Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Caritas in Veritate: The United States, an Over-Consumer in Energy?
Caritas in Veritate: The United States, an Over-Consumer in Energy?
Apr 5, 2025 7:47 PM

Energy has been a hot topic not just in the United States but throughout the world. From cap-and-trade legislation to the talks that occurred at the G8 Summit, energy is making headlines everywhere. Caritas in Veritate also addresses the issue of energy; however, it is in a different light from that which is occurring in the politics.

In Caritas in Veritate, Pope Benedict calls for us to be more conscious of our use of energy, and for larger, more developed countries to not hoard all of the energy. Furthermore, Pope Benedict calls for the munity to be more conscious of its use of non-renewable energy and to begin to regulate the use of non-renewable. His concern is that poor countries will not be able to gain access to energy resources, especially non-renewable energy.

The United States is the largest energy producer, but it is also the largest energy consumer. In fact, according to the Energy Information Administration, in 2006 the United States produced 71.054 quadrillion Btu and consumed 99.889 quadrillion Btu. These figures point out a large difference between the amount of energy produced and consumed by the United States. At face value these figures make the United States look like an over-consumer of energy and that the Pope’s message on energy would strike an enormous note with the United States.

However, looking beyond these numbers and what they consist of, the United States is not the mass over-consumer that these numbers make it look like. In 2006, the United States issued 89,823 patents (more patents were issued by the United States alone than the by the rest of the bined). The number of patents issued in the United States can be correlated into the manufacturing that occurs in the United States. Since the United States issued 89,823 patents in 2006 it can be expected that a large number of new products were manufactured in the United States or developed in the United States and manufactured abroad. As a result, in order to manufacture and develop this large amount of new products, in addition to the manufacturing that was already occurring, the United States used a large amount of energy.

The Energy Information Administration also keeps records on the amount of energy used by manufacturers in the United States. Of the 99.889 quadrillion Btu consumed by the United States in 2006, 21,046 trillion Btu was consumed by manufactures in the United States. Since the United States manufactures a large number of goods it is able to export these goods across the world. According to the United States Census, 1,451,685 goods and services were exported by the United States in 2006. Compared to 2005, this number was actually up by 12.7 percent.

While the United States uses a large amount of energy it is able to manufacture goods that are exported to other countries through trade. As a result, countries that do not have the technology, finances, or capital to increase their energy usage to manufacture more goods benefit from the United States. The United States, who can afford to purchase energy to manufacture goods and services, can send its goods and services to the poor countries that do not use a large amount of energy and do not have the means to manufacture the goods that can be produced in the United States. The trade the United States engages in encourages poor countries to develop so they can export even more of their goods to the United States.

However, just because the United States is able to provide goods and services to countries that do not have the means to produce modities, does not mean the United States is exempt from conserving energy. We are all called for to be stewards of Earth. As Pope Benedict states in Caritas in Veritate, “At the same time we must recognize our grave duty to hand the earth on to future generations in such a condition that they too can worthily inhabit it and continue to cultivate it.” As Christians, we still need to be consciousness of our use of energy to make sure our children will be given an Earth that has the same resources we are blessed to have. Furthermore, we also need to be conscious of the condition of the poor and not exploit energy and natural resources. Simply because we, as citizens of the United States, have the financial means that allow us to utilize and have access to energy and natural resources does not mean the same benefits are procured by those less fortunate.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Hong Kong group behind large pro-democracy protests disbands
The 19-year-old civil rights group CHRF was behind Hong Kong’s annual July 1 protests from 2003 to 2019; a memorating “Handover Day,” where the responsibility and sovereignty of Hong Kong was transitioned from the United Kingdom to the People’s Republic of China. In 2020, Hong Kong officials banned the event, citing its violation of COVID regulations and the new NSL that had been put into effect just the night before. Read More… The Civil Human Rights Front, or CHRF, a...
America’s meat industry needs more freedom, less federal control
Returning authority to the states for meat processing would bolster freedom, strengthen our political system, and spur more innovation across agriculture and enterprise. Read More… In the early 17th century, Calvinist philosopher Johannes Althusius put a distinctly Christian spin on earlier concepts of political subsidiarity. Althusius visualized civil bodies as not parts of a whole, but critical plete entities in themselves. Each body, or association, has a vocation to which it is divinely called, and each is meant to work...
New issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality explores ‘a world of change’
Acton’s latest volume offers thoughtful reflection on the intersection of economics and ethics amid the disruption of the pandemic. Read More… The newest issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality (Volume 24, Number 1) has been released in print and online at our website. In my editorial for the issue, I offer a preview of its contents: To use popular terminology, through reflecting on the “known unknown”—the hour of our deaths, the return of Jesus Christ—we fortify ourselves for...
Hong Kong protester sentenced nine years in prison under National Security Law
The Chinese Communist Party will not and cannot tolerate any opposition, verbal or otherwise, in order to maintain control of their citizens. The latest protestor trial opens the door to a more broad application of NSL on any phrase or word that poses a threat to the CCP’s absolute control of China. Read More… Leon Tong Ying-Kit became the first person to be sentenced under Hong Kong’s National Security Law, or NSL, on July 30, when a Hong Kong court...
Making community college free has hidden costs
The taxpayer-funded, one-size-fits-all approach of munity college distorts tradeoffs, inflates credentials, is dismissive of individual uniqueness and imposes a dubious pathway to improving lifetime earnings and vocational es. Read More… Education is the great equalizer. And a college education is one of the greatest ways to sharpen our unique gifts and talents before entering the workforce. President Joe Biden has proposed offering two years of munity college for any American, but here’s the problem: munity college “free” guarantees more associates...
Apple Daily chief editor denied bail for the second time under National Security Law
Under the ever-restrictive Beijing-imposed NSL, acts the Chinese Communist Party deems to qualify as collusion with foreign forces, secession, subversion, or terrorist attacks are punishable by up to a life imprisonment. Read More… Former Chief Editor of Apple Daily, Ryan Law Wai-kwong was denied bail Aug. 13 for a second time by a Hong Kong court under China’s National Security Law, or NSL, according to the Hong Kong Free Press. It’s the latest move by the Chinese Communist Party, or...
A disconnected society: Americans have replaced relationships, civic involvement with ‘games and spectacles’
A new study shows how sports and other “low stakes” diversions continue to replace outward-oriented associations and institutions across American life. Read More… The decline of civil society has e a running theme of social and mentary, marked by disruptions in marriage and family, diminishing church attendance, and the dilution of social capital. Wherever one munity life seems to be fading. Why? It’s a question that’s been explored at length, whether in popular works like Robert Putnam’s Bowling Alone and...
Ford Foundation’s aim to ‘change philanthropy’ warps the true meaning of ‘justice’ and ‘generosity’
Justice and charity are the duty of all – and are intimately related – but a redefinition of philanthropy that collapses the distinction between them serves neither. Read More… The Ford Foundation gives over $500 million dollars annually, mostly in grants, to nonprofit organizations around the world. Foundation President Darren Walker came from humble beginnings in rural Texas and now oversees the Foundation’s $15 billion endowment. In his recent and wide-ranging 60 Minutes interview with Lesley Stahl he makes the...
‘Neo-Calvinism and Modern Economics’: Acton Institute to host academic conference
On October 8, 2021, in-person at the Acton Building in Grand Rapids, Mich., the Acton Institute will host its First Annual Academic Colloquium, sponsored by its Journal of Markets & Morality. The theme is “Neo-Calvinism and Modern Economics,” featuring two panels of academic papers, followed by a plenary lecture by Jordan Ballor, director of research at the Center for Religion, Culture & Democracy and series editor of the Abraham Kuyper Collected Works in Public Theology. Published in partnership with the...
Biden defers some Hong Kong deportations, acknowledging human rights crisis under Communist Chinese rule
The Chinese Communist Party’s National Security Laws outlaws any action that qualifies as dangerous to the security of China or as an attempt of secession. The NSL extended its reach from the Chinese Communist regime to the former British colony, Hong Kong, when it went into effect there in June 2020. Since then, Hong Kong citizens’ freedoms have been smothered by CCP’s insatiable quest for absolute control. Read More… Hong Kong, once a haven for those seeking to escape the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved