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In fact, one of the key reasons Detroit's automakers are in shambles is the boom and bust in oil prices that effectively made it extremely difficult to prepare for an alternative future. Detroit's carmakers tried for a time during the 1980s and early 1990s. But — foolishly — they eventually gave up, having been seduced by the notion the world is awash in cheap oil. Of course, it wasn't. Inflated union contracts didn't cripple Detroit but shortsighted energy policies did and the same thing could happen again unless the U.S. as a nation adopts a more rational approach to energy policy.
I don't know if we've reached "Peak Oil" but the discussion is probably irrelevant. The larger fact is the U.S. economy will continue to face serious difficulties unless it finds a way around the OPEC blockade. Market economics, subsidies, tax credits and incentives and looser or tighter regulation all have proven irrelevant over the last three decades in tipping the energy balance.
Read full from Oakland Press