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Big Oil Rallies to Save Big Oil
A nationwide series of rallies kicked off in Texas this week urging Congress to block legislation proposed in the wake of the BP oil disaster that would regulate the oil and gas industry more strictly and eliminate tax breaks.
The organizer of the Rally for Jobs events, The American Petroleum Institute (API), with help from other industry groups including the Independent Petroleum Association of America, the National Petrochemical and Refiners Association and the International Association of Drilling Contractors.
Rallies held yesterday in Houston, Port Arthur and Corpus Christi drew an estimated 5,500 people, many of them employees from Texas-based oil industry firms. API says the rallies are aimed at protecting the estimated 9.2 million U.S. jobs supported by the energy industry.
About 200 employees of Houston-based Conoco-Phillips volunteered to attend yesterday's rally at the George R. Brown Convention Center, the Houston Chronicle reports. API provided transportation to the gatherings for oil company employees.
Environmental advocates criticized the rallies as "astroturf" events that are designed to appear grassroots but which are actually funded by corporate interests.
"By staging these rallies, API is trying to distort public perception," says Tyson Slocum, director of Public Citizen's energy program. "People want the government to ensure that another BP oil disaster never happens again. Lawmakers would be derelict in their duty if they didn't respond to the worst environmental disaster in U.S. history."
Slocum points out that API President Jack Gerard sent a memo to member companies last year laying out a plan to organize rallies against climate change legislation. The memo asked recipients to give API "the name of one central coordinator for your company's involvement in the rallies" and warned, "Please treat this information as sensitive ... we don't want critics to know our game plan."
"A year later, the game plan hasn't changed," says Slocum, "but the legislative focus has."
In the wake of the BP disaster, federal lawmakers have proposed setting new standards for blowout preventers and other safety equipment, eliminating the existing $75 million cap for oil companies' liability for spills, restructuring the industry-friendly regulatory agency formerly known as the Minerals Management Service, reforming the royalty system to ensure oil companies pay their fair share for use of public land, and adding protections for whistleblowers who call attention to safety violations in oil and gas operations.
The oil industry is fighting those regulatory efforts -- and spending big money to do so. So far this year, API alone has spent $3.57 million on federal lobbying efforts, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. Last year it spent $7.32 million. The oil and gas industry overall is the fourth-biggest spender on federal lobbying efforts in 2010, shelling out more than $74.9 million to date. Last year the industry came in third with an expenditure of more than $175 million.
API is holding other Rally for Jobs events through next week in Colorado, Illinois, New Mexico and Ohio.
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17 Comments so far
Show AllAbout 30% of U.S. oil comes from Canada.
In Canada we pay about $4 per US gallon for gas.
The best thing that the Canadian Government could do for the ecosystem of the world would be to put a wellhead tax on oil so that in the States the cost of gas would lead them to use less.
Maybe a cost of $5 US dollars per gallon would be enough to waken all North Americans.
The problem with unregulated free-market oil costs is that people will strip their country bare, as happened in Haiti, in order to have energy. 90 years ago you could run a Stanley Steamer on kindling. A number of more progressive options exist.
Stanley Steamers rule!
Stanly Steamers ran on hydrocarbons and were incredibly inefficient. They were the HumVees of the new century.
Haiti may have been "stripped bare" as you stated but it wasn't due to unregulated free-markets. Haiti has suffered several different pillages and devastation by the French, and then again the French, then by the US and US-friendly dictators. This isn't my definition of a free-market, not when you are being held at gunpoint. Not to say that free-marketers don't end up doing the same things, especially if they under the control of the Chicago Boys.
Maybe I should have suggested $6 per US gallon. Now it is about $2.75.
This is typical corporate fear mongering. To say that meeting safety regulations will cost jobs is so transparently stupid that it is truly amazing that any reasonably thinking person would give such arguments credence. The only thing that could be damaged by environmental and safety regulations is the corporate bottom line but in reality that cost would be passed to the consumer along with a surcharge. I for one would not begrudge an extra five cents a gallon if it would avoid the sterilization of another major ecosystem. This kind of corporate behavior makes me want to blow chunks.
So, this "rally" drew 5500 people - on a weekday. How many of them were ordeered by their bosses to be there?
sabo
this is hardly surprising in texas. the morons down here rally for oil companies like sheep. drill baby drill and less onerous regulation is the dickbrained mantra here. there was another explosion on a platform in the gulf today and they rally for oil corporations.
the morons down here repeat the oil corporations bs that regulatons will hurt jobs.
i moved from the nyc area to texas and see that too many down here are just corporate lackeys and follow corporate bs like sheep.
matt
galveston tx
We certainly don't need to import morons from up north then doe we?
And this on top of the peak oil chaos scenario spelt out in the Der Speigel article in today's CD!!!
This is no surprise. If Big Oil can pay pseudo scientists to produce voodoo reports that deny global warming, why wouldn't they force their employees, under the threat of losing their jobs, to attend rallies on their behalf? It won't be long now, before the Teabaggers and the rest of the Right Wing nutjobs jump on the bandwagon and this becomes another self-destructive national spectacle.
However, this is another cruel reminder that to the rest of us that we're living in a matrix of sorts, one created by Big Oil, Big Pharma, Big Business, Big Banks for the sole purpose of enriching themselves and nothing is what it seems but what they tell us it is.
I wonder what flavor of corporate Kool-Aid was served at these rallies?
Sweet Krude-Aid, duh!
This is a direct result of "Citizens United"!
How long does it take to go from corporate paid political rallies to . . .
oil is the one product in the world that should be 100% controlled by the governments.
great and nice article the problem with unregulated free-market oil costs is that people will strip their country bare, as happened in Haiti, in order to have energy banner design. 90 years ago you could run a Stanley Steamer on kindling online logo design. A number of more progressive options exist thanks for this great sharing.