How Cheap Gas Hurts Green Initiatives, Feds' Bottom Line

Driving less not great for gov't coffers
By Kevin Spak,  Newser Staff
Posted Nov 24, 2008 9:15 AM CST
How Cheap Gas Hurts Green Initiatives, Feds' Bottom Line
A gas station advertises gas under $2 a gallon for regular unleaded Thursday, Nov. 6, 2008 in Houston.    (AP Photo)

Americans are driving less and burning less fuel, but it could be too soon for conservation fans to celebrate. That dip, and global economic gloom, has sent oil and gas prices spiraling down, Joseph White writes in the Wall Street Journal, depriving the government of taxes it needs for transportation infrastructure—and perhaps sapping consumers’ motivation to buy more fuel-efficient vehicles.

President-elect Barack Obama, citing the cycle in which Americans “go from shock to trance,” promises to break the oil addiction for good. The feds must stop “encouraging Americans to burn less fuel, while secretly hoping they drive more,” the Transportation secretary says. But while raising the gasoline tax could improve revenues and encourage conservation, it’s politically untenable. (More gasoline prices stories.)

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