CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2022, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“OIL AND
GAS COSTING US EVEN MORE THAN WE THOUGHT”
The
idea that oil companies and gasoline refiners could gouge Californians – and
other Americans to a lesser degree – by as much as 100 percent of the previous
price of gasoline seemed utterly preposterous until February.
That’s
when President Biden slapped an embargo on Russian oil, depriving California
refineries of between 2 percent and 3 percent of the supplies they had been
using. Average pump prices instantly rose from $4.70 per gallon across the
state to above $6. Later, in some places, prices even topped $9 per gallon,
about twice their price just six months ago.
That’s
gouging, pure and simple. Yes, the worldwide price of oil was up, but not in
anywhere near such large proportions. Many citizens are still making excuses
for oil companies, but their financial reports make it clear they are reaping
windfall profits in the billions of dollars.
Now
comes a new report that indicates the money motorists are losing to the
cartel-like oil industry is just a fraction of what consumption of oil and gas
really costs us, when all the wrinkles and ripples are figured in.
How
does $10 trillion by the year 2045 sound? That’s the figure arrived at by the
Consumer Watchdog advocacy group, whose analysts are the first to even attempt
figuring all the expenses that are and will be created by use of oil and
natural gas over the next 20 years-plus.
The
report gains credibility from the fact that Consumer Watchdog is the outfit
whose 1987 ballot initiative curtailing insurance prices in California now
saves people here more than $3 billion per year. That’s an average of almost
$80 per year per Californian, of all ages and ethnicities.
So
it can be a mistake to ignore the group’s oil cost estimates, as virtually all
California media have since issuance of the report in late spring.
Here
are just some of the annual costs listed in the report from use of oil and
natural gas over the next 23 years:
$94.2
billion from wildfires and drought. $1.4 billion in heat-related deaths
indirectly caused by California oil wells, $339 billion for smog controls.
That’s a total annual cost of $434.6 billion for using and drilling petroleum,
or $10 trillion over 23 years, about 70 percent more than it costs to run the
federal government for one year – including huge programs like Medicare, Social
Security and the military.
Are
those figures realistic? Look at the wildfire number: Despite all its
mitigation moves of the last 25 years, California is the No. 2 emitter of
greenhouse gases among U.S. states, surpassed only by Texas. The state Air
Resources Board says 85 percent of the greenhouse gases produced here stem from
production and use of fossil fuels, helping further both dry conditions and
extreme heat that have exacerbated the state’s pre-existing problems with
wildfires, vastly driving up property damage, lives lost and firefighting
costs.
“One
third of the costs of drought (and the fires it furthers) can be attributed to
greenhouse gas emissions caused by (burning) fossil fuels,” says the report.
Global warming
driven by oil use will add to the costs listed, too, by raising sea levels and
destroying further billions of dollars in property before 2045.
Then there’s the
smog mostly created by both vehicles and oil- or gas-fired electric generating
plants. Costs of treating emphysema, not to mention creation of electric
vehicles and other smog-fighting measures, already amount to more than damage
from wildfires.
It
all makes the state’s efforts to cut greenhouse gases via a cap-and-trade
program, smokestack filters and other tactics look puny.
What’s
more, the estimated $10 trillion 23-year cost of using and drilling oil and
natural gas does not include what motorists spend for gasoline, the price of
which has fallen from its peak, but is never again likely to sink to
pre-February levels.
All
these numbers matter only if their sheer shock value causes actions. But that’s
not likely, as this report now looks to be ignored, just as the state auditor’s
springtime report on the unreliability of California housing need estimates
never spurred so much as a word of reaction from either Gov. Newsom or state
Attorney General Rob Bonta.
-30-
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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