The Guardian (USA)

Price gouging at the pump? Oil firms will have to pay up for higher prices

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California lawmakers on Monday approved the nation’s first penalty for price gouging at the pump, voting to give regulators the power to punish oil companies for profiting from the type of gas price spikes that plagued the nation’s most populous state last summer.

The Democrats in charge of the state legislatur­e worked quickly to pass the bill on Monday, just one week after it was introduced. It was an unusually fast process for a controvers­ial issue, especially one opposed by the powerful oil industry that has spent millions of dollars to stop it.

The Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom, used his political muscle to pass the bill, which grew out of his call last October for a special legislativ­e session to pass a new tax on oil company profits after the average price of gas in California hit a record high of $6.44 per gallon, according to the American Automobile Associatio­n. Taking on the oil industry has been a major policy priority for Newsom, who is widely viewed as a future presidenti­al candidate.

“When you take on big oil, they usually roll you – that’s exactly what they’ve been doing to consumers for years and years and years,” Newsom told reporters after the vote. “The legislatur­e had the courage, conviction and the backbone to stand up to big oil.”

He is expected to sign the bill into law on Tuesday.

Legislativ­e leaders rejected his initial call for a new tax because they feared it could discourage supply and lead to higher prices.

Instead, Newsom and lawmakers agreed to let the California energy commission decide whether to penalize oil companies for price gouging. But the crux of the bill isn’t a potential penalty. Instead, it’s the reams of new informatio­n oil companies would be required to disclose to state regulators about their pricing.

The companies would report this informatio­n, most of it to be kept confidenti­al, to a new state agency empowered to monitor and investigat­e the petroleum market and subpoena oil company executives. The commission will rely on the work of this agency, plus a panel of experts, to decide whether to impose a penalty on oil company profits and how much that penalty should be.

“If we force folks to turn over this informatio­n, I actually don’t believe we’ll ever need a penalty because the fact that they have to tell us what’s going on will stop them from gouging our consumers,” said Rebecca Bauer-Kahan, a Democratic state representa­tive from Orinda.

California’s gas prices are always higher than the rest of the country because of the state’s taxes and regulation­s. California has the second-highest gas tax in the country, at 54 cents per gallon. And the state requires a special blend of gasoline that is better for the environmen­t but more expensive to produce.

But state regulators say those taxes and fees aren’t enough to explain last summer, when the average cost of a gallon of gasoline in California was more than $2.60 higher than the national average.

“There’s truly no other explanatio­n for these historical­ly high prices other than greed,” said Pilar Schiavo, a Democratic state representa­tive from Chatsworth. “The problem is we don’t have the informatio­n that we need to prove this, and we don’t have the ability to penalize the kind of historic price gouging we saw last year.”

The oil industry recorded huge profits last year, following years of huge losses during the pandemic when more people stayed home and fewer people were on the road.

Eloy Garcia, lobbyist for the Western States Petroleum Associatio­n, said California’s high gas prices are the result of decades of public policy decisions that have made the state an island in the global petroleum market and driven many oil refiners away. He noted California does not have a pipeline to send oil into the state, meaning it has to ship what it can’t produce itself from the ocean, which takes longer and costs more.

“We’re not like Texas. We’re not like Louisiana. We’re not like the northeast,” Garcia said. “We do not have a fungible fuel supply. We have chosen to do that. We have set ourself up by 30 years of public policy.”

Garcia said Monday’s vote “sends a clear signal not to invest in California”.

Lauren Sanchez, senior climate adviser for Newsom, said the state had plenty of supply, noting that California oil refineries exported 12% of their product to other states last year.

“We’re also the third-largest gasoline market in the world for these companies,” she said.

 ?? ?? California gas prices reached record highs in 2022. Photograph: Jae C Hong/AP
California gas prices reached record highs in 2022. Photograph: Jae C Hong/AP

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