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FROM THIS
MONTH'S EDITOR |
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Mired in crude Greasing the machine A blue skies romance Perilous prosperity Hotspots! A convenient confusion Shifting gears Action profiles |
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Last year in Britain when the price of petrol skyrocketed 2,000 independent truckers went berserk. They blockaded refineries, eventually shutting down the country. Government taxes were blamed for destroying their livelihoods and the nation to boot. Similar protests erupted in Europe and North America. Meanwhile, the UK Government dithered. Petrol stations soon ran dry and, wonder of wonders, a blanket of blessed silence descended. The machine stopped, at least for a few days. While the truckers kvetched about high taxes, oil executives were pocketing millions in stock options and bonuses: BP, Shell and Exxon last year made record profits. The lesson? Whining about gasoline taxes is a gift to the oil lobby. Lower taxes mean more petrol sold, more profits for OPEC and more booty for the companies. And, inevitably, more carbon dioxide dumped into the atmosphere. The debate should be about how we can use less oil, not more. We need to keep taxes where they are. Or, better yet, raise them. But not before we insist that our money be used for the broader public good. That means funding research into energy alternatives. Now.
Wayne Ellwood |
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Front
cover photo: ADRIAN ARBIB / STILL PICTURES Magazine designed by: ALAN HUGHES. On-line mag maintained by: SIMON LOFFLER |
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