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Capitol Hill In The Market For Gas Price Solutions


Summer driving season is just up the road, and lawmakers from both parties are polishing up their legislative vehicles to deal with gas prices that are zooming towards $4 a gallon.

The Republican-controlled House passed a bill Thursday to force Interior Secretary Ken Salazar to restart oil and gas lease sales off the coast of Virginia and the Gulf of Mexico. Leases in the Gulf were stalled after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in April 2010. The Obama administration said in a statement that it intends to issue more permits in the Gulf by mid-2012.

Republicans also want to ease permitting restrictions for new oil refineries. They say that by increasing American oil production, the price of gas at the pump will come down.

“My colleagues across the aisle will say that expanding drilling will do nothing to lower gasoline prices,” said House Natural Resources Chairman Doc Hastings, R-Wash. “The truth is that this will send a strong signal to the world markets that the U.S. is serious about producing our resources and bringing more production online.”

Democrats argued that new leases would not bring down prices in the short term, as it can take months or even years to bring wells online.

While the oil may not flow immediately, Jim Noe, Executive Director of the Shallow Water Energy Security Coalition believes the measure would still have an impact.

“The commitment to drill will impact gas prices because the traders will be comforted by the fact that America will be a steady supply source,” says Noe, “Even before the oil starts flowing thru the pipeline to your neighborhood gas station.”

An alternative suggested by Democrats would release crude oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) in order to tamp down on speculation in the oil markets.

“This is important, not only to increase supply, but also to send a clear message to speculators that they do not call the shots,” said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., at a news conference Thursday, “The price at the pump is affected by the harmful speculation of some. And again how we strategically use the Strategic Petroleum Reserve is going to be very important and probably one of the quickest ways to take down the price at the pump.”

A similar measure used after a price spike caused by the 1991 Gulf War lowered the cost of a barrel of crude oil by 33 percent.

In addition to releasing oil from the SPR, Democrats also want to roll back tax credits given to large oil companies to produce domestically.

“If we were to end a big part of those subsidies, we could save $31 billion over 10 years,” Pelosi said, “The Republicans say that Big Oil needs these subsidies as an incentive to drill. And yet for the first quarter of this year big five oil companies had profits of over $30 billion.”

Though some Republicans, including House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, had expressed a degree of openness to such a measure, an attempt to roll back the tax breaks failed on the House floor Thursday.

Noe believes that raising taxes on oil producers will not bring in the revenue that some expect. “It’s a pure economics game for them. If they can produce oil cheaper somewhere else,” he says, “They’ll put it on a tanker and ship it to us.”

(Source: Fox News)



6 Responses

  1. The price of gasoline isn’t rising much if you are using (Swiss) francs, Loonis (Canadian dollars) or Aussies (Australian dollars). If the US stops printing oodles of money, the dollar will again be a “hard” currency, and the price of gas will stabilize

    It will also fall if the economic is so bad it causes another steep economic decline, since demand will fall.

  2. Rise to near $4? It is already way above $4, it is rising to $5.

    Profit is not enough incentive – they need tax breaks too? Also remember that the base price is what is rising, not the tax rate. If they eliminate tax breaks, it just means that the government might be able to collect more from them, but it won’t lower our price.

  3. The only way to lower prices is to either get them to lower the price of oil (right…. and forgo obscene amounts of money!?) or to stop buying from them and get it from elsewhere. The Strategic Reserves can only accomplish this for a short amount of time. Alternative pipelines are not really sufficient and cannot be soon enough, even if they exist.

    Alternative energy may be the only solution, but it wob’t happen until H’ decides that the time for Yishmael to be on Top of the World is over. If and when that happens, a better fuel source will appear, and overnight oil could become worthless.

    Maybe we could get a car powered by Tefillah, Torah, and Mitzvos!?

  4. yeshivabochur123…explain where and how would you make up the lost revenue, which in most states is used for road and highway maintenance?

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