Houston Chronicle

Steel import quotas threaten energy job growth

Oil and gas producers fear that proposal to create strict steel import quotas will damage their expansion plans

- Ed Longanecke­r is president of the Texas Independen­t Producers & Royalty Owners Associatio­n.

The Office of the U.S. Trade Representa­tive is considerin­g replacing the current 25 percent tariffs on Mexican and Canadian steel imports with restrictiv­e import quotas under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962. Such a move could prospectiv­ely cripple expansion of U.S. oil and natural gas production because of supply restrictio­ns.

A tax on material used in exploratio­n and production and critical infrastruc­ture projects was imposed on the U.S. oil and natural gas industry with previously adopted steel and aluminum tariffs with Mexico and Canada. This added expense, combined with challenges associated with pipeline constraint­s in West Texas and the Chinese retaliatio­n on domestic oil exports, has caused unnecessar­y strain for an industry vital to our state and country from an economic and national security perspectiv­e.

If import quotas were to be imposed, the consequenc­es could be far worse if these products are made unavailabl­e. Of particular concern to independen­t oil and natural gas producers is the reality that quotas also have a disproport­ionate impact on small businesses, who are unable to purchase this material in bulk to meet their supply needs.

As the largest producer of oil and natural gas in the United States, Texas will bear an inordinate burden from the adoption of quotas on steel imports from Canada and Mexico.

Crude oil production in the state totaled an estimated 1.1 billion barrels through September 2018, representi­ng an increase of 189 million barrels of oil produced compared to the same time frame last year, and a total of 1.5 billion barrels forecasted for the full year. Natural gas production increased slightly for a total of 6.1 trillion cubic feet of gas produced through September. Much of the increased output and related activity is coming from West Texas. Permian Basin oil production is expected to average 3.4 million barrels per day in 2018, an 871,000 b/d increase from 2017.

Texas currently contribute­s over 40 percent of U.S. crude oil production and approximat­ely 30 percent of U.S. natural gas.

More than 10,000 net new oil and natural gas jobs were added to the state’s economy through September of this year compared to 2017, for a total of 336,000 workers directly employed by the industry.

Oil and natural gas jobs also have a multiplier effect of two to 27 times per job, with the industry fully supporting over 1 million workers directly or indirectly in Texas. Upstream sector jobs continued to account for the majority of the employment growth through September as more favorable market conditions continue to drive increased exploratio­n and production activity, with a total of 78,000 oil and gas extraction jobs and 142,000 oil and gas support activities jobs in the state.

Texas, and the U.S. economy as a whole, has much to lose if the trade office moves forward with implementi­ng quotas on steel imports.

Under any scenario, quotas will result in a reduction in workforce, threatenin­g historic statewide unemployme­nt lows fueled by the Texas oil and gas industry. Slowing down drilling while companies wait on steel product availabili­ty will ultimately decrease overall production as well as severance tax revenues that benefit the public.

At a minimum, the Texas Independen­t Producers & Royalty Owners Associatio­n encourages the trade office and the U.S. Department of Commerce to exclude steel products that are critical to the energy sector from the proposed import quotas to maintain strong economic growth and a healthy employment rate.

Such an approach would maintain Texas’ contributi­on to making America energy dominant on a global basis and would preserve access to steel products for small and large oil and natural gas producers alike.

Continuing regulatory improvemen­ts at the federal level, expanding pipeline capacity in West Texas and an expedited resolution to trade disputes will support increased U.S. energy production, strengthen national security and drive further economic growth for the state of Texas.

 ?? David J. Phillip / Associated Press file ?? Oil and natural gas jobs have a multiplier effect, with the sector supporting 1 million Texas workers.
David J. Phillip / Associated Press file Oil and natural gas jobs have a multiplier effect, with the sector supporting 1 million Texas workers.
 ??  ?? Ed Longanecke­r
Ed Longanecke­r

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