by Cal Thomas at NewsBusters:
First quarter profits for American oil companies are jaw dropping.  Exxon earned nearly $11 billion, up 69 percent from a year ago. Royal  Dutch Shell PLC, Europe's largest oil company, announced it made $8.78  billion in the first quarter, a 60 percent increase over last year. Much  of it, but not all, is due to higher gas prices, over which the  companies have very little control due to our heavy reliance on foreign  oil.
Some in Congress -- mostly Democrats, but a few Republicans -- are  calling for an end to tax breaks enjoyed by the oil companies and in  some cases, higher taxes on their profits. But the Obama administration  is contributing to higher energy prices, which inflate the companies'  bottom line.
The Environmental Protection Agency has prevented Shell from proceeding  with its Northern Alaska drilling project after Shell reportedly  invested more than $4 billion in the project. How can companies make  costly investments when they are uncertain that policies allowed in one  administration will still be allowed in the one that follows?
In March, when visiting South America, President Obama promised that  the United States would help Brazil develop its offshore resources. But  he won't allow much new drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, or Alaska. So we  are going to help Brazil drill for oil, and then import it? Gas prices  have nearly doubled since Obama's inauguration and yet the media don't  blame him for it, as they blamed his predecessor when prices soared to  current levels.
What about taxes? Oil companies are already heavily taxed. According to  the energy research firm Wood Mackenzie, between 1998 and 2008, the oil  and gas industry paid $1 trillion in total income taxes. That's in  addition to the $178 billion the companies sent the federal government  in rent, royalty and bonus payments between 1982 and 2009. What oil  companies pay in taxes is higher than the average American manufacturer,  more than their "fair share."
Wood Mackenzie also found that should taxes be increased on oil  companies by $5 billion a year, that "would result in a $128 billion  loss in government revenue and would reduce domestic production by  400,000 barrels per day by 2025," with an additional 1.2 million barrels  per day at risk. "This tax increase would increase, not decrease our  reliance on foreign sources of oil."
As for those large profits, the American Petroleum Institute (API)  reports that in the latest published data for last year's third quarter,  "the oil and gas industry earned 6 cents for every dollar of sales in  comparison with all manufacturing, which earned 8.6 cents for every  dollar of sales."
This administration gives lip service to the successful, while  punishing them and subsidizing the unsuccessful. If the president is  serious about reducing the cost of oil (and given candidate Obama's  frequent statements in favor of increased energy prices to force more of  us (but not him) to drive hybrid, even electric cars -- he can emulate  George W. Bush.
In July 2008, President Bush lifted an executive order banning offshore  drilling, a token gesture since a federal ban on offshore drilling  remained in place, but his action caused oil prices to drop, as  suppliers believed we were getting serious about obtaining more oil from  domestic sources. The argument from the anti-drilling side is that new  drilling projects would have no effect because of the time it takes to  find and then refine the oil. If new drilling had begun five or 10 years  ago we would be pumping far more oil than we are now. If we begin now,  in five or 10 years we'll see the results.
Demonizing the oil companies won't produce one more drop of oil.  Neither will higher taxes, which will affect employment and create many  more negative consequences.
Last week, former President George W. Bush reiterated his support for  more drilling: "I would suggest Americans understand how supply and  demand works. And if you restrict supplies of crude, the price of oil is  going to go up."
President Obama either doesn't understand supply and demand, or he is  deliberately ignoring it in hopes of imposing his radical environmental  views on us all.
Friday, May 6, 2011
Not Needed! More Taxes on Oil!
Labels:
crude oil,
energy independence