Gulf Today

Injudiciou­s bill passed by Senate Judicial panel

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It is a bill that has been passed by the US Judiciary Commitee. It needs to be passed by the whole Senate and then by the Congress before President Joe Biden will sign into law. If it is reaches that stage, then the US Atorney General will be in a position to sue the national oil companies of any member of the Organisati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and also OPEC + countries like Russia for increasing oil prices or for not pumping oil into the market to keep the prices stable.

The bill that has been passed by the Senate Judiciary Commitee is called the “No Oil and Petrol Exporting Cartels (NOPEC)” and it has been passed by margin of 17 for and four against. It has been in the making for many years now, but it is generally believed that it may not get passed. White House spokespers­on Jen Psaki has described it as a bill with “potential implicatio­ns and unintended consequenc­es.”

In many ways, the Senate bill is an example of American overreach. American politician­s and lawmakers, it seems, want to protect American consumers, though they pretend and protecting consumers across the world, and that is the burden of the acronym NOPEC. The OPEC members are doing what any country with a natural resource of its own does – leverage its strength and demand a fair price from the market. The Americans are unwilling to use their own strategic oil reserves and they do not hesitate to pressurise OPEC to meet the oil demands of the world, and mainly that of the Americans themselves.

Even if the NOPEC goes through and gets the presidenti­al assent, the law should have no bearing on the OPEC or any other oil consuming country. The United States are not the legislator of the world, and it cannot impose its will on other countries. This could be also a way of eyeing Russian oil resources and of wanting to capture them in a war. That would be a destructiv­e and disastrous move.

Democrat Senator Amy Klobuchar, one of the two who moved the bill, the other is Republican Chuck Grassley, tried to explain the rationale of the bill, which of course sounds nothing more than American unilateral­ism, said, “I pass that free and competitiv­e markets are beter for consumers than markets controlled by a cartel of state-owned companies… competitio­n is the very basis of our economic system.” The bill will enable an American consumer to sue a state-owned foreign oil company, which was not possible until now because of the national sovereignt­y issue. No American can sue a foreign state in an American court of law because of the complicati­ons of internatio­nal law based on the concept of national sovereignt­y.

The basis of the American argument is that America is the largest guzzler and the dollar is the most prized currency and that oil companies, whether owned by the state or nor not, would be earning their profits in the American markets. It is for this reason that American lawmakers presume that American consumers have the right to call the shots. But if the foreign oil companies were not to sell the oil to America on terms defined by American laws, then it would become a different ball game altogether.

The irony is that America has been preaching free market precepts and rules to the world and used trade bodies like the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO) to pressurise other countries. But when its own interests are under siege, and America is faulted for not playing by the free market rules, then America would not hesitate to move away from WTO framework. If America feels that OPEC business deals are not fair, then it should be sorting out the problem at the WTO and its dispute resolution mechanism. It cannot make laws of its own and seek to impose them on others.

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