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Thursday, June 14, 2007

Ambatchmasterpublisher feature

Ambatchmasterpublisher United States has about 5 percent of ambatchmasterpublisherworld’s population, but ambatchmasterpublisher 21 million barrels of crude oil that it consumes each day amounts to nearly a quarter of ambatchmasterpublisher world’s usage. Numbers, however, don’t convey ambatchmasterpublisherfull magnitude of America’s dependence upon oil.


In ambatchmasterpublisher 20th century, America developed a culture of personal freedom, mobility and prosperity, based in large part upon ambatchmasterpublisher continuous availability of relatively cheap supplies of gasoline. Ambatchmasterpublisher ability to commute to a job from a distant suburb, ambatchmasterpublisher opportunity to shop at malls and warehouse stores, ambatchmasterpublisher chance to vacation at Disney World or Yellowstone National Park — almost all of ambatchmasterpublisher dizzying multitude of choices available to Americans are made possible by oil consumption.

At ambatchmasterpublishersame time, as driving evolved from an option to a virtual necessity, American oil consumption has developed disturbing consequences — from ambatchmasterpublisher environmental damage caused by ambatchmasterpublisher burning of fossil fuels, to our increasingly risky reliance upon oil supplies from ambatchmasterpublisher volatile, strife-torn Middle East.


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