Medill students find significant vulnerabilities in U.S. energy security policy

Oil Change ProjectWASHINGTON, D.C. — In a three-month investigation, a team of graduate  student reporters from the Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communication has found that the United States’ unquenchable thirst for oil has shaped nearly every aspect of the country’s domestic and foreign policy for more than five decades,  often in controversial and dangerous ways.

The graduate student team today (May 9) begins publication of its findings on the national security implications of U.S. energy policy. The project is available via a website created by the team, and an overview story linking to it is featured on Global Post, the award winning online international reporting network. The Washington Post also featured and linked to the students’ work in its Wonkblog section yesterday.

The innovative series of print, video and interactive stories is titled, “Oil Change: The World’s Most Precious Commodity and the Future of U.S. Security.’’

“The students reported from an aircraft carrier in the Persian Gulf, from Ecuador and the Philippines, from throughout the United States and especially from the corridors of power here in Washington, D.C.,’’ said Josh Meyer, lead instructor and director of education and outreach for the Medill National Security Journalism Initiative. (Read a Q&A with Meyer about the project). “They have delivered a well-reported and well-told examination of an issue that, while largely neglected by the government and the media, is of huge and growing importance to all Americans.’’

An increase in U.S. Navy ship visits to Subic Bay, Philippines, and joint military exercises hosted nearby signal a major shift in resources as the U.S. winds down wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and aims to secure its national security interests in the Pacific. (Photo by David Kashi)

An increase in U.S. Navy ship visits to Subic Bay, Philippines, and joint military exercises hosted nearby signal a major shift in resources as the U.S. winds down wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and aims to secure its national security interests in the Pacific. (Photo by David Kashi)

The nine Medill graduate students interviewed more than 100 current and former national security officials and experts and reviewed scores of official documents and reports.

Among the project’s findings:

The project allows audiences to explore the impact of energy security through creative multimedia and interactive graphics that:

Graphic: The rise and fall of production and consumption

Map out how oil travels by sea around the globe — focusing on the key “choke points” where that oil supply is most vulnerable to attack;

• Use video to show the empty rhetoric of U.S. presidents promising, and not delivering, on energy security and independence;

•  Use interactive maps and multimedia to show the rise and fall of production and consumption of oil and how it affects geopolitics, as well as how the oil supply is vulnerable;

•  Use interactive maps and multimedia to show how the secretive U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve is used as a hedge against oil shortages

“The imaginative use of interactive technology highlights Medill students’ advanced skills in presenting in-depth reporting in creative and entertaining ways that engage people and keep them informed,” said Professor Ellen Shearer, co-director of the Medill National Security Journalism Initiative and William F. Thomas Professor of Journalism.

The students learned sophisticated interactive storytelling approaches with the help of Kat Downs and Greg Linch of The Washington Post.

The Oil Change Project — the third in a series of annual investigative reporting efforts — was funded by the Robert R.McCormick Foundation  as part of Medill’s broader National Security Journalism Initiative. Established in January 2009, that initiative provides journalists-in-training and working journalists the knowledge and skills necessary to report accurately and with context on issues related to defense, security and civil liberties. The first project, on the national security implications of climate change, was the  recipient of a national award given by the Online News Association.


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