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March 18, 2008 9:46 AM PDT

Oil consumption peaks for world's No. 3 consumer

Posted by John Addison
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"Only the USA and China consume more oil than California," observes Jim Boyd, vice chairman of the California Energy Commission. With oil prices soaring, California must reduce its dependency on oil to sustain prosperity and achieve energy security.

As 38 million Californians deploy a range of solutions to reducing oil usage, the world will learn valuable lessons. In 2006, California consumption of gasoline peaked, even though population continues on the path of doubling over a 30 year period.

In California, more people are driving fewer miles; importantly, fewer solo miles. More efficient vehicles are being used, often benefiting from hybrid-electric drive systems. As an alternative to oil, there is a growing use of biofuel, natural gas, hydrogen, and renewable electricity.

Solutions to the state's, the nation's, and world's transportation needs were presented at the WestStart-CALSTART Clean Heavy Vehicle Conference 2008.

Many of the solutions were discussed by managers of large fleets. These people can save millions with improvements that passenger vehicle drivers often ignore, such as low-rolling resistance tires. Fleet managers can also install the infrastructure for their fleets; such as fast-charge stations, hydrogen fueling, and specific biofuel blends.

Fleets often pilot new technology years prior to commercialization. Large prototypes are later miniaturized for passenger vehicles. All successful fleets continually improve efficiency. In the transportation lifecycle, 80 percent of all energy is lost, estimates Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories.

John Boesel, President of WestStart-CALSTART, observed that linked trips, public transit, hybrids, and improved mileage vehicles are all factors in peak oil demand in California. Boesel is in a good position to observe future transportation trends. His organization facilitates bringing together fleet managers, vehicle and fuel producers, researchers, and top government officials.

Boesel discussed a number of reasons to be optimistic when we talked over lunch. Investment in clean tech and clean transportation is exploding. New lightweight materials are allowing vehicles to travel further with less fuel. There is ongoing innovation in materials. Hybrid-electric drive systems allow heavy mechanical components to be replaced with lighter ones. Engines are being made more efficient. Heavy vehicles that formerly burned fuel during the 40 percent of the time that they idle, now idle off. Major corporations and venture capital backed start-ups are creating next-generation biofuels and synthetic fuels.

WestStart-CALSTART encourages public policy makers to set performance standards and not attempt to pick technology winners. Government is also critical in early funding of new fuels and efficient vehicles. "There are many paths to the future," noted Boesel.

Biofuels will play a major role in reducing California's oil dependency. By law, California AB 2076 requires 20 percent alternative fuels use in 2020 and 30 percent alternative fuels use in 2030. The bulk of alt fuels are likely to be biofuel. By law, 40 percent of that biofuel must be produced in California by 2020 and 75 percent by 2050. This creates a challenge and an opportunity. California is the nation's leading agricultural state. Droughts and reduced snow accumulation are creating water scarcity for farmers. Corn ethanol and soy biodiesel generate tremendous greenhouse gases in their lifecycle of production and consumption.

New low-carbon fuels are being developed including next-generation biofuels. In pilot production, gasoline and diesel are being made from synthetic fuels.

To keep California's $1.5 trillion annual economy from running out of gas, the state is investing $200 million per year in clean transportation for the next 7.5 years. AB118 is the law that makes this possible. It was sponsored by Assembly Speaker Fabian N??ez and signed into law by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. The money is funded with vehicle fees.

CEC will fund $120 million per year for the commercialization of alternative fuels and efficient vehicle technologies. The California Air Resources Board will fund $80 million per year for enhanced fleet modernization and an air quality improvement program.

All these initiatives promise to create millions of jobs for a state that continues to grow. Despite a state budget crisis, no one is trying to remove AB118's $200 million annual investment in the future.

With intermodal transportation solutions, integrated freight movement, light materials, hybrid-electric drive systems, efficient vehicles, and new fuels, California is leading the way to control its own destiny without being dependent on foreign oil.

John Addison publishes the Clean Fleet Report.

John Addison is the Publisher of the Clean Fleet Report and serves on the Board of the California Hydrogen Business Council. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network, and is not an employee of CNET.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 5 comments
by polaris20 March 18, 2008 10:12 AM PDT
Gee, I thought California was apart of the US. I guess those people saying California is like another country (or planet) all these years were right after all. =)
Reply to this comment
by david__B March 19, 2008 1:28 PM PDT
The amazing part is California, like no other place ON EARTH could fix most of thier problems by doing what Europe has done. Tax the heck out of Gasoline, and spend the money on REAL mass transit.

They talk the talk, but when it comes down to real answers the Government and Citizens of California are all hot air.
Reply to this comment
by jemorris44 March 25, 2008 8:58 AM PDT
Since moving here two years ago I do notice a decrease in the number of SUVs on the road. Hopefully, California will embrace what promises to be the next bigger driver of the economy here: renewable energy. http://schwartz-pr.com/renewablog
Reply to this comment
by CleanBurning April 9, 2008 2:24 PM PDT
Will any of the $120 million/year from CEC further the development of natural gas as a viable alternative to biofuels? It seems that there are too many debates and environmentally friendly initiatives out there that are failing to acknowledge natural gas as having real potential.

Managers of fleets should take a special interest. Currently, they could save $0.50 up to $1.00 or more per gallon using natural gas vs. diesel. With 98% of natural gas being sourced domestically, dependence on foreign oil could be drastically reduced right now as opposed to in some distant future.
Reply to this comment
by dude7895 August 24, 2008 9:16 PM PDT
There is no way the US uses more oil than California! Its just not possible.
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