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By JAMES KROHE JR.



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Transportation and the new economics of oil


On the highways and on the farms, gasoline consumption is down in Illinois. Like the rest of the nation, the state is weaning itself of dependence on foreign oil. But the decrease has affected state tax increases and forced the shutdown of refineries and car assembly plants. These and other effects of the new economics of oil are explored in part one of Jim Krohe's two-part article. Next month he will analyze state intervention in the transportation marketplace

MOVING things is one of the jobs Illinois does best. The state is the site of O'Hare International, the world's busiest airport. It boasts a river system in the Illinois whose annual cargoes of 100 million tons are second only to the Mississippi's. It is served by the nation's two largest rail gateways in Chicago and St. Louis. And the Dan Ryan Expressway in Chicago has been called the world's busiest highway — an
Illinois petroleum* consumption by transportation sector (trillion Btus)
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Source: Illinois Energy Consumption: Statistical Report 160-1968, Illinois Institute of Natural Resources, May 1981.
opinion which commuters will amply confirm. Grain, coal, goods and people move on 10,000 miles of railroad track, 1,200 miles of waterway and enough miles of streets and highways to circle the globe five times. Transportation is often said to be vital to industry; in Illinois, transportation is an industry.

All that movement takes a great deal of energy. According to the Illinois Institute of Natural Resources (IINR), 23 percent of all the energy consumed in Illinois in 1978 was used for transportation. Of the residential, commercial, agricultural and industrial sectors of the state economy, only industry used more energy than transportation. Measured in Btus, consumption for transportation in 1978 was 961.2 trillion, nearly twice that consumed in 1960. Virtually all this energy is in liquid form. Motor and aviation gasoline, jet fuel (kerosene and naptha), diesel fuel and distillate fuel oil added up to 175.7 million barrels of petroleum in 1978, which was 98.5 percent of all the energy used for transportation that year. Illinois sails on a sea of oil, or more specifically, gasoline. In 1979, Illinois' 7.5 million automobiles drove more than 90 percent of the passenger-miles traveled in the state; of the transportation energy used in Illinois, motor gasoline alone accounts for roughly 80 percent.


Consumption down

Illinois in the late 1970s was producing about 26 million barrels of oil per year. This amounts to less than 10 percent of the state's annual consumption. Illinois thus stands in the same relation to the rest of the U.S. as the U.S. does to the world: Both are net importers of petroleum and net exporters of dollars. The difference is that while the U.S. currently imports only about 42 percent of its oil, Illinois imports 90 percent. (Most of the crude oil delivered to Illinois refineries comes via pipeline from Texas and off-shore Louisiana fields. Illinois also is connected via product pipelines to Gulf Coast refineries which furnish the state with finished fuels.) And since not only the state's transportation but also its agriculture runs almost entirely on oil, as well as 40 percent of its commerce, vital segments of the state economy are vulnerable to price increases and supply interruptions from beyond its borders.

It thus must be considered encouraging news that Illinoisans appear to be weaning themselves of "foreign" oil. Figures compiled by the IINR reveal that total gasoline consumption in Illinois in 1980 was 4.8 billion gallons. That was 13 percent fewer gallons than were consumed in 1978, even though the number of miles traveled remained virtually unchanged at approximately 65 billion. (These savings roughly parallel national figures, which show a decline in gasoline consumption of 16.5 percent in the two years beginning in March 1979.) IINR officials credit the reduction to increases in gasoline prices, which averaged 34 percent


ii810924-2.jpgPartial support for the energy series has been provided through a grant from the Office of Consumer Affairs of the U.S. Department of Energy. Opinions and conclusions expressed in the article are solely the responsbility of the author.         — Editor


24 | September 1981 | Illinois Issues


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higher in Illinois in 1980 than in 1978. Similar economies have been achieved in agriculture, where consumption dropped by 24 percent between 1975 and 1978 even though the number of acres farmed remained stable.


Small car sales up

Simple efficiencies such as tune-ups, car-pooling and improved driving habits played a part in achieving these savings. But the biggest cause of this happy effect is a switch to smaller, more gas-efficient cars. Sales figures compiled by the Illinois New Car and Trucker Dealers Association show that, compared to 1979, 1980 sales of small foreign cars in the state increased by roughly 6 percent while sales of larger American cars dropped by about 30 percent. (Sales figures were by make, not model type; if sales of American-made small cars such as the Chevrolet Chevette were included, the disparity between small and large cars would be even greater.) And further economies are possible; although the Illinois secretary of state reports that the share of smaller cars (35 horsepower or less — a VW Rabbit has 20 horsepower) among registered cars in Illinois has grown ii810924-5.jpg from 23 percent in 1974 to 34 percent in 1981, the fact remains that two-thirds of the cars on Illinois roads today are still sizable machines by world standards.

Transportation affects all industry in Illinois, and energy affects transportation. What can't be moved can't be sold, and what can't be moved cheaply can't be sold at a profit. But, as noted, transportation in Illinois is also an industry in itself, one which employs an estimated 250,000 people. That industry is being transformed by the new economics of oil. According to the U.S. Census, for example, costs of petroleum wholesalers have generally risen faster than prices, with the result that the number of bulk oil distributors in the Chicago area alone has dropped by more than 42 percent between 1972 and 1977. Thinner profit margins, plus pressure by big oil companies to funnel their products through company-owned outlets, has led to similar reductions in the number of gas stations in the state. In 1979 there were 14 oil refineries operating in Illinois; largely because of declining demand for gasoline, both the Amoco and Texaco oil companies announced this spring that they would close refineries operating in Illinois since 1903 and 1911 respectively. Finally, the consumer shift to smaller cars left a major Illinois industry ailing; poor sales threatened to force a shutdown of Chrysler's Belvi-dere assembly plant, which would have put an estimated 34,000 Illinoisans out of work.


Tax receipts affected

Any enterprise so basic also affects government. For example, the state and local governments are themselves sizable consumers of energy for transportation, the rising costs of which have unbalanced budgets across the, state. Municipalities have switched to smaller fleet cars, reduced police patrols and converted gasoline fire trucks to diesel. According to the Illinois Department of Commerce and Community Affairs, which held a series of nine workshops for local governments on such once-arcane topics as fuel management, such steps have reduced some cities' fuel consumption by as much as 100,000 gallons a year. The State of Illinois used roughly 8 million gallons of motor fuel in an average year in the late 1970s, and consequently has been driven to similar economies. In 1979, Gov. James R. Thompson ordered that the state's vehicle fleet switch to gasohol, the 90 percent gasoline-10 percent ethanol blend. Although the conversion was intended in part as a promotion for the


The biggest cause of
the drop
in gasoline consumption
is the switch
to small cars

state's fledgling fuel ethanol industry, the substitution saved an estimated 700,000 gallons of gasoline per year. But the revolution in energy economics is costing the state in other, more painful ways. Some $13.5 million of the state's annual expenditures on roads (11 percent) comes from the state's motor fuel tax of 7.5 cents per gallon. Over the years, that tax generated revenues at a pace equal to both inflation and the expansion of the state road network as gasoline consumption rose steadily. But the gasoline price pinch has hurt the state in three very sensitive places. One, decreases in consumption have caused decreases in tax collections — a drop of $45 million in 1979 alone. Two, the switch to smaller cars has meant that the state also earns less from vehicle registration fees. Three, the costs of construction and maintenance in the energy-intensive road industry has gone up — 25 percent from 1973 to 1974 because of the OPEC embargo, then up again by 20 percent from 1977 to 1978 and another 26 percent from 1978 to 1979, according


September 1981 | Illinois Issues | 25


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to the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT).

The structure of the state's road financing system has thus placed the state in a philosophical as well as a financial quandary. As long as road revenues remain a function of consumption, the state has a vested interest in energy waste. "Fifty is Thrifty" only for the motorist. For IDOT it is a disaster.


Increased production sought

Just as Illinois resembles the U.S. as a whole in its use of energy for transportation, so is it alike in its official thinking on the subject. The policies of Washington and Springfield are virtually identical in their broader aspects. Leaders in both capitals officially hold conservation to be good, but prefer to trust to market mechanisms as the agent of conservation. Both stress energy independence, and seek to achieve it by increased domestic production of energy, especially liquid fuels — efforts, however, which are based on technical and economic assumptions which have yet to be proven trustworthy.

For example, in late 1980 IDOT published its "Illinois Transportation Plan: Principles and Investment Strategies." It is not really a plan, in spite of its title. But the document does present "fundamental principles that will guide the investment of State funds in transportation projects." As reflected in the IDOT summary, transportation strategy is more a matter of means than ends. Naturally, the top priority is to operate and maintain the present auto-dominated system which, along with oil imports and traffic jams, is the legacy of the cheap energy era. Expansion of that system is suggested as a possibility if funds are available; rather than try to turn a sow's ear into a silk purse, in other words, IDOT aims merely to make a bigger and better sow's ear. The report does acknowledge that it is the "joint responsibility of the government and the private transportation sector to consider the energy implications of investments." But IDOT makes clear that it is "the responsibility of the general public . . . to voluntarily conserve energy through the wise use of available transportation facilities."

Energy conservation in Illinois, then, is a private, not a public concern. Consequently the state's own efforts to encourage conservation in the private sector (nearly all of which, reveal-ingly, have been funded by Washington) have been feeble. The IINR, as the state's energy agency, manages a program to recover and recycle used motor oil, offers demonstation projects to encourage reduced tillage by farmers and briefly sponsored a bicycle commuter program. Its most significant success is a ride-sharing /van-pooling program in which riders are matched using computers. To date the program has put perhaps 150 van pools on the road which carry an estimated 1,500 commuters every day. IINR officials estimate the resulting energy savings to be 1.86 trillion Btus — less than 0.002 percent of the state's annual transportation energy expenditure.


Illinois wells depleted

The most effective conservation incentive yet discovered is price. Yet the State of Illinois, like the federal government, has so far refused to enact a conservation tax on motor fuels. Even deregulated gasoline in the U.S. remains as much as $2.00 per gallon cheaper than gasoline in such European nations as Italy, Great Britain, France and West Germany where (not coincidentally) per capita consumption is much less. A large part of the differ ence (in Italy's case $1.83 more per gal' Ion) is the punitive taxes levied on gasoline by European governments to stem demand to minimize devastating oil import bills. A tax of similar magnitude levied in Illinois in 1980 would have earned the state roughly $8.75 billion; even allowing for reductions in demand occasioned by such a drastic price jump at the pump, revenue would still exceed $6.5 billion. As Robert Whitford of Purdue University told the eighth annual Illinois Energy Conference of the University of Illinois' Energy Research Center in Chicago


By JAMES KROHE JR.

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Rivers to Rails to Roads

THE STORY of progress in Illinois is in large part the story of the gradual conquest of distance. Transportation determines not just where but how Illinoisans have lived for nearly 200 years.

The early settlements of Illinois hugged the rivers, which were the only clear path through vast prairies and forests. Traveled first by canoe and flatboat, and later by steamboat, rivers and canals formed the state's first "road" system. The coming of the railroads in the 1850s cut Illinoisans loose from the river banks. The railroads opened new parts of the state to settlement. They also opened new markets, stimulating both agriculture and the development of heavy industry.

Energy powered this revolution. Wood-burning steamboats replaced muscle-power on river boats and later in early railroad engines. But wood is an inefficient boiler fuel, and was becoming rapidly scarce. Coal, however, was plentiful and cheap.

Coal didn't make railroads possible, but it made them more efficient. Rail dominated Illinois


26 | September 1981 | Illinois Issues


transportation from the 1860s until the 1930s. Virtually all intercity movement of goods and people was by train. (This included not just long hauls but short hops, made via electrified interurban lines; the Illinois Traction System, with 400 miles of track connecting St. Louis and central Illinois, was the largest interurban system in the Midwest.) At its height, the railroad dominated Illinois transportation more completely than even the automobile does today. Streetcars, suburban commuter lines, interurbans, freight trains, luxury Pullman coaches, all running on some 12,000 miles of track that tied every hamlet to major cities.

But coal, though efficient and cheap, was also dirty and cumbersome. What the steam locomotive did to river traffic the internal combustion engine did to railroads in the years after World War I. A new energy source — refined petroleum — combined with the new transportation technology — of the automobile, truck and bus to redraw the map of Illinois.

It is hard today to imagine a world without the parking lots, corner gas stations and ribbons of highways. In 1909, 97 percent of the gasoline sold in Illinois was purchased in hardware and grocery stores. But the car caught on. By 1929, there were 1.6 million cars registered in Illinois, a 340 percent increase in one decade. In 1910, the General Assembly for the first time required a license fee of drivers to pay for road improvements, and by the 1920s contractors were laying more than 60 miles of new concrete road per week. By 1918, crude oil was being piped to Chicago from Oklahoma to meet demand. This was a significant milestone. Self-sufficient in a coal-based transportation system, Illinois was to be dependent on other states, then other nations in the shift to a petroleum-based system.

Although Illinois has undergone three transportation revolutions — from muscle to wood, from wood to coal and from coal to oil •— none triumphed completely over its predecessors (although coal came close). The result is that the state's present transportation system is a curiously shaped hybrid whose parts date variously from the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. Railroads still carry much intercity freight, but proportionately only half what they carried in 1929. Rivers still carry more than 100 million tons of cargo per year (like rail, their share has increased in absolute terms but declined in percentage terms) but it is mostly bulk cargo such as grain which cannot be efficiently handled by truck. People ride trains much less, and barges not at all. As for trolleys and interurbans, they have disappeared, except for parts of Chicago. The automobile, bus and airplane are now the preferred mode of passenger travel — as oil consumption statistics prove.

Yet the railroad remains the most energy efficient way to move large numbers of people and goods. It is dramatically more efficient than trucks, and, when linked in units that haul coal or corn, trains even rival the energy economies of barges. It is ironic that the ideal rail-based transportation system which many experts espouse today existed and thrived in Illinois a mere 60 years ago.

Why then was it abandoned? Each transportation system that has survived in Illinois has carried into each new era economic and regulatory baggage it accumulated in the previous one. For example, one reason that trucks have taken over so much of the intercity freight market from trains is an archaic rate system left over from rail's days as a monopoly carrier; many shippers were overcharged (a mistake trucking companies did not repeat). And it was not until very recently, when barge operators were assessed a tax on diesel fuel to defray the costs of rebuilding the aging Lock and Dam 26 on the Mississippi, that waterway users began to pay fees for the maintenance of river highways.

But these are complications more than causes. The marketplace functioned according to its own rules, and as long as energy was cheap in Illinois it functioned (as it did elsewhere) without regard to long-range energy costs. (So, unfortunately, did government.) Consider, for example, the case of intercity passenger travel. Of the 28 national Amtrak routes, 17 pass through Illinois. The state provides operating subsidies for four intra-state trains, and ridership has been going up on these lines, totaling nearly 292,000 in 1980. As the Illinois Department of Transportation rightly notes, trains' "contributions to energy savings are a function of the numbers of riders carried." But affluent travelers (including the business traveler) value time more than money, and often fly. More than 51 million airplane passenger trips were flown in Illinois in 1979. The less affluent, who have more time than money, opt for the cheaper intercity bus. The intercity train is too slow for the affluent and too expensive for the poor.

The result is few train routes and high costs per passenger. Illinois subsidizes each passenger on the Chicago-Dubuque "Black Hawk" $10.21 out of a total subsidy of $21.08. If the Reagan administration succeeds in cutting federal subsidies to Amtrak, ticket prices will have to go up, further eroding trains' competitive position with the bus and even gas-efficient cars, the latter having the added advantage of being more convenient, if less comfortable. The passenger demand for trains could change; rising fuel prices are forcing airlines to cram more and more complaining passengers into each plane. Without subsidy, trains will have to be full to be cheap, and since trains can never compete with the airplane in speed, they will have to be cheap to be full.

last year, "Europeans, by keeping the price of gasoline at an artificially high level, have not only created tax revenues but ... forced the design of waller, more fuel efficient automobiles, developed good mass transit systems, built highly integrated urban areas, and encouraged relatively less automobile driving." In the U.S. by contrast — including that part of it known as Illinois — transit systems starved for funds, urban areas sprawl, mass transit decays and the auto industry loses markets to technologies perfected abroad.

Instead, the General Assembly, like the Congress, is committed to keeping the price of gasoline as low as possible. Suggestions by Gov. Thompson that the motor fuel tax be levied as a percentage of the purchase price — a change which would index motor fuel tax revenues to prices rather than consumption — were dismissed as politically unpalatable.

Rather than dampen demand, Illinois (again like Washington) has opted to boost production. Illinois is not likely to ever produce more than a tiny fraction of the oil it needs. Its wells are old, and produce only one-seventh of the oil they produced 40 years ago. But although Illinois may be running out of oil, it is not running out of either coal or corn. There have been predictions that substitutes for liquid petroleum fuels synthesized from coal and/or fuel ethanol distilled from corn and other grains will enable Illinois to become the Saudi Arabia of the next century.

James Krohe Jr. is associate editor of the Illinois Times in Springfield; he specializes in planning, land use and energy issues. He is also the author of three other articles in this energy series: "Energy for Illinois: past imperfect, present imperative and future conditional," "Illinois: the Land of Ethanol" and "Energy-efficient buildings: optional or mandatory?"


September 1981 | Illinois Issues | 27


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