Institute for Public Affairs of Montreal |
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Power Play Big Oil, Big Government, Big Fraud |
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Beryl P. Wajsman | 25 September 2005 |
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“Fat fingers as oily as maggots, Words sure as forty-pound weights, With his leather-clad gleaming calves And his large laughing cockroach eyes.” ~ Osip Mandelstam, “The Stalin Lampoon” “Big oil and big government are not colluding to assure reasonable profitability and sustainability in the oil industry. They are colluding to protect the “right” to ever-growing exorbitant profits, and taxes, fiscal quarter after fiscal quarter, year in and year out. The premise of shortage of supply is, by any standard, a fallacy of staggering proportions and the propagation of this myth by producers and governments is a fraud on the body politic of criminal degree.” ~ “Power Play” Contents 1. The Politics of Oil: Vertically Integrated Collusion 2. Oil Prices and Open Markets 3. The Lies about Supplies: The Canadian Case Study 4. The Real Numbers on Supply and Demand 5. The Plague of OPEC 6. Where Can We Go From Here? 1. The Politics of Oil: Vertically Integrated Collusion In all the hand-wringing over the rising cost of oil and gas it is astounding that there is still the naive notion abroad in the land that somehow our governors will come to the relief of the governed. It’s time that Canadians woke up and smelled the sulphur. It’s not going to happen. The faster we realize it, the faster we might get mad enough and reassert the sovereignty of our suffrage over our lives. Oh sure, There is no market regulation or anti-monopoly enforcement in the oil industry because the collusion goes much higher and reaches much further. The real issue involves the institutional intimacies of vested interests in big oil and big government who long ago conspired to fix the oil markets to satisfying their mutual greed. It also involves the institutional betrayals of the Canadian commonweal by those same interests who have maintained a facade of benevolence and fair play. There is no fair play. There is only a power play. Before going into the real story behind oil prices, let’s examine what has recently come to light about the current administration in Does anyone in their right mind think that a Prime Minister who compromised due process in this country by setting up the Gomery Commission to smear those who refused to pledge obsequiesce obedience to his administration as well as to deflect from publicity that began arising about his own possible conflicts of interest involving Bombardier, Earnscliffe Strategies and Lansdowne Technologies – possible conflicts that Gomery has no mandate to examine - is about to attack big oil with Cordex hanging like a sword of Damocles. Not on your life. The situation in Just last year former U. S. Senator Frank Lautenberg of New Jersey lambasted the President following evidence that Bush agreed to a secret deal with Saudi Prince Bandar bin Sultan to help the President win the election in November. The alleged deal allowed high oil prices for most of 2004 in return for a boost in oil production and lower gas prices in the three months immediately prior to the November election. Lautenberg said, "One must ask why "Now, with gasoline prices going through the roof, the Saudis have decided to cut back on production, making prices even higher. Instead of falsely accusing John Kerry of increasing gasoline taxes, the President should be working to stop this fleecing of Americans at the gas pump." Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan, Chairman of the Senate's Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, uncovered regular manipulation of prices by oil companies that of necessity would have required government complicity. A startling example was the discovery by Levin’s investigators of internal memos from BP Amoco PLC that set put a plan to "…influence the crude supply/demand balance by offering supply agreements to other oil majors in exchange for refining capacity shutdown and movement of product from the When Levin asked Rob Routs, president and chief executive of Shell U.S., whether he was troubled by, "The fact that gas prices go up and down together everywhere almost at once,” Routs replied, "No, it doesn't trouble me at all." Routs replied. Levin suggested that such pricing, while legal, ought to be considered "an anti-competitive act" and that juries should be allowed to consider whether that is an antitrust violation. 2. Oil Prices and Open Markets The retail prices of oil and gas have little to do with open market regulating principles of supply and demand. From the famous Gulbenkian (Mr. 5%) grouse hunt weekend in Scotland the 1920’s that set the borders of today’s Arab oil-producing states through the growth of the “Seven Sisters” oil conglomerates in the 1950’s and 1960’s, the compact between big oil and big government has been renewed year in and year out. They are partners. Regulatory agencies mandated to enforce anti-monopoly and open competition policies turn a blind eye to oil companies. The reason is very simple. Depending on the jurisdiction, 40-60% of the price at the pump goes to government in taxes. But don’t cry for the oil companies. It doesn’t affect them one iota. Just four months ago, when the per barrel price of oil reached $60, there was a hue and cry when gas hit eighty cents a litre at the pump. When the price of a barrel dropped back to $45 just ten days after, there was very little movement at the pump. Where was the pressure from government asking why? There was none. The reason there was none was that government profits more through taking in higher taxes. Officially, The price of producing a barrel of Saudi light or Venezuelan crude oil, which together account for almost 50% of world supply, is $3.00 a barrel. That’s right. Three dollars a barrel. In Where are the anti-gouging regulators now? 3. The Lies about Supplies: The Canadian Case Study Well, they hide behind door No.2. They put out the line to the public that due to diminishing supply, oil companies have to be given a wide berth and prices cannot be controlled or reigned in. But sometimes the truth does get out. The fact is that this year The numbers are staggering in their discrepancies. The Canadian oil industry has traditionally maintained that Oil sands development will require drilling assisted by steam-injection pressure or from simple mining. But CAPP's own estimate of Why hasn’t the Canadian government encouraged development in order to bring retail prices down? Because government makes more tax revenue at higher retail prices. And government’s big oil friends want to keep the public image of limited supply alive in order to have higher wholesale prices. Why doesn’t big oil start exploiting the oil sands? Because it wants government to subvent the extra costs even though huge profits are already built in. Who pays in the end? We do. The consumers. Big oil and big government are not colluding to assure reasonable profitability and sustainability in the oil industry. They are colluding to protect the “right” to exorbitant profits, and taxes, fiscal quarter after fiscal quarter, year in and year out. 4. The Real Numbers on Supply and Demand Much has been made of the growing Chinese demand for crude pumping up prices and the natural disasters from Asia to Closures of refineries from For all of In 1980, worldwide oil consumption was 63 million barrels per day. Today it’s about 78 million barrels per day. That’s about a 24 percent increase, from approximately 23 billion barrels a year to over 28 billion barrels per year. It is estimated that as world economic growth continues, including Estimates of reserves have kept pace and more. Let’s take just the That’s a 50% increase in supply from the Leaving the Middle East, the Venezuelan government estimates that it has enough oil in The premise of shortage of supply is, by any standard, a fallacy of staggering proportions and the propagation of this myth by producers and governments is a fraud on the body politic of criminal degree. 5. The Plague of OPEC No examination of the problem of big oil would be complete without a look at the plague of OPEC. Reasonable, thinking citizens should wonder at the apologias constantly offered up for this band of brigands by oil industry and government spokesmen. There is a veritable flood of statements that appear whenever public anger vents its spleen at the cartel. We are constantly told that OPEC is a “stabilizing” factor on the world oil scene. The reality is that the only thing OPEC stabilizes is the ability of producers, refiners and heads of government to cut up the oil pie, and oil policies, in council rooms apart far from the maddening eye of public scrutiny. At OPEC’s founding conference in 1960 in Far from being upset, big oil came to rely on these nationalizations as a crutch claiming it was no longer in charge of oil prices and laid off blame on their state partners. Both sides benefitted as prices continued to rise. The OPEC oil states really didn’t care about public anger in the west. And their corporate partners could use the oil states as scapegoats as they reaped greater profits. Because of the incredible jump in market price per barrel the oil giants didn’t even lose money as a result of the nationalizations. The public paid the price for the bigger cut the oil states demanded. Using the OPEC nationalizations as a cloak, western oil companies continued to provide the operating and managerial expertise for the producing countries and their profits actually grew after the nationalizations. And all this was before the 1973 OPEC oil embargo ostensibly put into effect to protest American support for Christina Rosset of the Wall Street Journal accurately summed up OPEC as the “Outrageously Predatory Energy Cartel” out to gouge consumers. She has rightly pointed out that the blatant collusion of OPEC and its fellow travelers “…is the kind of stuff that would get private capitalists in the The only continuous loser is the consuming public. The other losers are the poverty-stricken citizens of the oil states themselves. London-based oil reporter Nicole Gelinas labeled OPEC "an eternal summit of failed states-- OPEC is the central controlling mechanism for the worldwide oil rip-off. The one time it almost lost control, during the 1998 Asian economic collapse, oil plunged to about $10 a barrel. Now that’s the kind of stabilization we could all use. 6. Where Can We Go From Here? Without passing value judgments on the issues of the internal combustion engine, energy waste in the west and greenhouse emissions – all of which will be the subject of a forthcoming paper – it is clear that at current consumption rates, oil reserve life can be measured in centuries, not decades, as producers, refiners and governments try to make us believe. As people concerned about the environment, we may see this as bad news. Oil will remain plentiful long after serious damage from climate change starts to mount. The problem at hand however is how to protect consumers and stop the profiteering and price-gouging that has reached unprecedented proportions. We can’t solve the problem of global oil power, but we can make a start here at home. The first critical step must be public pressure on media to counter the gross misinformation we are fed every day. Even if many reporters do not see themselves as advocacy journalists, they, and their bosses, have a responsibility to correct the dissemination of lies. We deserve nothing less from the Fourth Estate. The "invisible hand" of the marketplace will not come to our rescue. Energy is, in the final analysis, a political matter. As citizens we need to force our elected officials to reign in the voracious appetite of what is quickly becoming an “outlaw” industry operating without restraint of consequence. The Talisman Energy confrontation brought into stark relief the impotence of federal policies. With the reserves Canada has we need strong central policies that will not only put the people’s interest ahead of the petroleum industry’s, but that will also put Canada’s national interests ahead of the parochial interests of the provinces. That means forcing the oil industry to re-invest a much larger percentage of its profits into a massive development of the Many have argued that the latter suggestion would require a constitutional convention. So be it. Let’s have it. Radical change in the energy sector in The word “nationalization” should not scare anyone. It’s not a bugaboo and it has many gradations. As a start we certainly need effective “regulation”. We’ve had price and wage controls before. Perhaps it is time to look at profit controls on the oil industry since our competition watchdogs have been so ineffective. Uuncontrolled energy costs are hurting people. And not only in the pocketbook. But in their very ability to survive. To earn a livelihood. I can anticipate the objections. Some will say that the moment the state introduces price regulation, shortages will appear. But there are no shortages of electricity, natural gas, or water even though the state does regulate their prices. The idea is not to fix artificially low prices by decree, but to analyze real costs of production, transportation, development and research, and on this basis set prices that would enable companies to profit but not to profiteer, as they now do, because of their lock-step policies and near-monopoly status. Government at all levels will have to be true partners in these reforms and reduce their untenable taxes even at the expense of Prime Minister Martin’s pledge to transfer some energy tax revenues to the cities. The bottom line is that in the life of every nation there comes a time of reckoning. That reckoning determines whether its people have the maturity to cast aside false notions and fictitious pieties and assert the strength of their nationhood. If that maturity is lacking, if there is no courage, then citizens condemn themselves to eternal subservience to vested interests. |