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The Oil Firms' Profits Ignore the Real Costs
The energy industry has long dumped its damage and, like the banks, made scant provision against disaster. Time to pay up
Despite an angry letter from two US senators and a warning from Barack Obama about spending big money on their shareholders while nickel-and-diming coastal people, despite the fact that it has no idea what its total liabilities in the Gulf of Mexico will be, BP seems to be planning to pay a dividend this year. It's likely to amount to more than $10bn. As the two senators noted, by moving money "off the company's books and into investors' pockets", BP "will make it much more difficult to repay the US government and American communities".
Pollution has been defined as a resource in the wrong place. That's also a pretty good description of the company's profits. The great plumes of money that have been bursting out of the company's accounts every year are not BP's to give away. They consist, in part or in whole, of the externalised costs the company has failed to pay, and which the rest of society must carry.
Does this sound familiar? In the 10 years preceding the crash, the banks posted and disposed of stupendous profits. When their risky ventures failed, they discovered that they hadn't made sufficient provision against future costs, and had to go begging from the state. They had classified their annual surplus as profit and given it to their investors and staff long before it was safe to do so.
Last week the British government bumped into another consequence of failing to take future costs into account. Chris Huhne, the new secretary of state for energy and climate change, revealed that nuclear decommissioning liabilities will cost the government £4bn more than it was expecting to pay over the next three years. This will cancel out two-thirds of the vicious cuts the government has announced and swallow most of his department's budget. As Huhne pointed out: "It is a classic example of short-termism. I cannot think of a better example of a failure to take a decision in the short run costing the taxpayer a hell of a lot more in the long run."
The decommissioning costs imposed on society by nuclear power will be dwarfed by those that are imposed by the fossil fuel industry. They include, but are not confined to, the money that will have to be spent on adapting to climate change. The United Nations estimates this cost at $50bn–$170bn a year, but a report last year by British scientists suggested that this is around three times too low, as it counts only a small proportion of likely impacts.
The UN has hired the consultancy Trucost to estimate the costs dumped on the environment by the world's 3,000 biggest public companies. It doesn't report until October, but earlier this year the Guardian published the interim results. Trucost had estimated the damage these companies inflicted on the environment in 2008 at $2.2 trillion, equivalent to one third of their profits for that year. This too is likely to be an underestimate, as the draft report did not try to value the long-term costs of any issue except climate change. Nor did it count the wider social costs of environmental change.
A paper by the New Economics Foundation in 2006 used government estimates of the cost of carbon emissions to calculate the liabilities of Shell and BP. It found that while the two companies had just posted profits of £25bn, they had incurred costs in the same year of £46.5bn. The oil leaking into the Gulf of Mexico from the Deepwater Horizon well is scarcely more damaging, and its eventual impacts scarcely more expensive, than the oil that is captured by neighbouring rigs then processed and burnt as intended.
The total costs imposed by the oil companies, which include the loss of human lives and the extinction of species, cannot be accounted. But even if they could, you shouldn't expect the companies to carry them. They might be incapable of capping their leaks; they are adept at capping their liabilities. The Deepwater Horizon rig, which is owned by Transocean, is registered in the Marshall Islands. Most oil companies pull the same trick: they register their rigs and ships in small countries with weak governments and no international reach. These nations are, in other words, incapable of regulating them.
Flags of convenience signify more than the place of registration: they're an unmistakable sign that responsibilities are being offloaded. If powerful governments were serious about tackling pollution, the first thing they would do would be to force oil companies to register their property in the places where their major interests lie.
US lawyers are drooling over the prospect of what one of them called "the largest tort we've had in this country". Some financial analysts are predicting the death of BP, as the fines and compensation it will have to pay outweigh its earnings. I don't believe a word of it.
ExxonMobil was initially fined $5bn for the Exxon Valdez disaster, in 1989. But its record-breaking profits allowed it to pay record-breaking legal fees: after 19 years of argument it got the fine reduced to $507m. That's equivalent to the profit it made every 10 days last year. Yesterday, after 25 years of deliberations, an Indian court triumphantly convicted Union Carbide India Ltd of causing death by negligence through the Bhopal catastrophe. There was just one catch: Union Carbide India Ltd ceased to exist many years ago. It wound itself up to avoid this outcome, and its liabilities vanished in a puff of poisoned gas.
BP's insurers will take a hit, as will the pension funds which invested so heavily in it; but, though some people are proposing costs of $40bn or even $60bn, I will bet the price of a barrel of crude that the company is still in business 10 years from now. Everything else – the ecosystems it blights, the fishing and tourist industries, a habitable climate – might collapse around it, but BP, like the banks, will be deemed too big to fail. Other people will pick up the costs.
There is an alternative, but it is unlikely to materialise. Just as Norway has treated its oil money not as profit but as provision against a tougher future, so the governments in whose territories oil companies work should force them to pay into a decommissioning fund. The levy should reflect the costs that economists are able to calculate, plus a contingency for those we can't yet foresee.
This would outrage the oil firms, as it would render many of them unprofitable. But there's a simple answer to that: the money currently defined as profit is nothing of the kind.
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14 Comments so far
Show AllAgain I point out that if the price of goods is determined by labor, as Adam Smith postulates, it means that economy is in fact governed by the laws of thermodynamics. The second law states that all transactions take place at a loss. Profits that are alleged to come from surpluses in transactions do not and cannot inhere with the transaction, they must come from the victimization permitted by legal and social custom. For a primer on these ideas, see the following links:
http://www.eco.uni-heidelberg.de/ng-oeoe/research/papers/Faber%20et%20al%20AEE%201998.pdf
http://www.eco.uni-heidelberg.de/ng-oeoe/research/papers/JPEE_Introduction.pdf
http://www.ecoeco.org/pdf/jointprod.pdf
We were supposed to start reducing our demand for oil in 1980 but it only went up. The heavy demand for oil gives the oil companies their profits. If the oil companies nationalized, we would have to assume that we're prepared to reduce our demand for oil significantly or it won't pass. Doesn't Norway use other sources of energy and don't they use switchgrass ethanol to increase the yield and help lower the demand?
Corporations have countless ways of avoiding the true costs of their operations. One is the human costs when they simply close down operations in a given locality and move, leaving their former employees bereft and the municipalities with unused and unusable physical facilities and property. Another occurs when they simply pull out of their pension obligations. In both cases it would be appropriate to require that corporations pay into escrow funds to meet the obligations as they incur by their current operations. We must do away with the standard corporate practice of paying for such obligations when they come due, at a time when the corporate entity may no longer exist.
Jim Shea
This article points out precisely why BP should be IMMEDIATELY placed into receivership - to avoid the scam perpetrated by the banks. BP's investors should not be paid a cent until all expenses incurred by this disaster are paid in full - including the salaries of all local residents who suffered an employment pay loss due to this terrible tragedy!!!
Yes!
That's the part they dont like. Investors need to face the fact that by investing they assumed risk. They want automatic returns no matter what happens, instead of facing the fact that, guess what? - the company you invested in screwed up and so, no return on your investment until the liabilities are paid off. Quit whining and face life as an adult who understands that the common good far outweighs your personal gains or losses. These people - like the banks - want the *free market* for us, but want the closed-market-and-externalized-costs-and-bailouts for them.
Another clear and clarifying article from Monbiot. Tnx, pal.
Pointing to unquantified externalities is a good way to formulate ex-pressions of the pressures we all feel but only some of us humans have been able to acknowledge verbally.
Yet the equation is still upside-down. - It's not our impacts on the planet that are costly to us. It's we who are a "costly" load on the biosphere of the planet, of which we - with all of our bodies and minds - are outgrowths.
Currently we are an overload on our source of origin.
Somewhat like a branch on a tree too heavy with fruit, about to break off from the overweight - possibly killing the tree, albeit not the soil that nourishes it.
"We're all outgrowths on this planet
living off this planet's growth"
That's the circular interaction we need to come to terms with, in a healthily conscious way.
Our every thought and notion, including that of "self", is part of that interaction. Which is why we are currently unaccustomed to calculating the interaction: the calculation is itself part of the equation, in a metonymic way.
We are accustomed to calculations of the metaphorical sort only, seeing parallels of externals and not including our selves and our notions of us.
As long as we exclude our selves in the deepest sense (of originating in the biosphere) from the premises of the calculations, the conclusions will be slanted towards errors.
Sorry, duplicate copy of comment
George, it's not simply that "Oil Firms' Profits Ignore the Real Costs", nor that "Investment Banks' Profits Ignore the Real Costs", nor that "Weapons Makers' Profits Ignore the Real Costs", but more importantly, if we are going to do anything to solve the real underlying problem and confront the hidden cancerous CAUSE beneath all of these true symptom problems:
It's precisely that "EMPIRE'S Profits Ignore the Real Costs", and it is the EMPIRE's negative externality cost dumping that is killing us, our kids, our country, our environment, and our world!
Therefore, the only movement that matters and can address ALL the problems of this CANCER OF EMPIRE is the "Anti-EMPIRE Movement", because the global corporate/financial/militarist EMPIRE that controls our country (and our world) by hiding behind the facade of its TWO-PARTY 'Vichy' sham of democratic government is the singular, signal, and seminal CAUSE of all of these ‘symptoms’, ‘identity issues’, problems, disasters, deaths, and "Sorrows of Empire"! It is the ultimate “Illusion of EMPIRE” that these issues are separate --- an illusion that “divides and conquers” the peoples’ distracted and divided attempt to attack the single central CAUSE of all these supposedly separate problems.
IT IS ONLY by attacking the singular underlying hidden cancerous tumor of EMPIRE --- and excising it --- that ALL these problems can be all solved; imperialist wars, climate destruction, criminal economic inequality, social injustice, racism, torture, global warming, financial looting by banks and hedge fund whores, domestic tyranny, spying, police-state oppression, crimes against humanity, ,,, clear cutting, killing whales, credit card usury, .... etc. etc.
If we continue to be stupid enough to let the single and unified ruling-elite oppressive Global corporate/financial/militarist EMPIRE to 'DIVIDE AND CONQUER' us (the US, and the world's working-class citizens) by being so stupid and diverted in our thinking that we continue to divide our own potential solidarity by focusing petty pissant personal efforts on hundreds of diverse, divided, symbolic, 'identity issues' like; 'climate justice', and prison justice, and racism, and anti-war efforts, and anti-cluster bomb efforts and 'save the friggin dolphins' efforts, then the unified Global EMPIRE will laugh all the way to OUR funeral.
The Global EMPIRE is unified and the world's people are pissing away their potential power to fight the EMPIRE because we are all caught-up on these stupid diversity and distractive little separate fights about dolphins and wars and trees and god knows what else while the EMPIRE is focused like a laser on killing us and exploiting our planet!
Get with it people, for god's sake --- our only power is in solidarity to confront the CAUSAL CANCER of the singular Global EMPIRE --- and we are all going to hang separately if we don't "Hang Together" as Ben Franklin (and all our founding fathers knew) when they were fighting the singular, integrated political/financial/economic/corporate/militarist British friggin EMPIRE.
Why the --ck is it so hard for the current stupid American people to understand that that was the secret to the success of our own fist American Revolution against EMPIRE???
And that's the secret to any and all successful battles against EMPIRE --- absolute solidarity focused entirely against the EMPIRE itself.
Only a unified battle which focuses the combined SOLIDARITY of the people directly against the monster of the EMPIRE itself is going to have any chance of winning and solving all of the problems that the EMPIRE is CAUSING.
My god, people, do you friggin think that the American colonists would have ever achieved anything if they said, "Let's form an 'identity group' that addresses the way the British Empire is cutting down trees for their royal navy ships", and another little group that said, "Let's form a different group that files a complaint with the royal governor about British Empire soldiers taking our food and sleeping in our homes,", and another dumb colonialist twerp who said, "I know. Let's form another little 'do nothing group' that takes donations to support a study about how the British Empire is unfairly taxing our stamps, and a separate study to show the percentage that the Empire is taxing our tea."
Hell, if that's all the brains and lack of guts that our fore fathers showed, we'd all still be singing "God save the friggin Queen".
Get with it people ---- the fight is against the EMPIRE. Doing anything but focusing all combined and solidarity efforts against the EMPIRE --- first, second, third and always --- is just going to result in the EMPIRE laughing at how stupid we are to divide ourselves, while they crush us under their unified thumb.
Let's stop being 'feel good idiots' promoting a multitude of dizzy, divided, and distractive separate movements, and unite as a "Global 'Anti-EMPIRE' Peoples Movement" ---- or we can kiss our lives, our children, our freedom, our country, our environment, our world, and our species good bye.
One almost has to wonder if the media, even the supposed alternative internet media, is working against the ruling-elite Global corporate/financial/militarist EMPIRE, or for it --- when so much of the media continues to run hundreds of 'divide and conquer' stories about this little 'social justice' issue, and that little 'torture' issue, and this little 'cluster bomb' issue, and that little 'clean water' issue, and this little 'save the whales' issue ---- instead of focusing and amplifying their media voice power on a singular 'Anti-EMPIRE' fight that could actually solve all these separate 'issues'?
What? Are the media just as happy having lots of little 'issues' to write about and keep their readership up and AD revenues up?
And what about the hundreds of little do nothing 'identity issues' groups and fund-raisers, who keep themselves going and growing (while accomplishing little) by focusing on the 'popularity' and market 'demographics' of being the best little 'anti-war' site on the internet, or the best internet site at 'uncovering' ecology scare stories??
If these internet sites want to actually accomplish something in terms of really stopping the 'horrors' that they write about why don't they attack the friggin CAUSE --- EMPIRE???
Nuf said.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
'Real costs' of many things have been withheld from public view and awareness.
Sophisticated, manipulative, relentless advertising in conjunction with mainstream corporate-owned news media have together excluded a critical part of the corporatist/consumer story: Consequences. By default, ignorance, poverty, hunger, injustice, environmental destructiveness, greed and addictions of all kinds have been fueled by an omission of vital information and experience about consequences. Oil is an idea that's over a century old. Do we really think there have been no painful, harmful consequences to oil/fossil fuel dependencies and addictions (including petroleum-based plastics) for all these many decades????!
News and research about the ongoing consequences of dependencies on cheap oil, cars, pay day lenders, fluffy toilet paper, pesticides, a 'fractional reserve' banking system, bottled water, fast 'food', GMO's, medical insurance companies, 'bigger is better' et al have been absent from mainstream news. It's even a time-consuming challenge to find out how elected officials voted on a piece of legislation.
Mainstream 'news' has consistently failed to report the downside risks and outright harm that more oil/fossil-fuel dependency, more cars, more consumerism, more horrible war and 'more' generally have been doing to us, to civil society, international cultures, a living earth. 'More' is greed's operative word. It is also the underpinning of addiction of every kind.
We've been bombarded for decades by a grand delusion via slick ads, PR and mainstream news communications that choice has no consequences. In the U.S., we've been relentlessly hammered by messages to buy, eat, do whatever we want. We've been sold reactive willy-nillyism and confusion. For decades, reporting about social and environmental consequences of oil drilling and oil wars, militarism, consumerism and specific consumer choices have gone missing.
We don't 'get away with' anything. There are consequences to choice. The hope and mature approach are that the individual takes responsibility and learns from mistakes and experience to make better, more responsible and compassionate choices, do no harm, deploy antidotes and solutions. Mass media has failed to honestly communicate the 'real costs', to report both sides of the consumer story. Mass media has failed to truly inform and educate us for our common good. How are we to make good choices from misleading, poor, incomplete, missing or inaccurate information? In my view, a needless consequence of decades of dishonest, irresponsible and manipulative public communications has been widespread ignorance and suffering. Better, healthier choices have better, healthier consequences.
A sickening tale of a sickening earth.
It is impossible to value which is worse, refining and burning the oil,using it to maintain and even expand civilization, or poisoning the oceans with it. Either way, GDP will certainly rise in America and more certainly well-being everywhere will continue on its downslide.
Its really that bad with these Fossil Fuel Companies, as their deferred social and environmental costs decrease with time for them and their profit takers, and correspondingly increase with time for everything else. So they will always pay their bills inadequate and late. Our damage bills are extortionate, with compound interest and ultimately life threatening. And directly life threatening if we get in the way of the companies in their extraction of buckets of money.
Lots of other things change with time as well.
The total amount of the cheaper oil left is rapidly dropping, because extraction rate is much greater than discovery rate. As the oil crunch tightens, the pressure to utilize dirty coal resources will be tripled, to keep the fires of civilization burning, sufficient to maintain or worsen our global CO2 output.
The economic and financial twists and turns will get more bumpy as our population with or without growth exceeds our decreasing resource base, and money is discovered to be an evermore dishonest commodity. Global trade and capacity to feed ourselves globally is heading for a drop.
Strangely , as CO2 increases in the atmosphere, the absolute temperature increase ascribed to each added tonne decreases. So fossil fuel companies will excuse adding more, by saying it has less effect.
On the other hand, as rising temperatures get closer to absolutely fixed critical survival limits in various habitats, each temperature increment is more life threatening. And the fixed critical limits for runaway global warming feedbacks, and other frightening changes are not that far off, and we are still accelarating towards them.
Random natural disasters due to weather are multiplying, but not fast enough for global crippling. As we die off when climate change passes and overshoots the limits of our human ingenuity, technology and adaptibility, demand for fossil fuel burning and shareholder profits will stop. It will of course be probably too late for us then, and certainly too late for the earth as we once knew it, and raped it.
None of this worries Fossil Fuel company men. They and their descendents will all die off with the rest of us. They should be begging for us to make them stop.
Such potentially huge liabilities because of environmental
disasters is precisely why oil companies, all oil companies
should be nationalized. It's the only way to protect the
public.
BP's assets should be frozen and its profits steered to the inception of a mega cleanup pension fund for the many billion and billions of dollars that will be required to modestly mitigate the damage done to the planets ecosystems and marine life and the affected local economies of the growing list of affected states and their peoples. The harm and ecocide perpetrated by the incompetence and arrogance of the British Petroleum Corporation and its hired sub-contractors needs to be fully prosecuted with the inauguration of new laws that take into account the extent of this massive environmental disaster and the determination that this kind of cataclysmic disaster does not happen again. Just the way BP has manipulated the whole protracted process of fudging the estimates of the amount of oil being spewed and possible solutions claiming they alone have the necessary technology along with the gullibility of the federal government and most Americans to believe what they're told is reprehensible and pathetic. In fact, BP's severing of the rising pipe exponentially multiplied the volume of oil gushing into ocean waters as the U.S. Feds looked on like helpless fools. Where's Manifest Destiny when it's truly called for?
Time to stop listening to the so-called "experts" and let those with common sense and a humane lookout on life take over.