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US energy bill funnels billions to oil, utility corporations
By Patrick Martin
29 July 2005
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Congressional Republican and Democratic negotiators reached
agreement Monday night on major elements of a new energy bill
promoted by the Bush administration to reward its corporate backers
in the oil, coal and utility industries.
The resulting legislation is set to provide as much as $14.5
billion in tax breaks over the next 10 years to corporations that
are already immensely profitable. At the same time, the bill will
relax environmental regulations, thereby permitting greater industrial
pollution with all of the harmful consequences for public health.
The energy bill has been bottled up in Congress for nearly
four years, stalled by policy disputes over such issues as whether
to approve oil drilling in the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge
(ANWR), but also by conflicting regional and industrial interests.
In particular, congressmen and senators representing the coastal
areas clashed with those from the interior, and those from predominantly
oil-consuming states with those from Texas and other energy-producing
states.
The two main compromises brokered Monday involved regional
trade-offs. The Bush administration prevailed on its demand that
the authority to approve new Liquefied Natural Gas terminals be
transferred from state regulators to the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, a proposal bitterly opposed by California and several
Atlantic Coast states. In another defeat for the coastal states,
the bill authorizes a comprehensive inventory of oil and gas deposits
on the entire US continental shelf, the first step in resuming
drilling on the Atlantic and Pacific coasts.
In return, the administration was compelled to drop a provision
that would have protected manufacturers of the gasoline additive
MTBElocated in Texas and Oklahomafrom liability lawsuits
arising from leaks of the poisonous substance from gas station
holding tanks into local groundwater, especially in the Northeast
and California.
More than 1,800 cities and counties are currently engaged in
expensive efforts to clean up drinking water fouled by MTBE, originally
added to gasoline as an anti-pollution measure. A compromise plan
to set up an $11.4 billion fund to compensate the local governments,
partially funded by the MTBE manufacturers and the oil industry,
collapsed because of uncertainty over the price tag for the cleanup,
estimated as high as $80 billion.
House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Joe Barton of
Texas, one of the two main sponsors of MTBE protection, threw
in the towel after Senate Republicans told him that they would
kill the bill otherwise. The other leading advocate of the MTBE
producers, House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, seems to have played
little role in the final talks, an indication that a series of
ethics scandals has weakened his position.
Once the deadlock was broken, a House-Senate conference committee
moved rapidly to distribute tax breaks to favored industries,
more than doubling the $6.7 billion boondoggle originally proposed
by the Bush administration. One liberal Democrat, Congressman
Edward J. Markey of Massachusetts, described the bill as a
huge giveaway for the oil and gas industry. He added, The
bill just tips the American consumer and taxpayer upside down
and shakes money out of their pockets.
The bill, however, has significant Democratic support, with
the ranking Democrat on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources
Committee, Jeff Bingaman of New Mexico, endorsing it. The committee
approved the bill 21-1, with only one Democrat opposing it. Whatever
version emerges from the conference committee is expected to pass
both houses by wide bipartisan margins.
While President Bush has sought to present the bill as an answer
to the huge rise in US gasoline prices, the bill will do nothing
to reduce the cost of energy to consumers, whether in the form
of gasoline, heating oil or electricity. Instead, it provides
billions in incentives to the giant energy companies,
already enjoying record crude oil prices and unprecedented profits.
Oil companies, for instance, will be exempt from taxation on
oil produced from deep-water wells drilled in the Gulf of Mexico,
on which they currently pay royalties of $8 billion a year. Large
sections of public land will be opened to natural gas exploration
and production. And the electric utilities will receive subsidies
to build new nuclear power generating plants and greater freedom
to run electrical transmission lines across public land, measures
billed as a response to the 2003 blackout in the Midwest and New
York state.
There are also subsidies for coal companies, as well as new
exemptions for energy producers from provisions of the Clean Water
Act, the Safe Drinking Water Act, and other environmental laws.
The bill also repeals the Public Utility Holding Company Act,
a law passed during the Great Depression to make it difficult
to establish multi-state or nationwide electricity monopolies.
Other provisions include an extension of daylight savings time
(one of a handful of conservation measures), an increase in the
amount of ethanol to be used in gasoline, and $1.3 billion for
an experimental nuclear reactor to produce hydrogen fuel. Proposals
adopted by the Senate to require increased fuel efficiency for
cars and trucks were dropped, as were measures to encourage wind
and solar power.
The most controversial issue in previous versions of the energy
bill, opening the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) to oil
drilling, was dropped from the bill after it was incorporated
in a separate piece of legislation, the budget resolution adopted
earlier this year by the Senate. The drilling plan had the support
of 51 senators, 48 Republicans and 3 Democrats, while 41 Democrats,
1 independent and 6 Republicans opposed it. Since it is part of
the budget resolution, under Senate rules the measure cannot be
filibustered, as it was last year.
Opponents of the drilling plan have pointed out that the estimated
10 billion barrels of oil under the ANWRif they materialize,
which is still uncertainamount to little more than a years
supply of oil for the United States, at the price of destroying
the countrys largest remaining wilderness area.
It is impossible to overstate the importance of sheer greed
in determining both the policies of the Bush administration and
the actions of Congress. A case in point is oil drilling in the
ANWR: if not a solution to the impending energy crisis, it is
nonetheless a source of enormous potential profits. At the current
price of nearly $60 a barrel, it would provide $600 billion in
revenue for Big Oil.
All the environmental and regulatory decisions of both the
White House and Congress have corporate dollar signs plastered
all over them. A recent emergency military spending bill, for
instance, had four paragraphs that allowed energy exploration
in the Gulf Islands National Seashore, a national park that comprises
ecologically sensitive barrier islands on the Gulf coast of Mississippi.
The first step will be seismic testing, which involves detonating
explosions in an area that is home to sea turtles, dolphins and
a wide range of fish and birds, and using the resulting sound
waves to locate pockets of oil and gas.
During 2004, the federal Bureau of Land Management issued 6,052
permits to drill oil and gas wells on federal land, triple the
number issues 10 years before. Some 40 million acres of public
land in the continental US have been leased out to oil and gas
development.
In the meantime, oil industry profits have reached stratospheric
levels. In May, Exxon Mobil Corp. announced first-quarter revenues
of $82 billion and first-quarter profits of $7.86 billion, up
44 percent over the same period last year. This works out to an
annual profit of more than $30 billion for the biggest US oil
company.
See Also:
Bush administration
steps up war on environment
[3 June 2003]
Bush administration
moves to gut Clean Air standards
[5 April 2002]
Bush announces new
global warming plan: a Valentines Day gift for energy corporations
[23 February 2002]
Arsenic and old waste:
US Congress debates Bush environmental policy
[3 August 2001]
An exchange on a socialist
approach to the protection of the environment
[10 January 2001]
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