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114264 1 (1981-01-01)

handle is hein.gao/gaobaduzy0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 








Is the Energy Crisis

Real?


r_21


Lisa Shames
Ms Shames is a management analyst in the
Energy and Minerals Division She received
her A B degree in political science from
Columbia University in 1977 and her
master's degree in public administration
from Syracuse University in 1978 She
joined GAO that year on the graduate co-op
program


  -The United States faces a serious
and continuing energy problem
which has provoked intense debate.
Few will deny that the age of cheap,
easy oil has drawn to a close, Im-
ports from the Middle East are vul-
nerable, and domestic production
is steadily declining.
  At the present, there is no con-
sensus on which fuel can and
should replace oil. The use of nu-
clear power is steeped in contro-
versy. The proven reserves of gas
have been falling off. Coal is abun-
dant, but there are potential envi-
ronmental risks and practical prob-
lems in mining and transporting the
necessary quantities. Among un-
conventional sources, solar energy
Is impeded by economic and insti-
tutional barriers, and   synthetic
fuels will not be available in signifi-
cant quantities until the end of the
decade.
   Most likely the projected energy
policy will develop into a mixed
strategy to meet our future energy
needs. One component of that mix,
and one that offers immediate
opportunities, is conservation.


Conservation

  Conservation, or the reduction of
energy use and its improved effici-
ency, is receiving growing recogni-
tion as an energy alternative. The
second National Energy Plan, is-
sued in May 1979, stated that con-
servation continues to offer the
greatest prospect of reducing de-
pendence on unstable imports,
reducing energy costs, and meeting
environmental goals. The Harvard
Business School estimates that a
serious commitment to conserva-
tion could supply up to 40 percent
of the country's energy with the
same standard of living.'
   Residential conservation involves
millions of individual decisionmak-
ers representing the most decen-
tralized energy-consuming sector.
Their attitudes and behavior regard-
ing conservation are critical to any
successful effort in encouraging
the public to adopt a more energy-
efficient lifestyle.


GAO Review/Winter 1981


   For an upcoming report evaluat-
 Ing the Department of Energy's
 existing and planned residential
 energy conservation outreach, pro-
 grams,2 GAO sought to determine
 public opinion on the overall energy
 situation since 1977, and review the
 research on what motivates people
 to conserve. Specific issues were
 * public awareness or perception
 of the energy situation,
 * factors which persuade or moti-
 vate the public to conserve, and
 * conservation measures already
 taken.
 We believed that these considera-
 tions contribute to the individual's
 decision to adopt or reject conser-
 vation as a permanent way of life.
   It should be noted at the outset
 that there are various Influences
 affecting an individual's decision to
 choose conservation. Some are
 general (prevailing local fuel prices),
 while others are more personal (the
 effect of higher fuel costs on one's
 heating bills). Social values also
 affect a person's decision. Conser-
 vation is an apple pie concept;
 that Is, few people rejec) It as
 socially unacceptable. Yet/despite
 the verbal enthusiasm for co-nserva-
 tion, there is a wide variation be-
 tween what people say and what
 they actually do to save energy. It is
 difficult to determine the relative
 weights of these variables in any
 given survey, but they must be rec-
 ognized nevertheless.

 Public Perception of
 the Energy Situation

   Effective policy implementation
 requires public acceptance, and the
 level of that acceptance Is, In part,
 related to the public's belief that the
 problem is serious, that the prob-
 lem will affect them personally, and
 that a new policy is necessary to
 solve the problem. For this reason,
it Is important to examine how the
public perceives the energy situa-
tion.
   Pribr to the Arab oil embargo,
 energy was virtually absent from
 the public concern, but it is now a
                               83

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