last
updated 18th November 05
by 4ecotips.com
All this and record profits
too!
As Americans struggle with the high
cost of energy, the world's biggest
oil companies are reaping record-setting
profits writes Sara Zdeb, Friends
of the Earth legislative director.
ExxonMobil alone reported a $9.9 billion
quarterly profit, a 75% increase.
Royal Dutch Shell, BP, ConocoPhillips
and Chevron Texaco fared similarly
well.
Big oil is reaping these record profits
at the expense of ordinary Americans
who are struggling to meet the high
cost of energy. The Energy Department
predicts up to a 41% increase in home
heating prices this winter. For low-income
families, this could force tradeoffs
between food and other basic needs
and the cost of home heating.
Oil companies aren't just profiting
from skyrocketing energy prices-they're
eating from a government trough of
tax cuts and other handouts courtesy
of the American taxpayer. These big
oil companies were on the receiving
end of more than $4bn in spending
subsidies and tax incentives included
in the Energy Policy Act of 2005.
And they were already set to reap
an additional $10bn in tax cuts authorized
prior to passage of the energy bill.
These giveaways help big oil cover
the cost of everything from refining
equipment to exploration to wages,
equipment and site preparation. You
name it, there's a tax cut for it.
The recent energy bill even included
a $1.5bn fund for an oil consortium
in Tom DeLay's home district-a cash
cow slipped into the bill at last
second and never debated.
Big oil often uses the catchphrase
"free market" to defend
its record-setting profits. But there's
nothing at all free market about lavishing
billions in tax benefits on these
wealthy corporations. It tilts the
playing field even farther toward
big oil and away from efficiency,
conservation and renewable energy-solutions
that will help consumers today and
reduce our dependence on oil in the
future.
There is simply no justification
for lavishing billions in tax cuts
and other handouts on oil companies
whose profits are skyrocketing at
the expense of consumers. In fact,
the president himself said it best
when he stated, "With oil at
more than $50 a barrel, by the way,
energy companies do not need taxpayers'-
funded incentives to explore for oil
and gas." Congress should repeal
these special interest giveaways.
|