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Tag Archives: Washington

Warning! Danger! Oil prices falling!

The majority of Americans are now supportive of the concept of US Energy Independence. It is one of the few topics that all of the candidates are in general agreement. The various methods and strategies to achieve that independence differ, but everyone realizes that we have to stop the massive transfer of wealth from our country to that of countries that are run by non-democratic dictatorships.

What is the current biggest risk in our ability to reach that goal in the next ten years? Falling oil prices. Seriously, that is our biggest risk. If oil prices fall, consumers will quickly forget the pain, investors will stop pouring money into alternative energy, car companies will crank up the SUV assembly lines, and politicians will start talking about the next new “crisis”. You say that can’t happen? Check your history books, as that is exactly what happened after the late 70’s oil crisis. The oil cartels felt the reduction in oil demand; they saw the new investment into solar and got scared. OPEC’s back was broken, new supplies came online in the North Sea and Alaska, and cheap oil returned.

We cannot allow that to happen again. With oil prices dipping to close to $100 a barrel, Congress should immediately call for a price floor on foreign imported oil. Any oil purchased over-seas at less than $100 a barrel would receive a tariff that made up the difference. Any oil that was produced in the US would remain tariff free, enabling US oil companies to invest in new fields, knowing that their oil could always be sold for a stable price. That price would never be undercut if OPEC and other oil-exporting companies suddenly increased supply.

The government could announce that, as part of a comprehensive energy strategy, it will henceforth not allow the price of foreign purchased oil to fall below $100 per barrel. If high oil prices continue, the proposal would have little impact and cost nothing, either politically or financially. If prices fell below that level, the added tariff would be sent to Washington to help fund alternative energy investment, tax refunds for hybrids, etc.

If consumers and industry knew that the price of a barrel of oil would never again fall below $100 a barrel, they could make long-term investment and consumption decisions with the knowledge that vastly lower oil cost will not under-cut those decisions. Americans will not buy fuel-efficient automobiles, create distribution networks for alternative fuels, or invest in technologies such as hydrogen fuel cells, flex-fuel vehicles or wind power unless they know that a future sharp fall in oil prices will not undercut them.

Would you support a price floor? If not, why?

The Russian Bear is Awake – Hold onto your Wallet

Moscow, with its recent attack on its former Georgian republic has caused concern across the world.  Russia is feeling strong, and is showing that it is no longer going to sit idly by as their former client states forge stronger relationships with the EU and the West.  This new found strength has been gained by becoming one of the world’s largest energy producers. The Russians now supply about 25 percent of the European Union’s crude oil needs and half of its natural gas.  But now Black Sea oil tankers that normally would be filling up with Baku crude, are anchored 15 miles offshore the Georgian port of Batumi, waiting for a cessation of hostilities.

Russia has demonstrated that its military is a force to reckon with, that it can defeat a Western-trained force, and that the West and NATO will not act to intervene.  Like during the Cold War, the West has limited ability to blunt Russia’s military agression.  Both sides know that an armed conflict between NATO and Russia is never going to happen.

After the fall of Communism, both Washington and the EU invested heavily in Russian energy production.  The result has been a network of oil and natural gas pipelines, ports, and tankers that can feed a million barrels a day to the world market. Washington has helped to expand and link that network directly to Europe, where Russia is currently the dominant supplier.  The multi-billion-dollar Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline that runs across Georgia is run by an international consortium, including American oil-giants Chevron and Conoco-Phillips.

Now, US taxpayers are about to get a double whammy.  Two government agencies, the Export-Import Bank (Ex-Im) and the Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC), have made large investments in the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, lending money to private companies involved in the construction of the pipeline. Ex-Im Bank gave $160 million in loans, and OPIC has provided $100 million in “political risk insurance”.  If the pipeline is damaged or destroyed, these companies will be forced to write off these loans, and US taxpayers will be left to pickup the pieces.  That is a potential quarter of a Billion dollar bill that may come due soon.