Times-Call (Longmont)

Oil company executives called to hearing

- BY BENJAMIN J. HULAC CQ-ROLL CALL

WASHINGTON — The top executives of six oil companies have been called to appear at an April hearing of the House Energy and Commerce Committee in connection with elevated gasoline prices following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

In letters sent Wednesday, Frank Pallone Jr., D-N.J., chairman of the committee, requested executives of six companies appear April 6 to answer questions about the war in Europe, their revenue, fuel prices, stock buybacks, domestic oil production and other corporate activities.

“I am concerned that the oil industry may be exploiting the war in Ukraine for its own economic gain,” Pallone said in the letters.

“Oil companies are currently seeing record profits,” he said. “As Americans reemerged from the coronaviru­s … lockdowns and demand for gasoline increased, oil companies kept supply low and prices high.”

Pallone’s letters follow comments Wednesday by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer accusing large oil and gas companies of possibly “price gouging,” noting that gasoline prices have remained high in recent days after crude oil prices dropped. Schumer also called for major oil company executives to be summoned for testimony to Congress.

There is interest among several Senate committees to also host hearings, according to a Senate Democratic staffer, who said Thursday that multiple committees have jurisdicti­on.

Talk of gasoline prices has dominated Congress and Washington after Russia’s attack, with President Joe Biden sanctionin­g U.S. imports of Russian fossil fuel supplies, Democrats pushing to suspend the federal gas tax and Republican­s and centrist Democrats calling for more domestic oil and gas drilling.

The companies Pallone called are BP, Chevron, Devon Energy, Exxon Mobil, Pioneer Natural Resources and Shell. A BP spokesman said the company is reviewing the request. The others did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Oil prices hit more than $130 a barrel in early March and gas prices in the U.S. rose too, hitting about $4.33 per gallon on average on March 11, according to AAA, the automobile club.

 ?? Jim Watson / Getty Images ?? A car passes a gas station sign in Annapolis, Md., on Monday as record high gas prices hit working class Americans with inflation already surging.
Jim Watson / Getty Images A car passes a gas station sign in Annapolis, Md., on Monday as record high gas prices hit working class Americans with inflation already surging.

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