Springfield News-Sun

Biden asks FTC to probe big oil

Letter alleges evidence of ‘anti-consumer behavior’ by companies.

- By Jim Tankersley

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden asked the Federal Trade Commission on Wednesday to consider whether “illegal conduct” by large oil and gas companies is pushing up gasoline prices for American consumers. It is the administra­tion’s latest effort to target concentrat­ion in the energy industry in a bid to bring down prices at the pump.

The move is unlikely to spur immediate action by the FTC, which has the power to break up large industry players, and it is unlikely to affect gasoline prices materially anytime soon.

But it could spur the commission to open an investigat­ion to gather data on how companies set gasoline prices, which could be used in future enforcemen­t actions.

Biden’s letter to Lina Khan, the antitrust champion he appointed as chair of the commission, claims “mounting evidence of anti-consumer behavior by oil and gas companies.” The president noted that prices at the pump have risen even as the costs of refined fuel have fallen and industry profits have gone up. The two largest players in the industry, Exxonmobil and Chevron, have doubled their net income since 2019, he wrote, while announcing billions of dollars in plans to issue dividends and buy back stock.

The average gallon of gas was nearly $3.40 in the United States on Monday, its highest price in seven years, according to the Energy Informatio­n Agency.

If the gap between refined fuel costs and gasoline prices at the pump were to return to normal pre-pandemic levels, drivers would be paying as much as 25 cents less per gallon, White House officials estimate.

“The FTC is concerned about this issue, and we are looking into it,” Lindsay Kryzak, a spokeswoma­n for the commission, said in a statement.

Earlier this year, Biden asked the commission to monitor the gasoline market for any illegal conduct. The commission responded by increasing scrutiny of mergers in the oil and gas industry.

Soaring gas prices, driven by an OPEC choke on production and renewed driving as commuters and travelers return from a pandemic hiatus, have dented Americans’ views of the economy and helped fuel an accelerati­on of inflation that has jeopardize­d part of Biden’s economic agenda in Congress.

The increase has pinned Biden between his goals of reducing the greenhouse gas emissions that drive climate change and keeping costs low for middle-class consumers.

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