Hamilton Journal News

High gas prices hurt, but they can enable good choices

- Eugene Robinson Eugene Robinson writes for The Washington Post. Paul Krugman returns soon

The water level in Nevada’s Lake Mead has fallen so low that authoritie­s found two bodies previously hidden in the reservoir’s depths, one an apparent homicide victim stuffed into a barrel. Upstream along the Colorado River, in shrinking Lake Powell, another set of waterlogge­d human remains was recently found in a submerged car. Meanwhile, the bodies of longdead mountain climbers are emerging from the melting glaciers of the Himalayas and the Alps.

Those macabre discoverie­s are the result of climate change, which doesn’t care about the war in Ukraine or spiking gasoline prices or the coming midterm elections. Climate change marches on, and we ignore it in favor of our immediate interests at our grave near-term peril.

We just keep finding reasons not to take the steps — or make the sacrifices — that we know are necessary to curb carbon emissions.

One of those sacrifices involves paying more at the pump. The nationwide average price of a gallon of gasoline hit $4.42 on Thursday, an all-time high. Low-income Americans struggling to cope with inflation are suffering. The Biden administra­tion and the Democratic Party, looking ahead to November, are worried. But we must keep in mind that paying higher gas prices now will mean better lives for our children, our grandchild­ren and the generation­s that follow.

Russia’s brutal and unprovoked invasion of Ukraine leaves the United States and its allies no choice but to do whatever is possible to keep Russian fossil fuels, which fund President Vladimir Putin’s war machine, off the world markets. We need to see this not as a problem but as an opportunit­y.

The sky-high price of gasoline is a powerful incentive to use less of it — which would mean reduced carbon emissions. But it is also a powerful incentive for motorists to get angry at the politician­s who lead their government­s. President Joe Biden has responded with an unpreceden­ted release of oil from the nation’s strategic petroleum reserve, a move echoed by allied government­s around the world. “We all over-rely on fossil fuels,” Cecilia Rouse, chair of the president’s Council of Economic Advisers, told me on Thursday. “That’s just the reality of today.”

Biden has not, however, given in to the “drill, baby, drill” hectoring of Republican critics, who see the solution to high gas prices as bringing more and more U.S. oil out of the ground — and, eventually, spewing its heat-trapping carbon into the atmosphere. On Wednesday, the administra­tion canceled the planned sale of offshore oil and gas leases, including 1 million acres off the Alaska coast and more in the Gulf of Mexico.

The right long-term solution, for the sake of the planet, is not increasing the supply of fossil fuels. It’s reducing the demand.

One impact of high gasoline prices should be to spur greater demand for electric vehicles, which have a much smaller carbon footprint. They allow drivers to blissfully ignore prices at the pump — and, with their terrific accelerati­on, to embarrass Ferrari owners at stoplights.

The price spike comes as mass-market electric vehicles come on the market in earnest. Ford is about to ship its F-150 Lightning, the all-electric version of the pickup truck that has been America’s most popular vehicle for a generation. The base model will cost around $40,000 — not cheap, exactly, but within the range of what a buyer would expect to pay for a brand-new pickup with a few bells and whistles.

Imagine the difference it would make if all the pickups on U.S. streets stopped belching carbon.

These high gas prices, and shallow lakes, are telling us to make good choices. We should listen.

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