CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 2025 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“ETHICAL ISSUE DOGS ‘$8 PER GALLON’ GASOLINE STUDY”
Academics have known for many
years the potential for conflicts of interest when they conduct studies or
write reports on products or companies for which they have consulted. That’s
why they almost always disclose conflicts.
There is also no doubt of the
strong link between the Saudi Aramco oil company and California’s biggest oil
refiner, Chevron, known as Standard Oil of California when it co-founded (with
Texaco and two others) just plain Aramco, the Saudi Arabian company’s name when
the Americans got it going in the 1930s.
Fast forward to mid-April,
when television networks like ABC, CBS and Fox, plus Forbes magazine covered a
study by Michael Mische, an associate professor at USC’s Marshall School of
Business, that predicted $8 per gallon gasoline in this state very soon.
There is no such thing as gas
price gouging in California, Mische contended. As the New Jersey-based Forbes
reported, “the average price of a gallon of regular unleaded (gasoline) in
California was $4.67 – more than 55 percent above the national average.”
Forbes quoted from Mische’s
report, titled “Ensuring California’s Gasoline Security for the 21st
Century.” It “lays out a clear and compelling case for why California fuel
costs are so high,” the reasons being structural, state policy driven and
“deeply embedded in how the state regulates, produces and distributes
gasoline.” It doesn’t help that California refineries ship large amounts to
neighbor states.
Mische blamed environmental
regulations, the state’s cap-and-trade program and seasonal gas blends as big
causes of California prices, along with high taxes and fees, frequent refinery
closures, declining in-state oil production and the fact there are no pipelines
bringing gas here from other states. Other studies have indicated such factors
account for about one-third of the price differential.
Mische denies oil companies
collude to raise prices, despite phenomena like the huge price hikes of
February 2023, when a single refinery outage shot pump prices up about $2.50
per gallon overnight – not just for the refiner with the outage, but for every
brand of gas.
The state then passed new
laws aiming to punish such gouging and there have been no new incidents since.
Forbes said Mische included a
disclaimer saying he “has not received any special compensation and has no
promise or anticipation of future compensation for the work presented...” That
was vague about the recent past.
The upshot of Mische’s report
is the new state laws are pointless because there is no gouging. This may
surprise the more than 1 million Californians who received $21.65 apiece from
the state in mid-May after a settlement reached by state Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta
with three gasoline trading firms that allegedly manipulated gas prices in
2016, during another refinery outage.
Now comes Jamie Court,
president of the Consumer Watchdog advocacy group, which has documented how oil
company profits set records whenever California gas prices spike.
Court obtained a copy of
Mische’s resume and discovered the professor’s private consulting firm listed
Saudi Aramco as a major client. That company and Chevron still have strong ties
even though the Saudi government took ownership of Aramco decades ago.
The two companies also
partner on advanced refinery technology. So there’s a direct link between
California’s largest oil refiner and a major Mische client.
This, of course, debunks
Mische’s disclaimer about impartiality. Wrote Court in a letter to USC
officials, “There is no question that the policies Mische advocates (to the
Legislature) will…benefit his client.”
Mische responded to an
emailed query asking why he failed to disclose his tie to Saudi Aramco in the
recent paper, saying he would shortly provide answers to the emailed questions.
The answers did not arrive.
Policies he recommends
include tax subsidies and other giveaways to both oil refiners and drillers.
Said Court, “Sacramento lawmakers (were) unaware of Mische’s ties because of
his failure to disclose them.
“There is no question
Mische’s work would be looked at differently if people knew… In failing to
(disclose), he dishonors USC and its tradition of ethics.”
The bottom line: The
decades-long pattern of industry-wide price hikes when only one refinery has an
outage makes it clear some kind of collusion and price gouging has long been at
work.
-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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