http://news.ft.com/cms/s/a0470f9a-b2c6-11da-ab3e-0000779e2340.html
The 
US must expand international co-ordination of energy issues, especially with 
China and India, to address concerns about growing global competition for energy 
resources, the chairman of the Senate foreign relations committee said on 
Monday.
In a speech in Washington, Dick Lugar, the influential Republican senator, 
warned: ¡°No one who is honestly assessing the decline of American leverage 
around the world due to energy dependence can fail to see that energy is the 
albatross of US national security.¡±
His remarks highlight the extent to which energy security has moved rapidly 
up the US political agenda, driven by an unusual coalition of interests. These 
include national security specialists concerned about US reliance on foreign oil 
in troubled parts of the world, environmentalists and unions keen to create jobs 
in the US by developing alternative energy sources.
Political interest in the issue was underlined by President George W. Bush's 
unexpected comments in his State of the Union speech in January, when the former 
oil executive warned that the US ¡°was addicted to oil¡±.
Mr Lugar on Monday called that phrase a ¡°seminal moment in American history, 
when a US president said something contrary to expectations,¡± and compared it 
with ¡°President Nixon using his anti-communist credentials to open up China¡±.
As debate about Iran¡¯s nuclear ambitions shifts to the United Nations 
Security Council, Mr Lugar highlighted the dangers of transferring billions of 
dollars to unaccountable regimes and warned that economic sanctions against Iran 
might not work.
¡°Iran has been anticipating a crisis by accumulating funds [from high oil 
prices], so if they shut off oil supplies it could have savings to draw down for 
a long period of time. That is not well recognised and allows Iran and other 
states a degree of invulnerability to economic sanctions,¡± he said.
Mr Lugar noted that 77 per cent of the world's oil supply was controlled by 
foreign governments, and that the US paid 17 per cent more for its energy in 
2005 than the year before. Energy costs now account for a third of the US trade 
deficit. He predicted that the US would spend $320bn on oil imports this year.
To reduce US vulnerability he said he would introduce an Energy Diplomacy and 
Security Act this week to expand international co-operation to ¡°enhance 
preparedness for major disruptions in oil supplies¡±. 
He said a priority was formal co-ordination with China and India as they 
developed strategic petroleum reserves. He also called for new regional 
partnerships in the west.
More controversially, he suggested that there be a $35 a barrel price floor 
for oil, to provide security for companies seeking to invest in alternative 
fuels. He admitted that he was still speaking to economists about how this could 
be achieved.