The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Gas too cheap to cover its environmen­tal cost

- Jim Cameron COMMENTARY

Gasoline is too cheap. This is not another treehugger, train-guy rant. Hear me out.

Former Vice President Biden has made the argument for weaning us off fossil fuels, mostly for environmen­tal reasons. Anybody who remotely believes in science or has witnessed the cataclysmi­c changes in our weather knows we must do something to stop global warming.

But I still drive a car (albeit a hybrid) and am not ready to give it up for a bicycle or skateboard like some crazed Gen-Z’er. We need cars to get around in Connecticu­t despite our meager attempts at mass transit, especially in the time of COVID.

My argument is that price of the fuel we use (gasoline) doesn’t cover the real cost to our environmen­t (or each other) when we drive. Gasoline is too cheap.

Why does a gallon of gasoline, which moves us 20 to 50 miles depending on your car’s efficiency, cost less than a cup of coffee at

Starbucks? Enjoying your java doesn’t destroy the ozone layer.

Why does a gallon of gas in the U.S. cost roughly half of what it does in Canada? Or a third of the price in Europe?

The answer is taxes. Other nations put huge taxes on fuel and reinvest the proceeds into mass transit, subsidizin­g the fares.

OK, so you don’t want to take the train or a bus — that’s fine. Drive your car and enjoy the crowded highways ... and our polluted air. Those are the costs of cheap fuel too.

Did you know that Connecticu­t’s air quality is, by many criteria, dirtier than Los Angeles’? Sure, a lot of that airborne crud is floating our way from New York City, but we’re not helping ourselves by adding to it. Nor are we aiding our residents who have conditions like asthma.

Caring parents obsess about protecting the health of their kids by buying organic food, but drive to the supermarke­t to acquire it in SUVs. There seems no incentive for buying a car, truck or SUV that uses less fuel with gas prices so low.

When I visit Europe again (soon, I hope) I won’t see SUVs, but smaller, cleaner, much more fuel efficient cars. With the higher price of gasoline reflecting the actual cost of driving, European motorists don’t waste fuel the way we do.

The oil companies get it. That’s why BP (British Petroleum) is investing in solar and wind, expecting to produce 40 percent less fossil fuels in the next decade.

Wall Street also understand­s it, witness the more than quadruplin­g in the share price of electric carmaker Tesla in the last year.

So why don’t we get it? Why is gasoline so cheap?

Depending on whom you talk to, we have about 47 years worth of oil left before we run out. That as

sumes current consumptio­n levels. If we use less, it will last longer. That’s why the price of gasoline should go up so we are incentiviz­ed to drive less in smaller cars and make our oil last longer while we transition to renewables, right?

Of course, what do we care? We won’t be around when the oil runs out. That, along with the rising sea level and coastal flooding, will be the next generation’s problem. I’m sure they’ll figure it out. Good luck, kids.

 ?? Alexander Soule / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Southweste­rn Connecticu­t’s first Sinclair Dino Mart opened in October 2018 at 479 Main Ave. in Norwalk, offering “wholesale” gas prices.
Alexander Soule / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Southweste­rn Connecticu­t’s first Sinclair Dino Mart opened in October 2018 at 479 Main Ave. in Norwalk, offering “wholesale” gas prices.
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 ?? Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? Stamford's Lettresha Nelson fills up at a Global gas station in Norwalk in 2016.
Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo Stamford's Lettresha Nelson fills up at a Global gas station in Norwalk in 2016.

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