While this article may be somewhat astray from shale discussions, I think it provides some insight into collateral activities by the current administration relative to oil & gas exploration and production:

 

The Obama administration has consistently promoted subsidies for “clean” energy technologies like wind and solar while charging that the oil and gas industry benefits from excessive taxpayer support.

But in fact subsidies for the oil and gas sector aren’t all that large when compared to the amount of energy being produced, while the “green” economy is not creating large numbers of jobs, according to a new report by Robert Bryce, senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research.

President Barack Obama’s budget proclaims: “We should not devote scarce resources to subsidizing the use of fossil fuels produced by some of the largest, most profitable companies in the world. That is why the Budget eliminates inefficient fossil fuel subsidies that impede investment in clean energy sources and undermine efforts to address the threat of climate change.”

The reference to the “largest, most profitable companies” reflects the administration’s antipathy toward the hydrocarbon sector, Bryce asserts.

Apple Inc. has a market capitalization of $475 billion and a profit margin of 25.8 percent. Meanwhile, BP, the biggest producer of domestic oil, has a market capitalization of $147 billion and a profit margin of 6.8 percent.

Apple is three times as large and nearly four times as profitable as BP. Apple has virtually no manufacturing jobs in the United States and imports nearly everything from China. Meanwhile the domestic oil industry last year exported about 1 billion barrels of crude oil and refined products.

The administration shows no such antipathy toward the “clean” energy industry. In fact, between 2009 and late 2011, under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, the administration handed out $2.6 billion in tax-free grants to just four companies, all them board members of the American Wind Energy Association, Bryce discloses.

Two of those firms are foreign-owned — the Spanish energy company Iberdrola, which got $1 billion in grants, and German giant E.ON, which received $542 million.

A third firm, Terra-Gen, is building a wind farm in California that will create only about 50 permanent jobs — that works out to around $9 million per job.

The oil and gas industry, on the other hand, received “subsidies and support” totaling $2.82 billion, and that was spread among the 14,000 oil and gas companies operating in the United States.

The report notes that domestic oil production is now increasing, natural gas production is surging, driving down prices, and over the past five years about 158,000 new oil and gas jobs have been created, many of them high-paying.

Bryce concludes: “The Obama administration continues to vilify the very industry that’s helping spur eco¬nomic growth. America doesn’t need more slogans about ‘clean’ energy. It needs more cheap, abundant, reliable energy.”

 

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Good post.

I don't think the oil industry gets any subsidies.  What they get are tax incentives to drill for more oil and gas. But the libs and their sycophants in the press mislabel them as subsidies.

The "green" companies get actual subsidies and grants in huge amount for energy that is very expensive and unreliabl, costs tax payers huge amounts, and creates very few jobs.

So greenies get huge subsidies and great praise for technologies that are not competitive. But the oil and gas industry gets tax incentives that have resulted in huge increases in supply, lowered costs for consumers, paid large amounts of tax revenue across the nation, reduced foreign imports, and created large numbers of jobs but they get lambasted daily.  Georg Orwell would be so impressed.

Here is an interesting teleconference briefing by Jack Gerard, API President and CEO, regarding the myth of oil industry subsidies:

 

As prepared for delivery

Press briefing teleconference on energy policy and the administration
Jack Gerard, API president and CEO
Thursday, February 23, 2012


Opening statement:

Good morning everyone. Thanks for calling in.

Later this morning the president will discuss energy policy and as part of that is expected to say his administration is encouraging more oil and natural gas development as part of an all-of-the-above strategy for addressing U.S. energy security and higher gasoline prices. This follows similar remarks in the president’s State of the Union address in January.

On first impression, this sounds good. More oil and natural gas development here at home would benefit the nation. It would increase the security of our energy supplies, create jobs, boost revenue to our government, and help put downward pressure on prices at the pump.

Unfortunately, the administration’s actions and its policy proposals are out of synch with its words.

The administration is restricting where oil and natural gas development may occur, leasing less often, shortening lease terms, going slow on permit approvals, and increasing or threatening to increase industry’s development costs through higher taxes, higher royalty rates, higher minimum lease bids, and more regulations.

Keeping 85 percent of our offshore areas off limits – per the administration’s latest offshore energy plan – is not a prescription for increased oil and natural gas production.

Decreasing oil and gas leasing in the Rockies by 70 percent is not generating the jobs and more affordable energy that America’s workers and consumers need.

Having ten federal agencies planning more regulation of hydraulic fracturing, which is key to oil and natural gas development, is not keeping affordable supplies of gas flowing to generate electricity, heat homes, and supply chemical plants.

Rejecting the Keystone XL pipeline is not increasing American access to supplies of affordable, secure energy that would allow us produce more of the gasoline and other fuels we’ll need.

And increasing taxes on oil and gas companies by $85 billion, as the administration has proposed, will not encourage more energy investment or jobs in the United States.

We continue to hear about the need to eliminate “subsidies” for the industry. The industry receives not ONE subsidy, and it is one of the largest contributors of revenue to our government of any industry in America. The oil and natural gas industry doesn’t get the guaranteed loans made famous by the Solyndra affair, for example. It takes tax deductions the same or similar to what all other American companies get to recover their costs of doing business.

In addition to paying its fair share of taxes, the industry is also investing massive sums in new technology and energy development. These investments support 9.2 million jobs and produce income that helps support millions of America’s retirees. By expanding these investments under more reasonable tax and access policies, we could create over one million new jobs in just 7 years.

But what is being proposed – an $85 billion tax hike – will chase energy investment out of the country. It will stifle job creation, drive up imports – and our trade deficit – and increase the volatility of gasoline markets.

The administration suggests that its policies are, in fact, already increasing oil production. This couldn’t be farther from the truth. While oil production is up, the increase relates almost entirely to investment and leasing decisions made before, sometimes long before, this administration came into office. The increase is also due to oil and gas development on private and state lands over which the administration has little or no control at all. We have some additional information on this we’ll send to you after the call.

Certainly, it’s better to hear the administration talk about more oil and natural gas development than to hear it call oil “yesterday’s” energy, as the president did during last year’s State of the Union address.

But words are not leadership if not followed by the right actions. We don’t know whether the president is committed to more domestic development and reasonable energy policies or is still harboring the idea he and his secretary of energy expressed before the election that higher gasoline prices might actually make sense as a part of our national energy policy because they would make us more energy efficient and encourage green energy.

The administration’s own projections tell us that we’re still going to rely on oil and natural gas for nearly 60 percent of our energy for the next quarter century. We’re either going to produce that oil and gas in the U.S. with the added benefits of creating over a million new American jobs, strengthening our national security, and generating more revenue for our government – or we’re going to depend more on resources from less stable parts of the world.

The President has an opportunity to put America’s energy destiny back into our own hands, and his words about doing so need to be followed up with actions that will make it happen.

 

Regarding the Keystone XL Pipeline, I learned something interesting today that I had not heard nor thought of previously. At present, the heavy (bitumen) crude from the Canadian Oil Sands Region is being mostly transported to the Gulf Coast refineries via BNSF (Burlington Northern Santa Fe) rail lines in tank cars, which mode is certainly more costly and less efficient but also benefits Warren Buffet, who owns a major share of BNSF and who is likely a favorite of Obama. What is ironic about this is that the transportation of petroleum via hiqhway and rail is far more dangerous and more likely to have accident occurances than transportation via pipeline. Further, some of the crude is being transported to a refinery in Minnesota, owned by the Koch Brothers, who refine it for their primary business of providing various grades of bituminous products to the paving industry.

 

It surely seems to me that, in reviewing any aspect of our world today, we are typically looking at the surface current and maybe one underlying current. As one gathers more information, which is not readily available from the mainstream media with its biases, it becomes clear that there are likely many levels of underlying current at play and the general public are just lowly , expendable pawns in the scheme of things.

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