AUTHOR Q & A
'Energy Pearl Harbor' possible
In 'The Plan,' Edwin Black says American leaders are as unprepared for a foreign source cutting off our oil as they were for Katrina.
Related Content
BY RICHARD PACHTER
rap@richardpachter.com
Though based in Washington, D.C., South Florida seems to be author Edwin Black's second home. The peripatetic author's current and previous books were launched here, he frequently speaks at local events and visits to recharge a bit between writing and the promoting.
We had a quick lunch in late August, then a flurry of phone calls and e-mails that resulted in this colloquy. A longer, unedited version is posted at www.richardpachter.com
Q: Why did you select this topic and the form it took, literally, a plan?
A: I've spent my life chronicling a terrible past in hopes of preserving a precious future. My oil addiction books -- this is my second -- document a precious past juxtaposed against a terrible future. Our addiction to oil is a clear and present danger. But The Plan is not about energy independence, which is, at best, a distant goal. The Plan outlines how to recognize and survive an energy Pearl Harbor imposing an oil interruption on America -- this can come at any moment. Amazingly, no government official, local or federal, has even discussed such a plan, but our allies have.
Q: In your earlier books, you encountered resistance from some of the companies that were profiled, specifically IBM and GM. Who wouldn't speak to you this time, and did they seek to prevent others from cooperating with you?
A: This time it was certain groups within the Department of Energy and industrial associations such as the American Trucking Association. But The Plan yielded a tremendous turnaround in one company, General Motors. In my previous investigations, General Motors would not answer any questions or even communicate.
After three years of the most negative publicity based on my writings and facing bankruptcy, GM underwent a complete turnaround. The response time of their media department was this time measured in minutes. This time, they were honest, admitted all their past misdeeds, but were also quick to explain their fresh new commitment to the electrification of their fleet beginning 2010. If GM can be believed, it will be a major part of the solution to getting off oil.
Q: Has your book reached either of the presidential candidates? If so, any feedback?
A: In my opinion, nothing can reach any of the presidential candidates. No matter how good a plan is, they will be oblivious to it.
Between McCain offering a $300 million bonus for a battery invented decades ago and Obama offering to position one million plug-in hybrids seven years from today, when there will probably be 300 million gas guzzlers on the road, increasing at the rate of 1.5 million per month, it became clear to me that while someone needs to provide them with a copy of The Plan, I think they are too busy making empty promises and using alt energy buzzwords to absorb any new ideas.
Between the old guard and the new guard, in the event of an oil interruption, America will discover that its leadership has been uniformly negligent. There will be a Katrina-style catastrophe in every city from South Beach to Seattle. No one will care until it is too late.
Q: Beyond promoting this book, what's the next step for you in trying to secure the implementation of ``The Plan''?
A: I'm just one man, working with no one's permission, rallying a diverse national movement of alt energy advocates who are only now awakening to the reality that beyond the warm and fuzzy goal of energy independence, there is no plan for an energy interruption, which could occur at any moment. My website www.planforoilcrisis.com will bring people together to develop such plans.
In fact, my very first meeting the day before I officially launched the book in Fort Lauderdale was a closed-door briefing with two key magnates in the transportation sector who are determined to move aggressively to adopt a plan and to help get our country off oil. But I have found too many are reacting too slowly to the necessity to learn about the coming hurricane in the Gulf -- not the Gulf of Mexico but the Persian Gulf, which holds the key to 40 percent of all seaborne oil, 18 percent of the global supply and 15 to 20 percent of America's oil lifeline. It can all be shut down by Iran or Al Qaeda at a slender choke point just two miles wide in each direction called the Strait of Hormuz.
Q: What role has Nova Southeastern University played in the promotion of your book?
A: Nova has been the launch pad for each of my books during the past several years. To me, Nova represents the most enlightened university management I have encountered, willing to commit its resources, its campus and its support to new ideas and the pursuit of new revelations. I have found Nova particularly interested in helping the country get off of oil by promoting the discussion and jumping at every chance to adopt new technology as soon as it's available.
Join the discussion
Note: If this is your first time using our NEW commenting system, you will have to LOG OUT and then LOG BACK IN.
The Miami Herald is pleased to provide this opportunity to share information, experiences and observations about what's in the news. Some of the comments may be reprinted elsewhere in the site or in the newspaper. We encourage lively, open debate on the issues of the day, and ask that you refrain from profanity, hate speech, personal comments and remarks that are off point. In order to post comments, you must be a registered user of MiamiHerald.com. Your username will show along with the comments you post. Thank you for taking the time to offer your thoughts.
















My Yahoo
@Nyx.CommentBody@