Why oil and gas prices
are through the roof

By Mike Fak

[DEC. 21, 2000]  I have started getting notes, e-mails and plenty of comments about this winter's heating bills. All of you are upset with your first cold weather bills, and you should be. Well, forgive me, but I told you so.

Summer headlines in the Tribune forewarned of 35 percent increases in winter bills. The AP carried stories that dibbled and dabbled about numbers with increases as high as 50 percent. I looked at the commodities prices of natural gas and told you folks your bills for gas and propane would at least double.

 

No, I didn't have insider knowledge. It doesn't take much knowledge or math skills to know that the futures market showing two or three times the old price for a BTU of natural gas meant prices would do the same when they passed through your home's gas meter.

I also told you that to blame only OPEC for the demise of your wallet would be an error. I wrote that the major oil and gas producers of this country were using OPEC as an excuse to line the pockets of their thousand-dollar suits with our hard-earned money, and our politicians were doing nothing to protect our interests.

Most of you were too interested in blaming the filing station operator for the price you paid for gas. Now I suppose you want to blame the propane driver or the meter reader for the fact you have no idea how you can pay this winter's bills.

 

Well, I would like to take one last shot at explaining to you who is killing us at the gas pump and giving us the gas when it comes to getting natural gas or propane.

Yes, OPEC is a major culprit in this whole affair. Cutting production in order to drive the price of a barrel of crude to as high as $38 from a previous low just two years ago of $12 is manipulating the market.

But what have our leaders done about this obvious thievery? Nothing. In fact the United States continues to give foreign aid to OPEC nations with no regard to the fact those foreign industries do little to use crude oil profits to improve the lives of their own citizens. But then, why should they, when they know there are suckers like the U.S. to pay for curing their social ills? We currently spend a billion dollars a month on our military presence in the gulf, protecting the nations who are nailing us at the fuel depot.

Oh, there is Venezuela, of course, a major player on this side of the globe that we don't give military aid to. We do, however, find the time and the money to write off a billion-dollar loan to that country. As the ink was drying on the document, OPEC minister Ali Rodriguez was stating that cuts in production will be affected to maintain a minimum of $28 per barrel. Mr. Rodriguez, by the way, is a Venezuelan.

There is no need to worry if the presidential election made us look foolish. The way we continue to be played as patsies by OPEC nations and others has made us a laughing stock for decades. OPEC, however, isn't the only culprit giving us the gas.

The BBC has carried the story (the American press has been too enamored telling us the same Bush-Gore stories to carry the news) that the top four U.S. oil- and gas-producing companies have reported "soaring" income for the third quarter.

 

 

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Exxon Mobil, the world's largest publicly-listed oil company, reported third-quarter earnings that one analyst described as "the most profitable quarter EVER by ANY public company." Chevron, No. 2 in the industry, came right out in their financial report and stated, "Our oil and gas production results continue to reflect the financial benefit of not only higher commodity prices but also increased production."

American companies such as Chevron have raised their prices to the levels of OPEC for a barrel of crude. Since American oil is so much cheaper to produce and transport than overseas crude, the oil and gas industry has made a killing on crude prices. This was a more profitable decision, rather than hold the line on a barrel of oil to help slow OPEC and the futures market from driving the price of crude through the roof.

 

Chevron also talks of higher production amidst the stories that this year there are major shortages of fuel oil. I could get into the so-called shortage with you, but I'm getting too old to start doing term papers.

The third and final culprits in this whole sordid affair are our federally elected officials. The amount of political donations flowing into the politicians’ coffers has reached staggering numbers. Again, I could get in depth with the numbers on who in Congress gets how much from the oil and gas industry, but I'm too busy burning furniture to produce heat for my own home.

 

I will take a moment away from my bonfire to tell you the total financial largesse in the past decade to both political parties from oil and gas has gone over the $100 million mark. A breakdown of who on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee received how much money, is available at the Center For Responsive Politics, www.opensecrets.org on the web.

Don't be surprised to find that senators who are supposed to be developing and implementing legislation that protects the American people are cashing chunks of money from the oil companies that just set record profits. In the event you find no impropriety with accepting huge sums from industries that you are supposed to regulate, I haven't got any time left to get through to you. Just sit back and see your discretionary winter income go to oil companies and then to our politicians.

 

In the event you need more information, try CNN.com, subheading "The Money Trail. Democracy For Sale," on the web.

You know, I could go on and on, but it's your turn. Are you about to look at this crisis realistically and vent your ire and rage towards your congressmen or are you just going to send me another e-mail asking why is gas a dime cheaper this week in Springfield, or Decatur or perhaps Bangladesh?

[Mike Fak]

This article is re-published courtesy of www.fakmachine.com.

Click here to comment on this article.  

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