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For the last year Americans, and the rest of the driving world, have been
paying record prices for gasoline (petrol for our British friends). This move
higher in price started in 1998 when unleaded gasoline prices, as measured
from the wholesale level using the futures contract on the New York Mercantile
Exchange (NYMEX) hit a low of under 40 cents a gallon. In the next 7 years
the price skyrocketed 6 fold to hit a high of over $2.40 a gallon during the
week that Hurricane Katrina destroyed New Orleans and other parts of the Gulf
of Mexico coastline.
For the last year or more we have heard a lot of talk about oil shortages,
no new super giant field discoveries and not enough refinery capacity to supply
the products created from crude oil such as unleaded gasoline, heating oil,
diesel fuel and jet fuel. Books have been written, hundreds of web sites track
the data coming from the various national and international agencies and TV
specials have been broadcast all trying to explain this situation.
But one thing that does not get a lot of attention is "What are the oil companies
and refinery companies doing? Are they building new refineries?" President
Bush again this weak mentioned the need to build new refinery capacity to meet
the ever growing demand for refined products.
But as usual our President speaks with a forked tongue. According to numerous
independent reports, over the last 15 years the major oil companies have colluded
with the federal government to close down independent refineries and have even
shut down some of their own refineries all in an attempt to keep the price
of gasoline and other refined products higher.
According to a report by US Senator Ron Wyden dated June 14, 2001 "major oil
companies pursued efforts to curtail refinery capacity as a strategy for improving
profit margins; that competing oil companies worked together to subvert supply;
that refinery closures inhibited supply; and that oil companies are reaping
record profits, yet may benefit from a proposed national energy policy that
would offer financial incentives to expand refinery capacity."
Let's look at this report in some more detail. It states that "In the mid-1990s
too much refining capacity, not too little, concerned the nation's major oil
companies. At that time, the oil and gas industry faced what they termed "excess
refining capacity," a circumstance they viewed as a financial liability that
drove down overall profit margins. The industry reduced the total amount of
potential supply by closing down more than 50 refineries in the past decade.
Since 1995 alone, 24 refinery closings have taken nearly 830,000 barrels of
oil per day."
During the period from 1985 to 2000 the price of unleaded gasoline on the
NYMEX stayed in a range between 40 and 70 cents a gallon except for the 1991
spike when the US invaded Iraq. A full 15 years of consistent pricing. (One
would think the Federal Reserve was holding the value of the US dollar steady.)
The report then cites internal oil company documents revealing a concerted
effort to raise refining margins and profits by curtailing refinery capacity.
From Chevron, "A senior energy analyst at the recent API (American Petroleum
Institute) convention warned that if the U.S. petroleum industry doesn't reduce
its refining capacity, it will never see any substantial increase in refining
margins...However, refining utilization has been rising, sustaining high levels
of operations, thereby keeping prices low."
From Texaco, "As observed over the last few years and as projected well into
the future, the most critical factor facing the refining industry on the West
Coast is the surplus refining capacity, and the surplus gasoline production
capacity. The same situation exists for the entire U.S. refining industry.
Supply significantly exceeds demand year-round. This results in very poor refinery
margins, and very poor refinery financial results. Significant events need
to occur to assist in reducing supplies and/or increasing the demand for gasoline."
The document also quotes from a deposition where an oil company executive
admitted to meeting with another oil company executive for the purpose of keeping
supply off the market, 'The President of ARCO Products Company William Rusnack
admitted in a deposition taken May 15, 1997, that he met with Tosco CEO Thomas
O'Malley to discuss opportunities to work together to control supply of the
cleaner burning gasoline, thus propping up the overall price. "... explore
whether or not there was any mutual benefit, any mutual interest, any profit
for both ARCO and Tosco to find a way to have ARCO purchase or Tosco sell CARB
[cleaner burning California Air Resources Board] gasoline to ARCO, recognizing
that the agreement that was in place at that time did not provide for the supply
of CARB gasoline."'
The document also reveals how one oil company colluded to force a shutdown
of a competitor, 'An internal Mobil document highlighted the connection between
an independent refiner producing CARB gas, the depressed price that would result,
and the need to prevent the independent refiner from producing. "If Powerine
re-starts and gets the small refiner exemption, I believe the CARB market premium
will be impacted. Could be as much as 2-3 cpg (cents per gallon)...The re-start
of Powerine, which results in 20-25 TBD (thousand barrels per day) of gasoline
supply...could...effectively set the CARB premium a couple of cpg lower...Needless
to say, we would all like to see Powerine stay down. Full court press is warranted
in this case."
'The Powerine Oil Company refinery closed in 1995. Despite documented attempts
to work in conjunction with major oil companies to restart the Santa Fe Springs,
Calif. refinery, the major oil companies stood in the way and the refinery
remains closed.'
According to Energy Information Administration, the following refineries were
shut down between 1995 and 2001:
| Year |
Refinery |
Location |
| 1995 |
Indian Refining |
Lawrenceville IL |
|
Cyril Petrochemical Corp. |
Cyril OK |
|
Powerine Oil Co. |
Sante Fe Springs CA |
|
Sunland Refining Corp. |
Bakersfield CA |
|
Caribbean Petroleum Corp. |
San Juan Puerto Rico |
| 1996 |
Tosco |
Marcus Hook PA |
|
Barrett Refg. Corp. |
Custer OK |
|
Laketon Refg. |
Laketon IN |
|
Total Petroleum Inc. |
Arkansas City KS |
|
Arcadia Refg. & Mktg. |
Lisbon LA |
|
Barrett Refg. Corp. |
Vicksburg MS |
|
Intermountain Refg. Co. |
Fredonia AZ |
| 1997 |
Gold Line Refg. LTD |
Lake Charles LA |
|
Canal Refg. Co. |
Curch Point LA |
|
Pacific Refg. Co. |
Hercules CA |
| 1998 |
Gold Line Refining Ltd. |
Jennings LA |
|
Petrolite Corp. |
Kilgore TX |
|
Shell Oil Co. |
Odessa TX |
|
Pride Refg. Inc. |
Abilene TX |
|
Sound Refg. Inc. |
Tacoma WA |
| 1999 |
TPI Petro. Inc. |
Alma MI |
| 2000 |
Pennzoil |
Rouseville PA |
|
Berry Petroleum |
Stephens Ark. |
|
Chevron |
Richmond Beach WA |
| 2001 |
Premcor |
Blue Island IL |
Refinery Capacity Lost Due to Refinery Closures Between 1995 - 2001
< Numbers in Barrels per Calendar Day >
| 1995 |
191,750 bbl/cd |
| 1996 |
268,750 bbl/cd |
| 1997 |
87,100 bbl/cd |
| 1998 |
123,650 bbl/cd |
| 1999 |
51,000 bbl/cd |
| 2000 |
25,700 bbl/cd |
| 2001* |
80,515 bbl/cd |
| Total Capacity Lost |
828,465 bbl/cd |
While all this has been happening we have seen the oil companies report record
profits due to the high price of crude oil and refined products. But the record
profits of the oil companies are not due to any shortage of oil in the world
or of refining capacity; the record profits are due to the oil cartel working
with the federal government to create a false shortage of product (coupled
with a media that enjoys creating a frenzy). This was enhanced in November
2001 when President Bush ordered the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to be filled
with real crude oil thus removing another 700 million barrels of crude oil
from the market. The loser in all this is the middle class that is paying the
record prices at the pump.
To add insult to injury the Bush administration now wants to throw incentives
at the oil majors to build more refining capacity. These incentives will be
in the form of a tax breaks and a reduction in environmental regulations. What
we have here is a contrived crisis created by the big oil and government cartels
working together so that the ignorant masses will accept a preconceived result.
Senator Wyden ends his report with this: "If this approach becomes reality,
the U.S. government will reward the same oil companies who perpetuated the
gasoline supply crunch, those companies who may have deliberately worked to
close refineries and reduce supply. These companies, already enjoying record
profits because of their actions, would reap even higher profits by recognizing
the cost savings of relaxed environmental standards. As a result, oil and gas
profits would continue to rise, the public would be saddled with the costs
of dirtier air, and consumers would remain unprotected from high gas prices."
Senator Wyden's report can be found here: http://republican.sen.ca.gov/web/38/pubs/oilinvest.pdf
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