EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
At least since the energy crisis of the early 1970s, the United States has
wrestled with the difficult question of how best to ensure an adequate energy
supply while protecting the environment. Today, this question continues to play
a role in our political debates. Whether and how public policy might reduce
reliance on imported oil, encourage lower-emission vehicles, or spur the development
of new or cleaner sources of power are all regular matters of public discussion
and concern.
It is in this context that the Manhattan Institutes Center for Energy
and the Environment offers this publication. It is predicated on the belief
that wise and prudent policies in these areas require a well-informed citizenryone
well versed in the facts. With that goal in mind, the Center sought, with the
help of survey research conducted by Zogby Associates, to determine what Americans
believe about energy and environmental issues. We report here on the answers
given by 1,000 Americans, chosen to be representative of public opinion generally,
on matters such as the sources of U.S. energy supply, the extent of the oil
supply, the rate of global warming, and trends in atmospheric pollution. Our
poll was taken at a timethe summer of 2006when, because of a sharp
increase in the price of gasoline, public interest in energy and environmental
issues was particularly keen.
The survey found that the views that Americans hold about a wide range of these
issues are, in key ways, inaccurate. Significant numbers of people appear to
misunderstand such crucial matters as:
- The types of fuel that are the main sources of energy
- The main uses of energy supplies
- Which countries supply the U.S. with the most oil
- The extent of oil reserves
- The rate of global warming
- The terms of the Kyoto Protocol international environmental treaty
- The environmental record of nuclear power plants
- The extent of urban air pollution
- The effects of conservation and increases in energy efficiency
Herein we report on what might be called the energy myths to which
many Americans subscribeand their correctives. Energy Myths, Energy
Facts is intended as a primer for educators, journalists, and public officialsfor
concerned citizens generallyas we seek twin goals: an energy supply sufficient
to fuel continued economic growth; and environmental policies that will protect
the public health and the quality of our lives.
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