Published on 2 Dec 2006 by Energy Bulletin.
Archived on 2 Dec 2006.
Reference: http://www.energybulletin.net/23151.html
by Rear Admiral Hyman G. Rickover, U.S. Navy
FOR RELEASE AT 7:00 P.M. TUESDAY, MAY 14, 1957
Remarks Prepared by
Rear Admiral Hyman G. Rickover, USN
Chief, Naval Reactors Branch
Division of Reactor Development
U.S. Atomic Energy Commission
and
Assistant Chief of the Bureau of Ships for Nuclear Propulsion
Navy Department
For Delivery at a Banquet of the Annual Scientific Assembly of
the Minnesota State Medical Association
St. Paul, Minnesota
May 14, 1957
I am honored to be here tonight, though it is no easy thing, I assure you, for a layman to
face up to an audience of physicians. A single one of you, sitting behind his desk, can be
quite formidable.
My speech has no medical connotations. This may be a relief to you after the solid
professional fare you have been absorbing. I should like to discuss a matter which will, I
hope, be of interest to you as responsible citizens: the significance of energy resources
in the shaping of our future.
We live in what historians may some day call the Fossil Fuel Age. Today coal, oil, and
natural gas supply 93% of the world's energy; water power accounts for only 1%; and the
labor of men and domestic animals the remaining 6%. This is a startling reversal of
corresponding figures for 1850 - only a century ago. Then fossil fuels supplied 5% of the
world's energy, and men and animals 94%. Five sixths of all the coal, oil, and gas
consumed since the beginning of the Fossil Fuel Age has been burned up in the last 55
years.
These fuels have been known to man for more than 3,000 years. In parts of China, coal was
used for domestic heating and cooking, and natural gas for lighting as early as 1000 B.C.
The Babylonians burned asphalt a thousand years earlier. But these early uses were
sporadic and of no economic significance. Fossil fuels did not become a major source of
energy until machines running on coal, gas, or oil were invented. Wood, for example, was
the most important fuel until 1880 when it was replaced by coal; coal, in turn, has only
recently been surpassed by oil in this country.
Once in full swing, fossil fuel consumption has accelerated at phenomenal rates. All the
fossil fuels used before 1900 would not last five years at today's rates of consumption.
Nowhere are these rates higher and growing faster than in the United States. Our country,
with only 6% of the world's population, uses one third of the world's total energy input;
this proportion would be even greater except that we use energy more efficiently than
other countries. Each American has at his disposal, each year, energy equivalent to that
obtainable from eight tons of coal. This is six times the world's per capita energy
consumption. Though not quite so spectacular, corresponding figures for other highly
industrialized countries also show above average consumption figures. The United Kingdom,
for example, uses more than three times as much energy as the world average.
With high energy consumption goes a high standard of living. Thus the enormous fossil
energy which we in this country control feeds machines which make each of us master of an
army of mechanical slaves. Man's muscle power is rated at 35 watts continuously, or
one-twentieth horsepower. Machines therefore furnish every American industrial worker with
energy equivalent to that of 244 men, while at least 2,000 men push his automobile along
the road, and his family is supplied with 33 faithful household helpers. Each locomotive
engineer controls energy equivalent to that of 100,000 men; each jet pilot of 700,000 men.
Truly, the humblest American enjoys the services of more slaves than were once owned by
the richest nobles, and lives better than most ancient kings. In retrospect, and despite
wars, revolutions, and disasters, the hundred years just gone by may well seem like a
Golden Age.
Whether this Golden Age will continue depends entirely upon our ability to keep energy
supplies in balance with the needs of our growing population. Before I go into this
question, let me review briefly the role of energy resources in the rise and fall of
civilizations.
Possession of surplus energy is, of course, a requisite for any kind of civilization, for
if man possesses merely the energy of his own muscles, he must expend all his strength -
mental and physical - to obtain the bare necessities of life.
Surplus energy provides the material foundation for civilized living - a comfortable and
tasteful home instead of a bare shelter; attractive clothing instead of mere covering to
keep warm; appetizing food instead of anything that suffices to appease hunger. It
provides the freedom from toil without which there can be no art, music, literature, or
learning. There is no need to belabor the point. What lifted man - one of the weaker
mammals - above the animal world was that he could devise, with his brain, ways to
increase the energy at his disposal, and use the leisure so gained to cultivate his mind
and spirit. Where man must rely solely on the energy of his own body, he can sustain only
the most meager existence.
Man's first step on the ladder of civilization dates from his discovery of fire and his
domestication of animals. With these energy resources he was able to build a pastoral
culture. To move upward to an agricultural civilization he needed more energy. In the past
this was found in the labor of dependent members of large patriarchal families, augmented
by slaves obtained through purchase or as war booty. There are some backward communities
which to this day depend on this type of energy.
Slave labor was necessary for the city-states and the empires of antiquity; they
frequently had slave populations larger than their free citizenry. As long as slaves were
abundant and no moral censure attached to their ownership, incentives to search for
alternative sources of energy were lacking; this may well have been the single most
important reason why engineering advanced very little in ancient times.
A reduction of per capita energy consumption has always in the past led to a decline in
civilization and a reversion to a more primitive way of life. For example, exhaustion of
wood fuel is believed to have been the primary reason for the fall of the Mayan
Civilization on this continent and of the decline of once flourishing civilizations in
Asia. India and China once had large forests, as did much of the Middle East.
Deforestation not only lessened the energy base but had a further disastrous effect:
lacking plant cover, soil washed away, and with soil erosion the nutritional base was
reduced as well.
Another cause of declining civilization comes with pressure of population on available
land. A point is reached where the land can no longer support both the people and their
domestic animals. Horses and mules disappear first. Finally even the versatile water
buffalo is displaced by man who is two and one half times as efficient an energy converter
as are draft animals. It must always be remembered that while domestic animals and
agricultural machines increase productivity per man, maximum productivity per acre is
achieved only by intensive manual cultivation.
It is a sobering thought that the impoverished people of Asia, who today seldom go to
sleep with their hunger completely satisfied, were once far more civilized and lived much
better than the people of the West. And not so very long ago, either. It was the stories
brought back by Marco Polo of the marvelous civilization in China which turned Europe's
eyes to the riches of the East, and induced adventurous sailors to brave the high seas in
their small vessels searching for a direct route to the fabulous Orient. The "wealth
of the Indies" is a phrase still used, but whatever wealth may be there it certainly
is not evident in the life of the people today.
Asia failed to keep technological pace with the needs of her growing populations and sank
into such poverty that in many places man has become again the primary source of energy,
since other energy converters have become too expensive. This must be obvious to the most
casual observer. What this means is quite simply a reversion to a more primitive stage of
civilization with all that it implies for human dignity and happiness.
Anyone who has watched a sweating Chinese farm worker strain at his heavily laden
wheelbarrow, creaking along a cobblestone road, or who has flinched as he drives past an
endless procession of human beasts of burden moving to market in Java - the slender women
bent under mountainous loads heaped on their heads - anyone who has seen statistics
translated into flesh and bone, realizes the degradation of man's stature when his muscle
power becomes the only energy source he can afford. Civilization must wither when human
beings are so degraded.
Where slavery represented a major source of energy, its abolition had the immediate effect
of reducing energy consumption. Thus when this time-honored institution came under moral
censure by Christianity, civilization declined until other sources of energy could be
found. Slavery is incompatible with Christian belief in the worth of the humblest
individual as a child of God. As Christianity spread through the Roman Empire and masters
freed their slaves - in obedience to the teaching of the Church - the energy base of Roman
civilization crumbled. This, some historians believe, may have been a major factor in the
decline of Rome and the temporary reversion to a more primitive way of life during the
Dark Ages. Slavery gradually disappeared throughout the Western world, except in its
milder form of serfdom. That it was revived a thousand years later merely shows mans
ability to stifle his conscience - at least for a while - when his economic needs are
great. Eventually, even the needs of overseas plantation economies did not suffice to keep
alive a practice so deeply repugnant to Western man's deepest convictions.
It may well be that it was unwillingness to depend on slave labor for their energy needs
which turned the minds of medieval Europeans to search for alternate sources of energy,
thus sparking the Power Revolution of the Middle Ages which, in turn, paved the way for
the Industrial Revolution of the 19th Century. When slavery disappeared in the West
engineering advanced. Men began to harness the power of nature by utilizing water and wind
as energy sources. The sailing ship, in particular, which replaced the slave-driven galley
of antiquity, was vastly improved by medieval shipbuilders and became the first machine
enabling man to control large amounts of inanimate energy.
The next important high-energy converter used by Europeans was gunpowder - an energy
source far superior to the muscular strength of the strongest bowman or lancer. With ships
that could navigate the high seas and arms that could outfire any hand weapon, Europe was
now powerful enough to preempt for herself the vast empty areas of the Western Hemisphere
into which she poured her surplus populations to build new nations of European stock. With
these ships and arms she also gained political control over populous areas in Africa and
Asia from which she drew the raw materials needed to speed her industrialization, thus
complementing her naval and military dominance with economic and commercial supremacy.
When a low-energy society comes in contact with a high-energy society, the advantage
always lies with the latter. The Europeans not only achieved standards of living vastly
higher than those of the rest of the world, but they did this while their population was
growing at rates far surpassing those of other peoples. In fact, they doubled their share
of total world population in the short span of three centuries. From one sixth in 1650,
the people of European stock increased to almost one third of total world population by
1950.
Meanwhile much of the rest of the world did not even keep energy sources in balance with
population growth. Per capita energy consumption actually diminished in large areas. It is
this difference in energy consumption which has resulted in an ever-widening gap between
the one-third minority who live in high-energy countries and the two-thirds majority who
live in low-energy areas.
These so-called underdeveloped countries are now finding it far more difficult to catch up
with the fortunate minority than it was for Europe to initiate transition from low-energy
to high-energy consumption. For one thing, their ratio of land to people is much less
favorable; for another, they have no outlet for surplus populations to ease the transition
since all the empty spaces have already been taken over by people of European stock.
Almost all of today's low-energy countries have a population density so great that it
perpetuates dependence on intensive manual agriculture which alone can yield barely enough
food for their people. They do not have enough acreage, per capita, to justify using
domestic animals or farm machinery, although better seeds, better soil management, and
better hand tools could bring some improvement. A very large part of their working
population must nevertheless remain on the land, and this limits the amount of surplus
energy that can be produced. Most of these countries must choose between using this small
energy surplus to raise their very low standard of living or postpone present rewards for
the sake of future gain by investing the surplus in new industries. The choice is
difficult because there is no guarantee that today's denial may not prove to have been in
vain. This is so because of the rapidity with which public health measures have reduced
mortality rates, resulting in population growth as high or even higher than that of the
high-energy nations. Theirs is a bitter choice; it accounts for much of their anti-Western
feeling and may well portend a prolonged period of world instability.
How closely energy consumption is related to standards of living may be illustrated by the
example of India. Despite intelligent and sustained efforts made since independence,
India's per capita income is still only 20 cents daily; her infant mortality is four times
ours; and the life expectance of her people is less than one half that of the
industrialized countries of the West. These are ultimate consequences of India's very low
energy consumption: one-fourteenth of world average; one-eightieth of ours.
Ominous, too, is the fact that while world food production increased 9% in the six years
from 1945-51, world population increased by 12%. Not only is world population increasing
faster than world food production, but unfortunately, increases in food production tend to
occur in the already well-fed, high-energy countries rather than in the undernourished,
low-energy countries where food is most lacking.
I think no further elaboration is needed to demonstrate the significance of energy
resources for our own future. Our civilization rests upon a technological base which
requires enormous quantities of fossil fuels. What assurance do we then have that our
energy needs will continue to be supplied by fossil fuels: The answer is - in the long run
- none.
The earth is finite. Fossil fuels are not renewable. In this respect our energy base
differs from that of all earlier civilizations. They could have maintained their energy
supply by careful cultivation. We cannot. Fuel that has been burned is gone forever. Fuel
is even more evanescent than metals. Metals, too, are non-renewable resources threatened
with ultimate extinction, but something can be salvaged from scrap. Fuel leaves no scrap
and there is nothing man can do to rebuild exhausted fossil fuel reserves. They were
created by solar energy 500 million years ago and took eons to grow to their present
volume.
In the face of the basic fact that fossil fuel reserves are finite, the exact length of
time these reserves will last is important in only one respect: the longer they last, the
more time do we have, to invent ways of living off renewable or substitute energy sources
and to adjust our economy to the vast changes which we can expect from such a shift.
Fossil fuels resemble capital in the bank. A prudent and responsible parent will use his
capital sparingly in order to pass on to his children as much as possible of his
inheritance. A selfish and irresponsible parent will squander it in riotous living and
care not one whit how his offspring will fare.
Engineers whose work familiarizes them with energy statistics; far-seeing industrialists
who know that energy is the principal factor which must enter into all planning for the
future; responsible governments who realize that the well-being of their citizens and the
political power of their countries depend on adequate energy supplies - all these have
begun to be concerned about energy resources. In this country, especially, many studies
have been made in the last few years, seeking to discover accurate information on
fossil-fuel reserves and foreseeable fuel needs.
Statistics involving the human factor are, of course, never exact. The size of usable
reserves depends on the ability of engineers to improve the efficiency of fuel extraction
and use. It also depends on discovery of new methods to obtain energy from inferior
resources at costs which can be borne without unduly depressing the standard of living.
Estimates of future needs, in turn, rely heavily on population figures which must always
allow for a large element of uncertainty, particularly as man reaches a point where he is
more and more able to control his own way of life.
Current estimates of fossil fuel reserves vary to an astonishing degree. In part this is
because the results differ greatly if cost of extraction is disregarded or if in
calculating how long reserves will last, population growth is not taken into
consideration; or, equally important, not enough weight is given to increased fuel
consumption required to process inferior or substitute metals. We are rapidly approaching
the time when exhaustion of better grade metals will force us to turn to poorer grades
requiring in most cases greater expenditure of energy per unit of metal.
But the most significant distinction between optimistic and pessimistic fuel reserve
statistics is that the optimists generally speak of the immediate future - the next
twenty-five years or so - while the pessimists think in terms of a century from now. A
century or even two is a short span in the history of a great people. It seems sensible to
me to take a long view, even if this involves facing unpleasant facts.
For it is an unpleasant fact that according to our best estimates, total fossil fuel
reserves recoverable at not over twice today's unit cost, are likely to run out at some
time between the years 2000 and 2050, if present standards of living and population growth
rates are taken into account. Oil and natural gas will disappear first, coal last. There
will be coal left in the earth, of course. But it will be so difficult to mine that energy
costs would rise to economically intolerable heights, so that it would then become
necessary either to discover new energy sources or to lower standards of living
drastically.
For more than one hundred years we have stoked ever growing numbers of machines with coal;
for fifty years we have pumped gas and oil into our factories, cars, trucks, tractors,
ships, planes, and homes without giving a thought to the future. Occasionally the voice of
a Cassandra has been raised only to be quickly silenced when a lucky discovery revised
estimates of our oil reserves upward, or a new coalfield was found in some remote spot.
Fewer such lucky discoveries can be expected in the future, especially in industrialized
countries where extensive mapping of resources has been done. Yet the popularizers of
scientific news would have us believe that there is no cause for anxiety, that reserves
will last thousands of years, and that before they run out science will have produced
miracles. Our past history and security have given us the sentimental belief that the
things we fear will never really happen - that everything turns out right in the end. But,
prudent men will reject these tranquilizers and prefer to face the facts so that they can
plan intelligently for the needs of their posterity.
Looking into the future, from the mid-20th Century, we cannot feel overly confident that
present high standards of living will of a certainty continue through the next century and
beyond. Fossil fuel costs will soon definitely begin to rise as the best and most
accessible reserves are exhausted, and more effort will be required to obtain the same
energy from remaining reserves. It is likely also that liquid fuel synthesized from coal
will be more expensive. Can we feel certain that when economically recoverable fossil
fuels are gone science will have learned how to maintain a high standard of living on
renewable energy sources?
I believe it would be wise to assume that the principal renewable fuel sources which we
can expect to tap before fossil reserves run out will supply only 7 to 15% of future
energy needs. The five most important of these renewable sources are wood fuel, farm
wastes, wind, water power, and solar heat.
Wood fuel and farm wastes are dubious as substitutes because of growing food requirements
to be anticipated. Land is more likely to be used for food production than for tree crops;
farm wastes may be more urgently needed to fertilize the soil than to fuel machines.
Wind and water power can furnish only a very small percentage of our energy needs.
Moreover, as with solar energy, expensive structures would be required, making use of land
and metals which will also be in short supply. Nor would anything we know today justify
putting too much reliance on solar energy though it will probably prove feasible for home
heating in favorable localities and for cooking in hot countries which lack wood, such as
India.
More promising is the outlook for nuclear fuels. These are not, properly speaking,
renewable energy sources, at least not in the present state of technology, but their
capacity to "breed" and the very high energy output from small quantities of
fissionable material, as well as the fact that such materials are relatively abundant, do
seem to put nuclear fuels into a separate category from exhaustible fossil fuels. The
disposal of radioactive wastes from nuclear power plants is, however, a problem which must
be solved before there can be any widespread use of nuclear power.
Another limit in the use of nuclear power is that we do not know today how to employ it
otherwise than in large units to produce electricity or to supply heating. Because of its
inherent characteristics, nuclear fuel cannot be used directly in small machines, such as
cars, trucks, or tractors. It is doubtful that it could in the foreseeable future furnish
economical fuel for civilian airplanes or ships, except very large ones. Rather than
nuclear locomotives, it might prove advantageous to move trains by electricity produced in
nuclear central stations. We are only at the beginning of nuclear technology, so it is
difficult to predict what we may expect.
Transportation - the lifeblood of all technically advanced civilizations - seems to be
assured, once we have borne the initial high cost of electrifying railroads and replacing
buses with streetcars or interurban electric trains. But, unless science can perform the
miracle of synthesizing automobile fuel from some energy source as yet unknown or unless
trolley wires power electric automobiles on all streets and highways, it will be wise to
face up to the possibility of the ultimate disappearance of automobiles, trucks, buses,
and tractors. Before all the oil is gone and hydrogenation of coal for synthetic liquid
fuels has come to an end, the cost of automotive fuel may have risen to a point where
private cars will be too expensive to run and public transportation again becomes a
profitable business.
Today the automobile is the most uneconomical user of energy. Its efficiency is 5%
compared with 23% for the Diesel-electric railway. It is the most ravenous devourer of
fossil fuels, accounting for over half of the total oil consumption in this country. And
the oil we use in the United States in one year took nature about 14 million years to
create. Curiously, the automobile, which is the greatest single cause of the rapid
exhaustion of oil reserves, may eventually be the first fuel consumer to suffer. Reduction
in automotive use would necessitate an extraordinarily costly reorganization of the
pattern of living in industrialized nations, particularly in the United States. It would
seem prudent to bear this in mind in future planning of cities and industrial locations.
Our present known reserves of fissionable materials are many times as large as our net
economically recoverable reserves of coal. A point will be reached before this century is
over when fossil fuel costs will have risen high enough to make nuclear fuels economically
competitive. Before that time comes we shall have to make great efforts to raise our
entire body of engineering and scientific knowledge to a higher plateau. We must also
induce many more young Americans to become metallurgical and nuclear engineers. Else we
shall not have the knowledge or the people to build and run the nuclear power plants which
ultimately may have to furnish the major part of our energy needs. If we start to plan
now, we may be able to achieve the requisite level of scientific and engineering knowledge
before our fossil fuel reserves give out, but the margin of safety is not large. This is
also based on the assumption that atomic war can be avoided and that population growth
will not exceed that now calculated by demographic experts.
War, of course, cancels all man's expectations. Even growing world tension just short of
war could have far-reaching effects. In this country it might, on the one hand, lead to
greater conservation of domestic fuels, to increased oil imports, and to an acceleration
in scientific research which might turn up unexpected new energy sources. On the other
hand, the resulting armaments race would deplete metal reserves more rapidly, hastening
the day when inferior metals must be utilized with consequent greater expenditure of
energy. Underdeveloped nations with fossil fuel deposits might be coerced into withholding
them from the free world or may themselves decide to retain them for their own future use.
The effect on Europe, which depends on coal and oil imports, would be disastrous and we
would have to share our own supplies or lose our allies.
Barring atomic war or unexpected changes in the population curve, we can count on an
increase in world population from two and one half billion today to four billion in the
year 2000; six to eight billion by 2050. The United States is expected to quadruple its
population during the 20th Century ¬ from 75 million in 1900 to 300 million in 2000 - and
to reach at least 375 million in 2050. This would almost exactly equal India's present
population which she supports on just a little under half of our land area.
It is an awesome thing to contemplate a graph of world population growth from prehistoric
times - tens of thousands of years ago - to the day after tomorrow - let us say the year
2000 A.D. If we visualize the population curve as a road which starts at sea level and
rises in proportion as world population increases, we should see it stretching endlessly,
almost level, for 99% of the time that man has inhabited the earth. In 6000 B.C., when
recorded history begins, the road is running at a height of about 70 feet above sea level,
which corresponds to a population of 10 million. Seven thousand years later - in 1000 A.D.
- the road has reached an elevation of 1,600 feet; the gradation now becomes steeper, and
600 years later the road is 2,900 feet high. During the short span of the next 400 years
from 1600 to 2000 - it suddenly turns sharply upward at an almost perpendicular
inclination and goes straight up to an elevation of 29,000 feet - the height of Mt.
Everest, the world's tallest mountain.
In the 8,000 years from the beginning of history to the year 2000 A.D. world population
will have grown from 10 million to 4 billion, with 90% of that growth taking place during
the last 5% of that period, in 400 years. It took the first 3,000 years of recorded
history to accomplish the first doubling of population, 100 years for the last doubling,
but the next doubling will require only 50 years. Calculations give us the astonishing
estimate that one out of every 20 human beings born into this world is alive today.
The rapidity of population growth has not given us enough time to readjust our thinking.
Not much more than a century ago our country the very spot on which I now stand was
a wilderness in which a pioneer could find complete freedom from men and from government.
If things became too crowded - if he saw his neighbor's chimney smoke - he could, and
often did, pack up and move west. We began life in 1776 as a nation of less than four
million people - spread over a vast continent - with seemingly inexhaustible riches of
nature all about. We conserved what was scarce - human labor - and squandered what seemed
abundant - natural resources - and we are still doing the same today.
Much of the wilderness which nurtured what is most dynamic in the American character has
now been buried under cities, factories and suburban developments where each picture
window looks out on nothing more inspiring than the neighbor's back yard with the smoke of
his fire in the wire basket clearly visible.
Life in crowded communities cannot be the same as life on the frontier. We are no longer
free, as was the pioneer - to work for our own immediate needs regardless of the future.
We are no longer as independent of men and of government as were Americans two or three
generations ago. An ever larger share of what we earn must go to solve problems caused by
crowded living - bigger governments; bigger city, state, and federal budgets to pay for
more public services. Merely to supply us with enough water and to carry away our waste
products becomes more difficult and expansive daily. More laws and law enforcement
agencies are needed to regulate human relations in urban industrial communities and on
crowded highways than in the America of Thomas Jefferson.
Certainly no one likes taxes, but we must become reconciled to larger taxes in the larger
America of tomorrow.
I suggest that this is a good time to think soberly about our responsibilities to our
descendents - those who will ring out the Fossil Fuel Age. Our greatest responsibility, as
parents and as citizens, is to give America's youngsters the best possible education. We
need the best teachers and enough of them to prepare our young people for a future
immeasurably more complex than the present, and calling for ever larger numbers of
competent and highly trained men and women. This means that we must not delay building
more schools, colleges, and playgrounds. It means that we must reconcile ourselves to
continuing higher taxes to build up and maintain at decent salaries a greatly enlarged
corps of much better trained teachers, even at the cost of denying ourselves such
momentary pleasures as buying a bigger new car, or a TV set, or household gadget. We
should find - I believe - that these small self-denials would be far more than offset by
the benefits they would buy for tomorrow's America. We might even - if we wanted - give a
break to these youngsters by cutting fuel and metal consumption a little here and there so
as to provide a safer margin for the necessary adjustments which eventually must be made
in a world without fossil fuels.
One final thought I should like to leave with you. High-energy consumption has always been
a prerequisite of political power. The tendency is for political power to be concentrated
in an ever-smaller number of countries. Ultimately, the nation which control - the largest
energy resources will become dominant. If we give thought to the problem of energy
resources, if we act wisely and in time to conserve what we have and prepare well for
necessary future changes, we shall insure this dominant position for our own country.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Editorial Notes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Contributor Rick Lakin writes:
Admiral Rickover was considered the Father of the Nuclear Submarine. As an employee of the US Atomic Energy Commission, later Department of Energy, he had great influence on the development of our country's civilian Nuclear Power Generation Industry.
This speech, given almost 50 years ago, sheds an important light on our current discussion about the future of energy in our country. In the 1970s, Admiral Rickover worked closely with President Jimmy Carter on energy issues. I served on Navy Nuclear Submarines as a Nuclear Reactor Operator for 8 years.
I would like to give special thanks to Theodore Rockwell, author of The Rickover Effect: How One Man Made a Difference for searching his files and sending me a copy of this speech so that I could convert it for digital publication. Mr. Rockwell has a more recent book, Creating the New World: Stories & Images from the Dawn of the Atomic Age. Both are available on amazon.com.
Biography of Hyman G. Rickover from Wikipedia:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyman_G._Rickover