[Mb-civic] Bush Calls For Probe Of Rising Gas Prices - Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Wed Apr 26 03:46:55 PDT 2006
Bush Calls For Probe Of Rising Gas Prices
President to Also Divert Oil Reserves, Ease Pollution Rules
By Jim VandeHei and Steven Mufson
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, April 26, 2006; A01
With gas prices expected to hover at record highs through summer,
President Bush yesterday called for price-fixing investigations and
several measures aimed at holding down the fast-rising costs of driving.
Amid growing Republican unrest about the politics of $3-plus gasoline,
Bush told the Renewable Fuels Association he will take the unusual step
of suspending shipments to the nation's Strategic Petroleum Reserve to
boost supply and help hold down oil prices. The president also said he
will temporarily ease environmental regulations that require the use of
cleaner-burning fuel additives to cut down on summertime pollution.
Still, according to industry experts and administration officials,
Bush's efforts at best are likely to shave a few cents per gallon off
the cost of gasoline.
"Energy experts predict gas prices are going to remain high throughout
the summer, and that's going to be a continued strain on the American
people," Bush said in his speech.
Under pressure from GOP leaders, Bush is taking a tough public line with
the U.S. oil companies that are recording record profits and paying
hefty salaries and retirement packages to executives. Bush ordered three
federal agencies to investigate whether companies are manipulating the
cost of gasoline -- boosting prices as many report record profits. The
administration asked state governments to do the same.
Some lawmakers and consumer groups have charged that oil companies are
improperly setting high prices -- an accusation that has proven
difficult to prove in the past.
Despite yesterday's tough rhetoric, neither the White House nor Congress
is rushing to hit the oil industry in the pocketbook.
Republicans negotiating a major tax bill have agreed to strike
Senate-passed measures that would raise taxes on the major oil companies
by nearly $5 billion over five years. And Bush's statement that Congress
should roll back tax breaks for the industry is less dramatic than it
sounds. His proposal merely stretches out a tax write-off from oil
exploration from two years to five years, a plan that industry officials
do not oppose.
Privately, Republicans said price-fixing investigations are good
politics but unlikely to result in any significant punishments or price
changes this year. Bob Slaughter, president of the National
Petrochemical & Refiners Association, said that it "does smack of 'round
up the usual suspects.' "
Bush is trying to walk a fine line with gasoline prices. Two years ago,
when Democratic presidential candidate John F. Kerry suggested
suspending purchases for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, Bush
responded, "We will not play politics with the Strategic Petroleum
Reserve," which he emphasized is solely for "major disruptions of energy
supplies."
With polls showing that high gasoline prices are creating deep anxiety
about the election-year economy, however, the president wants to project
the image of a leader doing everything he can to provide some relief --
without alienating corporate allies and economic conservatives who
loathe government intervention in the market.
J. Robinson West, chairman of the consulting firm PFC Energy who worked
in the Reagan administration, said Bush is in a tough spot in part
because "the administration is seen as being very close to the oil
industry."
The gas-price strategy was the first major initiative for new White
House Chief of Staff Joshua B. Bolten. He spent the weekend working with
congressional, agency and industry officials to devise the approach.
Wholesale gasoline futures for June delivery dropped eight cents a
gallon to $2.10 on the New York Mercantile exchange after Bush's speech,
the Associated Press reported.
Democrats said Bush's response is insufficient and politically
motivated. Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) and other
Democrats proposed suspending for 60 days the tax of 18.4 cents per
gallon on gasoline and the tax of 24.4 cents per gallon on diesel. The
plan would cost at least $6 billion, which Democrats said should be
covered by increasing taxes on oil companies.
The White House yesterday rejected one measure backed by Democrats and
at least one prominent Republican: a tax on some oil company profits.
White House spokesman Scott McClellan called it a "failed
command-and-control approach of the past."
Bush's moves are similar to those he and past presidents have proposed
during spikes in gasoline prices, even though history has shown that the
laws of supply and demand control short-term prices. In his speech, Bush
said the best thing government can do is push automakers to produce --
and consumers to use -- vehicles that run on something other than gasoline.
Bush has rejected one change that some experts said could reduce oil
consumption: tougher federally mandated fuel-economy standards for cars,
trucks and SUVs. The president has supported modest increases for some
vehicles. But any increase in those standards would take years to bring
down demand and ease prices.
"Increasing domestic fuel economy would have by far the biggest impact.
Yet U.S. mileage standards have not risen in 25 years ," said Paul
Bledsoe, communications director of the bipartisan National Commission
on Energy Policy.
Instead, Bush renewed his call for greater domestic oil production,
including in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge; the construction
of new U.S. refineries; and new tax breaks to anyone who buys a hybrid
vehicle such as Toyota's Prius this year. Currently, only the first
60,000 vehicles produced by each manufacturer are covered by the tax
break, which tops out at $3,400.
Speaking to an industry group that promotes alternative fuel sources
such as ethanol, Bush also renewed his call for Congress to pass new
incentives for research and development of hydrogen cars, pollution-free
fuel cell batteries and technologies that turn such materials as switch
grass and soybeans into fuel.
The tax breaks for hybrid vehicles would cover only a sliver of new cars
sales for the rest of the year and, according to Bush's top economist,
Al Hubbard, the easing of environmental regulations is more about making
sure some stations do not run out of gasoline than lowering prices.
Bush's order to suspend oil shipments to the strategic oil reserve --
the government's emergency supply for national security or other crisis
-- will increase the domestic supply by less than 1 percent.
This could save consumers a few cents per gallon at best, energy experts
said. Philip K. Verleger, an Aspen, Colo.-based oil consultant, said
that Bush's proposals were "more or less like prescribing aspirin to
take care of prostate cancer."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/25/AR2006042501900.html?nav=hcmodule
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://www.islandlists.com/pipermail/mb-civic/attachments/20060426/a625c07c/attachment-0001.htm
More information about the Mb-civic
mailing list