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Activists demonstrate outside of the U.S. Congress in Washington, D.C. prior to an April 6, 2022 House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing on Big Oil profiteering. (Photo: Kevin Wolf/AP Images)
Amid the ongoing atrocities in Ukraine, rising gas prices, and the existential threat of climate change, policymakers in Washington have a long list of crises to address. But there's one step that could help mitigate all of them: reducing our dependence on oil--and the giant oil and gas companies who profit from it.
If you think these CEOs are worried about the toll high gas prices are having on families trying to get their kids to school or drive to work, think again.
For decades, we've allowed big oil and gas companies to enrich themselves at the expense of our families, communities, and environment.
Now these companies are seizing a moment of geopolitical unrest to pad their pockets even more. Oil companies are celebrating some of their biggest profits in years. In the first three months of 2022 alone, ExxonMobil raked in a record $5.5 billion, ConocoPhillips $5.8 billion, and Chevron $6 billion.
On quarterly earnings calls with their shareholders, big oil CEOs can't stop bragging about how the crisis in the Ukraine is a great excuse to keep prices high and bring in historic profits--while consumers literally pay the price.
Just listen to the CEO of Texas-based Pioneer Oil. When a reporter asked the CEO whether the company would consider taking measures to reduce prices after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, he replied: "No."
Why? He explained: "It's all about the shareholders. Our shareholders own this company. They want a return of cash."
Pioneer Oil isn't the only one: 59 percent of oil and gas executives recently told the Dallas Fed that "investor pressure to maintain capital discipline"--i.e., to keep profits soaring--is the primary reason publicly traded oil companies are throttling supply despite high prices.
If you think these CEOs are worried about the toll high gas prices are having on families trying to get their kids to school or drive to work, think again. As Diamondback's CEO told investors this month: "I think what matters most...is that we're returning cash to shareholders."
As long as we depend on oil and gas to fuel our cars, heat our homes, and power our electric grid, we will remain vulnerable to the bottomless greed of fossil fuel executives, their shareholders, and a volatile global market.
Unless we fight back, Big Oil profiteers will continue adding to their profits--and to those of the authoritarian petrostates they've long been in bed with.
The good news is, there are many policy tools at our disposal to rein them in.
House Democrats are advancing legislation that would grant the Federal Trade Commission expanded authority to crack down on profiteering energy companies charging excessive or exploitative prices for fuel.
Congress is also considering a Big Oil Windfall Profits Tax, which would make it a lot less lucrative for big oil companies to exploit moments of crisis. The revenue raised from the tax on price gouging would go back to families to give them direct relief while we do everything we can to quickly transition away from our reliance on fossil fuels.
However, our work cannot stop there. Russia's invasion of Ukraine has laid bare the inherent risks of fossil fuel dependency not only for consumers' wallets, but for our national security and the future of our planet.
Fortunately, one long-overdue solution sits before the U.S. Senate: a suite of investments in secure sources of homegrown, affordable, clean energy.
A bold reconciliation bill could make it $10,000 cheaper for families to electrify their home to sidestep the rising cost of heating from gas. The bill could also lower electricity costs by doubling the expansion of wind and solar power to create more competition with gas.
Congress has a narrow window of opportunity to stop profiteering at the pump and secure a more stable, sustainable future for all. It's time to act--before it's too late.
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
Amid the ongoing atrocities in Ukraine, rising gas prices, and the existential threat of climate change, policymakers in Washington have a long list of crises to address. But there's one step that could help mitigate all of them: reducing our dependence on oil--and the giant oil and gas companies who profit from it.
If you think these CEOs are worried about the toll high gas prices are having on families trying to get their kids to school or drive to work, think again.
For decades, we've allowed big oil and gas companies to enrich themselves at the expense of our families, communities, and environment.
Now these companies are seizing a moment of geopolitical unrest to pad their pockets even more. Oil companies are celebrating some of their biggest profits in years. In the first three months of 2022 alone, ExxonMobil raked in a record $5.5 billion, ConocoPhillips $5.8 billion, and Chevron $6 billion.
On quarterly earnings calls with their shareholders, big oil CEOs can't stop bragging about how the crisis in the Ukraine is a great excuse to keep prices high and bring in historic profits--while consumers literally pay the price.
Just listen to the CEO of Texas-based Pioneer Oil. When a reporter asked the CEO whether the company would consider taking measures to reduce prices after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, he replied: "No."
Why? He explained: "It's all about the shareholders. Our shareholders own this company. They want a return of cash."
Pioneer Oil isn't the only one: 59 percent of oil and gas executives recently told the Dallas Fed that "investor pressure to maintain capital discipline"--i.e., to keep profits soaring--is the primary reason publicly traded oil companies are throttling supply despite high prices.
If you think these CEOs are worried about the toll high gas prices are having on families trying to get their kids to school or drive to work, think again. As Diamondback's CEO told investors this month: "I think what matters most...is that we're returning cash to shareholders."
As long as we depend on oil and gas to fuel our cars, heat our homes, and power our electric grid, we will remain vulnerable to the bottomless greed of fossil fuel executives, their shareholders, and a volatile global market.
Unless we fight back, Big Oil profiteers will continue adding to their profits--and to those of the authoritarian petrostates they've long been in bed with.
The good news is, there are many policy tools at our disposal to rein them in.
House Democrats are advancing legislation that would grant the Federal Trade Commission expanded authority to crack down on profiteering energy companies charging excessive or exploitative prices for fuel.
Congress is also considering a Big Oil Windfall Profits Tax, which would make it a lot less lucrative for big oil companies to exploit moments of crisis. The revenue raised from the tax on price gouging would go back to families to give them direct relief while we do everything we can to quickly transition away from our reliance on fossil fuels.
However, our work cannot stop there. Russia's invasion of Ukraine has laid bare the inherent risks of fossil fuel dependency not only for consumers' wallets, but for our national security and the future of our planet.
Fortunately, one long-overdue solution sits before the U.S. Senate: a suite of investments in secure sources of homegrown, affordable, clean energy.
A bold reconciliation bill could make it $10,000 cheaper for families to electrify their home to sidestep the rising cost of heating from gas. The bill could also lower electricity costs by doubling the expansion of wind and solar power to create more competition with gas.
Congress has a narrow window of opportunity to stop profiteering at the pump and secure a more stable, sustainable future for all. It's time to act--before it's too late.
Amid the ongoing atrocities in Ukraine, rising gas prices, and the existential threat of climate change, policymakers in Washington have a long list of crises to address. But there's one step that could help mitigate all of them: reducing our dependence on oil--and the giant oil and gas companies who profit from it.
If you think these CEOs are worried about the toll high gas prices are having on families trying to get their kids to school or drive to work, think again.
For decades, we've allowed big oil and gas companies to enrich themselves at the expense of our families, communities, and environment.
Now these companies are seizing a moment of geopolitical unrest to pad their pockets even more. Oil companies are celebrating some of their biggest profits in years. In the first three months of 2022 alone, ExxonMobil raked in a record $5.5 billion, ConocoPhillips $5.8 billion, and Chevron $6 billion.
On quarterly earnings calls with their shareholders, big oil CEOs can't stop bragging about how the crisis in the Ukraine is a great excuse to keep prices high and bring in historic profits--while consumers literally pay the price.
Just listen to the CEO of Texas-based Pioneer Oil. When a reporter asked the CEO whether the company would consider taking measures to reduce prices after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, he replied: "No."
Why? He explained: "It's all about the shareholders. Our shareholders own this company. They want a return of cash."
Pioneer Oil isn't the only one: 59 percent of oil and gas executives recently told the Dallas Fed that "investor pressure to maintain capital discipline"--i.e., to keep profits soaring--is the primary reason publicly traded oil companies are throttling supply despite high prices.
If you think these CEOs are worried about the toll high gas prices are having on families trying to get their kids to school or drive to work, think again. As Diamondback's CEO told investors this month: "I think what matters most...is that we're returning cash to shareholders."
As long as we depend on oil and gas to fuel our cars, heat our homes, and power our electric grid, we will remain vulnerable to the bottomless greed of fossil fuel executives, their shareholders, and a volatile global market.
Unless we fight back, Big Oil profiteers will continue adding to their profits--and to those of the authoritarian petrostates they've long been in bed with.
The good news is, there are many policy tools at our disposal to rein them in.
House Democrats are advancing legislation that would grant the Federal Trade Commission expanded authority to crack down on profiteering energy companies charging excessive or exploitative prices for fuel.
Congress is also considering a Big Oil Windfall Profits Tax, which would make it a lot less lucrative for big oil companies to exploit moments of crisis. The revenue raised from the tax on price gouging would go back to families to give them direct relief while we do everything we can to quickly transition away from our reliance on fossil fuels.
However, our work cannot stop there. Russia's invasion of Ukraine has laid bare the inherent risks of fossil fuel dependency not only for consumers' wallets, but for our national security and the future of our planet.
Fortunately, one long-overdue solution sits before the U.S. Senate: a suite of investments in secure sources of homegrown, affordable, clean energy.
A bold reconciliation bill could make it $10,000 cheaper for families to electrify their home to sidestep the rising cost of heating from gas. The bill could also lower electricity costs by doubling the expansion of wind and solar power to create more competition with gas.
Congress has a narrow window of opportunity to stop profiteering at the pump and secure a more stable, sustainable future for all. It's time to act--before it's too late.