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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: gerard mangiardi who wrote (251993)4/30/2002 11:54:00 AM
From: DMaA  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
What makes you think "we" aren't aggressively pursuing alternatives?

Who is "we"?



To: gerard mangiardi who wrote (251993)4/30/2002 12:13:55 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769670
 
No.....they wouldn't do THAT now would they...? The Bush Boyz?

Gas Supplies Manipulated, Report Says
Energy: Senate study finds refineries cut production and increase exports to boost
prices, especially in California. Industry disputes claims.

By NANCY RIVERA BROOKS, TIMES STAFF WRITER

The gasoline business is dominated by a handful of
oil companies that can manipulate supplies to
increase prices and profits, and California is a prime
spot for such maneuvers, congressional
investigators said Monday.

A 396-page report by the Democratic staff of the
Senate permanent investigations subcommittee does
not accuse oil companies of violating federal
antitrust laws, but notes that when only a few
players control supply, then those companies have
enormous power to control prices. The problem is
worsened by the closure of dozens of refineries
during the last 20 years, the report said.

"In a number of instances, refiners have sought to
increase prices by reducing supplies," said the
report, commissioned in June by Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), who chairs the
subcommittee. The report, citing internal oil company documents from the
1990s, contends that refiners employ a variety of strategies to boost prices,
including reducing refinery production and exporting supplies out of the
country. Levin ordered the investigation, which is the subject of hearings today
and Thursday, when a second summer of gasoline price spikes plagued the
Midwest. This year, prices jumped again across the country as crude oil prices
leaped; on Monday, the U.S. average price for a gallon of self-serve regular
gasoline was $1.393, down about a penny from last week but up nearly 29
cents since early February, the Energy Department said.

The oil industry disputed the subcommittee report's findings, arguing that
gasoline prices are set largely by market forces, including supply, demand and
competition. Some of the blame for gasoline price spikes can be laid on
government regulation, which requires more than a dozen gasoline formulas to
fight air pollution in different parts of the country, said John Felmy, chief
economist of the American Petroleum Institute.

"There are conditions in the market that have led to a reduction in the number
of refineries. Our point is what's caused that is government regulation and not
any attempt by firms to merge and increase concentration," Felmy said.
California's prices are some of the highest and most volatile in the nation
because the gasoline business here is particularly concentrated, with the top
four refiners controlling nearly 80% of the refining capacity and the top six
refiners operating about 85% of the retail outlets in the state, the report said.

In addition, California is an island in the gasoline world, consuming since 1996
a unique cleaner-burning gasoline that is produced by few refineries outside the
state. The California refineries, running at full production, are barely able to
satisfy the state's 1-million-barrel-per-day appetite for gasoline and frequently
must rely on expensive imports to keep California motorists supplied, the
report stated. (The gasoline market in California is the second-biggest in the
world, tied with Japan for the No. 2 spot after the United States as a whole.)

In such a situation, any slight supply disruption is enough to send prices soaring,
but at times, the report contended, prices are kept high by other means.

The report cited industry documents from unnamed companies that indicate
some West Coast refiners routinely sell gasoline out of state, even at a loss.
One document, produced by an unnamed refiner, said the company planned to
export gas to "improve market conditions" and that the firm was willing to "take
[a] hit on price to firm up market."

The report also included a 1996 presentation to senior Arco managers outlining
a strategy to export gasoline so a surplus would not develop in California. A
spokesman for BP, which now owns Arco, said that the document was a
consultant report never acted upon by Arco, adding that the company does not
export gasoline out of California.

Because so much gasoline is sold in California, any price increase is unusually
costly to the state's economy, the report said, pegging the toll of a 1-cent
increase in the price of a gallon of gasoline at $420,000 per day, or $153
million per year.
latimes.com
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