldest son, Carbon, [coal] a solid and conservative boy, even if somewhat boring. He doesn't complain much but, by searching for his language, we can hear him commenting on how unfair it is that he is ignored at home, while in countries like Germany and Spain, his peers enjoy such extraordinary subsidies that they even go by the same name as his father Petroleum.

The second, Heavy Oil, a man who, although he looks like his father, does not even remotely have his father's personality. He is a slow and heavy guy, but if someone only gave him some technical clinics, who knows if in the future he couldn't become a real cleanup hitter. Recently he tried to do something, putting on the Orimulsion flannel but, even in Florida, supposedly a friendly state, they wouldn't let him play.

The little boy Gas – who everyone knows as the genius of the family – but nothing he can start. Although he is a good associate of Dad Oil, helping him fill the empty spaces he leaves, he fails to assert himself when he is alone and free. However, one day he will be a star

The Aeolian female and her alternative cousins ​​are still too young to know how they will behave, but they look good.

Finally, there is a nuclear guy who, because he lives outside the country, almost no one knows him.

What's the point? It occurred to me that describing our energy family in this way could help me explain what a few of us consider to be possible errors in our energy policy as a country. Let's see.

The little Gas boy, instead of preparing him to exploit all his talents in the future and assist him in forming his own OPEG, we want to launch him onto the streets alone, because we have read that he is fashionable in other countries. We don't even realize that one of the reasons for its popularity is that since it is not organized, it is a perfect strikebreaker to be used against its father Oil. Furthermore, and even if it is not bad to generate electricity, when considering its true potential, burning it in this task is like being satisfied with it washing dishes, as long as it is in New York.

Regarding Heavy Oil, if in the Orinoco Belt we sold cheaply, for about 30 years, to various national and foreign groups the bitumen they need and in return developed on-site technologies for generating plants, we could make the boy a champion. How much better than to make him pass off today's global punishment as fat, dirty and flabby!

Finally, Carbon [coal] is not without reason. If they can use it in other parts of the world and if its value is not really seen to rise explosively in the future, why don't we allow it to be useful, generating electricity?

Obviously, all of these are only matters that a united family understands and considers.

PS. Translated by Google from  an Op-Ed in Venezuela, March 1, 2001