CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“PUMP PRICES DOWN A BIT, BUT GAS GOUGING CONTINUES”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“PUMP PRICES DOWN A BIT, BUT GAS GOUGING CONTINUES”
The days when oil companies could
credibly deny they’re gouging California drivers just because they’ve dropped
pump prices a bit appear now to be over.
For every measuring stick except a
comparison with the price of gasoline four months ago leads to the unmistakable
conclusion that this state’s three biggest gasoline refiners – Valero, Tesoro
and Chevron – are still gouging customers like they did at mid-summer, when
prices topped $4 per gallon in many places.
Now prices are down to $2.60 in some
spots, while it’s hard to find gas anywhere at prices over $3.60 per gallon.
That’s taking some heat off the big
refiners, but it should not. For even when this state’s higher-than-normal
gasoline taxes are figured in, Californians are still paying about 60 cents per
gallon more than the average price in many other states with far worse access
to refined gasoline.
The first thing to understand is that
the price is down because the cost of oil has been below $50 per barrel for
many months, largely the result of hydraulic fracturing (fracking), which has
hugely increased American supplies.
Motorists in most parts of
America benefit far more from this than Californians, with prevailing
prices in most regions well below $2 per gallon all fall.
To ascertain whether a company is
profiteering to take advantage of unusual market conditions, the best place to
look is at its profits, which all firms whose stock is publicly traded must
make public.
The most prominent third-quarter
corporate report among California-related oil companies this fall came from
Chevron Corp. The San Ramon-based firm has announced it will cut 11 percent of
its workforce, or about 7,000 jobs, as it deals with lower oil prices that cut
its company-wide profit about 60 percent below the same quarter a year ago,
from $5.6 billion to $2.04 billion.
But look a bit closer and you see how
bad things would have been for Chevron but for the money it gouged from
California consumers. For the first nine months of this year, the huge
corporation’s refining operations netted a whopping $2.6 billion, compared with
$1.4 billion last year. Since 54 percent of Chevron’s refining occurs in
California, in El Segundo and Richmond, it’s clear that overcharging
Californians has been one of Chevron’s most profitable tactics this year.
Then there are Valero and Tesoro, the
latter selling much of its gas under the Shell and USA labels. These are the
only two big oil companies that break out California-specific refining profits.
And what profits they reaped! For Tesoro, the profit was $770 million just from
California gasoline refining in the third quarter. This was double the
company’s take for the July-to-September period last year and about four times
the firm’s average quarterly profit of $169 million over the last 10 years.
Valero, meanwhile, made $342 million on
California refining during the third quarter, an almost obscene 14 times more
than last year. Its per-barrel profit was $13.54, fully 11 times more than last
year’s figure for the same time period in 2014.
All the companies claim their profits
were in part due to a partial outage of the Exxon-Mobil refinery in Torrance,
but exported gasoline continued to flow from California to Mexico and other
destinations throughout the third quarter. If there was a shortage here, why
would exports continue?
“Those outsize profits show just how
broken the state’s gasoline market is,” said Cody Rosenfield, a researcher for
the Consumer Watchdog advocacy group. “Instead of passing on a dramatic drop in
the price of crude oil, California refiners imposed extreme and unreasonable
pain at the pump for consumers.”
Sure, that pain is a tad less when
prices come down. But imagine how many dollars could have flowed into the
state’s economy, rather than to the Texas headquarters of Valero and Tesoro, if
profits had remained at their previous, already copious levels.
Yes, billionaire activist Tom Steyer
threatened last summer to fund and run a ballot initiative requiring disclosure
of all refiners’ California profits, among other things, unless the
Legislature imposed new transparency rules on the gasoline market by the
end of September.
That deadline came and went with no
action from either legislators or Steyer, leaving consumers to wonder when
anyone will take a hand to stop the ongoing gouging of millions of Californians.
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Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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