May 25, 2013

*Big Oil* tosses coal under the bus in favor of profits

We all know one of the few promises Obama kept in his 2008 campaign was he would bankrupt coal. We’ve all heard his words, but they should be ingrained in our minds so here is the video once more:

We all know about all the new regs from the EPA which has caused many coal plants to shut down, three in my area alone. We know about all the new coal plants which were planned years ago but plans have been scrapped because of the cost. We know about all the layoffs in the coal industry. We know the United Mine Workers did not endorse Obama for re-election. We know about all the miners in southeast Ohio who rallied in support of Romney’s pro-coal stance. We know that Murray Coal just threw up their hands and closed a mine in Ohio. We know Mike Bloomberg gave $50 million out of his own pocket to the Sierra Club in an effort to “dump coal.”  This is just the tip of the iceberg.

And we know that Obama and the Dept. of Interior is after not only coal, but natural gas and oil in favor of failed wind and solar energy. We are frustrated because Interior after the Gulf BP spill shut down the majority of drilling in federal offshore areas. We watched Shell Oil struggle to get a permit for drilling in Alaska’s Beaufort Sea and never got started this year because of equipment failure.

We were elated that cap and trade was never passed. But just as ACORN has rebranded itself and is still out there like cockroaches hiding from the daylight, so has cap and trade “rebranded itself” into a proposed “carbon tax.” From Bloomberg:

A carbon tax would force electricity producers, refiners and manufacturers to pay a fee for the greenhouse gases they emit. It is gaining interest as lawmakers and President Barack Obama pledge to simplify the corporate tax code and raise revenue to narrow the deficit. The devastation from superstorm Sandy following the wildfires and drought of this summer have also increased concern about global warming.

And guess who some of the major players are who have signed on to this proposal? None other than RoyalDutchShell, ExxonMobil and BP. And why?

The most obvious reason why big oil and gas companies would support a huge new tax on their own products is that it would kill coal first. Burning coal emits roughly twice as much carbon dioxide as producing the same amount of energy by burning natural gas. A $20 a ton of CO2 tax would roughly double the current price of coal used for producing electricity. That would provide a huge incentive for utilities to switch to natural gas. Exxon Mobil owns the world’s largest privately-owned reserves of natural gas. Shell and BP also own huge gas reserves.

Shell has it’s HQ in the Hague, BP in the UK, but even though Exxon is headquartered in the U.S. most of it’s drilling is done internationally. And it might surprise you who the “leader” is in this international effort to impose a *carbon tax*: none other than Prince Charles, The Prince of Wales:

You can scroll through all the signatories on his site, one other major player is Norway’s StatOil, and of course all the environmentalists.

“The source hit hardest is coal,” David Kreutzer, a research fellow in energy economics at the Heritage Foundation in Washington who opposes the tax, said in an interview. “The biggest substitution for coal is going to be natural gas.”

Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) admits getting a carbon tax through Congress will be difficult, however we all know Obama’s propensity for back-door Executive Orders like amnesty and welfare DE-form.

So just like almost every other corporation, *Big Oil* is favoring “profits” over “principle.”

Crossposted at Unified Patriots and Grumpy Elder

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Greenwire: U.S. losing $4.7M a day from permitting lag, group says

Natural Resources Committee The following information was received via email from House Natural Resources Committee Chair Doc Hastings. The article sited and written by Phil Taylor at Greenwire requires a subscription.

Research by a Dallas-based research group found that declining oil and gas production in the Gulf of Mexico and a lull in new drilling permits is costing the United States $4.7 million a day in mineral revenues.

The briefing released today by the National Center for Policy Analysis blames the losses on declining production at existing wells and bureaucratic delays on new exploration but warns that the losses will increase the longer the United States waits to issue new offshore leases.

The group cites estimates by the federal Energy Information Administration that Gulf oil production will decline by 240,000 barrels a day this year. With oil selling at $100 a barrel and producers typically paying an 18.75 percent royalty, the United States is losing $4.7 million a day, which would amount to $1.7 billion over the year, the group found.

“While President Obama says he supports deficit reduction, his administration’s policies are only contributing to the country’s deficit problem,” report author and NCPA adjunct scholar Rob Bluey said. “Every day the Obama administration delays new oil drilling, the federal government loses more oil company revenue that could be used to reduce state, federal and local deficits.”

Bluey is also director of the Center for Media and Public Policy at the Heritage Foundation.

The report also warns that the lack of new leases means the government will collect less in rent payments, which generate more than $200 million a year.

The Interior Department since February has issued at least 10 new deepwater permits for exploration activity that was banned under a now-lifted moratorium imposed in the aftermath of last April’s BP PLC Deepwater Horizon disaster. The moratorium allowed Interior to establish critical safety regulations to protect workers and the environment from another blowout, officials have said.

Interior last week said it plans to hold its first lease sale after the BP spill in the western Gulf by the end of the year (E&ENews PM, April 19).

The NCPA briefing also takes a swipe at an Obama administration proposal to raise inspection fees and charge nonproducing lease holders to raise money for more inspectors and agency resources.

The group suggests additional revenue from expanded production would be ample to cover the costs. “The income from new lease sales, rents and royalties would be more than enough to pay for new offshore oil rig inspections,” the group notes. “President Obama’s 2012 budget proposal estimates the fees would generate about $65 million — significantly less than the amount the federal government could collect by simply boosting Gulf of Mexico production to last year’s levels.”

Crossposted at Unified Patriots

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The BP “blame game.” Let the lawsuits begin

How classy is this. Today is the one year anniversary of the BP Deepwater Horizon spill which claimed the lives of 11 people. It appears BP doesn’t even want a day of mourning because they are now SUING the company which made the blowout preventer. Cameron International. The lawsuit was filed today in US court in New Orleans  Apparently today is the “deadline” to file the suit:

“It is not surprising that the companies are filing to protect their indemnity rights (except in the case of BP) and whatever claims they believe they have,” Cameron said. “Additionally, in order to protect ourselves, we, too, have filed crossclaims and counterclaims, including our indemnity claims, against other parties to the litigation.”

Transocean, the owner of the rig, is filing suit against BP and Cameron for $12.9 million demanding judgments against them. Also named in the suit is Halliburton and others with requests for $20 million.

Brietbart is reporting that BP is also filing suit against Transocean, asking for $40 billion.

Round and round we go. Where we stop, nobody knows.

And FYI it’s business as usual on BP’s website. No mention of this… Let the games begin. BP logo Crossposted at Unified Patriots

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Obama’s misleading “spin” on US energy situation

Update 1:28 am 3/13/11. This just came to me. House Natural Resources Committee Doc Hastings (R-Wa) discussing rising gas prices on Cavuto:

It is foolish for us to ignore the resources that we have in our country right now.

Original post begins below.

Yes Mr. President, you are the ultimate spinmaster, that is for sure. Under fire from consumers and businesses enraged about the rising price of gasoline, you set out on a mission to either “spin the facts” or take credit, when credit is due, from previous administrations.

In his White House blog last week, Obama had this to say:

From 2008 to 2010, oil production from the Outer Continental Shelf increased more than a third – from 446 million barrels in 2008 to an more than 600 million barrels of estimated production in 2010. Onshore, responsible oil production from public lands has also increased over the last year, from 109 million barrels in 2009 to 114 million barrels in 2010.

Yes, it did. See chart below prepared by the Energy Information Administration (EIA):

US crude oil & liquid fuels production

What Obama doesn’t say is, this is a direct result of the Deep Water Royalty Relief Act (see page 7 and hereafter referred to as DWRRA) of 1995 during the Clinton Administration which I’ll discuss down the road. I know your eyes are bugging out about 2011 and 2012, we’ll get to that in a few as well…

One campaign promise Obama did keep was his desire to curtail the US dependency on fossil fuels and the creation of more “green jobs and energy.” So it’s probably no wonder he chose former Colorado US Senator Ken Salazar to head his Department of the Interior. Salazar had this little exchange on the Senate floor in 2008 with Mitch McConnell:

How high can it go? Salazar didn’t object when McConnell said “$10 per gallon.” And yes, because this is an edited exchange, I did look further and the prestigious Institute for Energy Research uses this same video so I am trusting their judgment. And what is T-man Geithner doing in Germany?  (See IER link immediately above). Telling us that “boosting oil output would calm fears.” For once you are correct sir, and the US is the third largest producer of oil, so what are we waiting for?

Let’s take a look again at that eye-popping chart above. Yea, Obama would like all of us to think this country is running out of oil, coal and natural gas. Don’t worry about it. We have tons, barrels and trillions of CF. Problem is getting it out of the ground. And no, it ain’t because of lack of technology or infrastructure or willingness on the part of oil, gas and coal companies.

Take a look at this handy-dandy chart prepared by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and notice the number of oil and gas leases issued post-DWRRA compared to NOW:

  • 1995: 4,528
  • 1997: 4,182
  • 1999: 3,075
  • 2001: 3,289
  • 2006: 3,985
  • 2008: 2,416
  • 2009: 2,072
  • 2010: 1,308

Notice when the mega-dropoff started? Yep, Obama has been using the BP DeepWater Horizon spill as an excuse to cut down on leases and curtail our drilling and mining for our own fossil fuels which I guarantee DO exist. USGS says so as I outlined in a previous article and I don’t believe they are deceiving us.

Any wonder now why your eyes are bugging out about the predicted lack of oil and NG production in 2011 and 2012?

BOEMRE has only issued 2 post-BP spill deep-water drilling permits. One to Noble Energy’s Santiago rig on February 28, which is 46.5% owned by BP. The second permit was issued to BHP Billiton (h/t to Kenny Solomon) on March 10 for an operation already in progress off the coast of Louisiana  but put on hold because of the BP spill.

Obama in his presser on March 10 was asked the possibility of opening up our oil and gas reserves to help alleviate the dramatic rise in gasoline prices. But those reserves should only be used in an emergency.

The only “emergency” here is an administration unwilling to allow our own fossil fuels to be tapped.

Crossposted at Unified Patriots

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Guess who’s back in the Gulf? Obama’s “evil” BP

Yea, you guys heard that right. Remember that huge spill last April? Remember Obama denouncing BP, holding hearings and forcing BP to set aside $20 billion for the clean up? Remember his Oil Spill Commission Report stating BP had safety issues which were the cause of the catastrophe? Remember the moratorium placed by Obama/Salazar/BOEMRE on deep-water drilling in certain parts of the Gulf and Atlantic seaboard “because of this spill”? Remember the 103 new drilling permits awaiting approval in the Gulf?

Finally last week, if one recalls, under pressure after hearings held by Doc Hastings (R-WA) Chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee, BOEMRE issues one deep-water drilling permit to Houston’s Noble Energy. Great news, we were thinking. Perhaps the flood gates will be opening and more permits will be forthcoming. This permit was for resumption of Noble’s Santiago well in the Gulf.

Well, guess who owns 46.5%, the largest piece of the Santiago well? You guessed it. None other than that “evil” BP.

I had seen several reports from UPI and a couple others about this last week, but no links were provided so I couldn’t confirm this. Until today. The Institute for Energy Research answered my question on twitter, as to whether or not this could be confirmed. Here is their answer:

IER confirms BP

Link to their tweet is here.The link is to the subscription-only Financial Times, but here is a quote from the article:

Noble is the operator, meaning it is in charge of day-to-day decisions about the well, but it owns just 23.25 per cent of the project. BP has the biggest stake, with 46.5 per cent.

Michael Bromwich, the director of the BOEMRE, did not mention BP’s involvement when he announced the permit award on Monday, saying that Noble had “successfully demonstrated that it can drill its deep water well safely and that it is capable of containing a subsea blow-out if it were to occur.”

Yea, Bromwich. You conveniently didn’t announce BP’s  involvement. Well, ya know, as a reporter I should only be throwing out there “who, what, when, and where,” NOT “why.” But I’m sure many are asking questions and eyebrows are being raised since BP will again be making money from the Gulf. BP causes an environmental disaster and ends up being treated better than other oil companies?  The company that caused the mess in the Gulf is the first to benefit from this administration and other companies stand by waiting for crumbs.

Lou Dolinar at NRO questions the strange behavior of the Obama administration:

a) Why did the administration penalize and systematically attack BP’s competitors by banning drilling in the Gulf while BP fought the blowout, and b) why is it now giving the first drilling permit to BP?

Oh, and that’s not all. BP handed about bonuses to some of their top dogs.  Per Yahoo news: Chief financial director Byron Grote received a £380,000 ($620,000, 445,000 euro) bonus while Iain Conn, head of downstream activities, picked up a payment of £310,500.

Nice.

BP logo

Crossposted at UnitedPatriots

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