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Bush rhetoric on energy strays from the facts
By H. JOSEF HEBERT – 1 hour ago
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Bush put politics ahead of the facts
Tuesday as he sought to blame Congress for high energy prices, saying
foreign suppliers are pumping just about all the oil they can and
accusing lawmakers of blocking new refineries.
Bush renewed his
call for drilling in an Arctic wildlife refuge, but his own Energy
Department says that would have little impact on gasoline prices.
THE SPIN:
Asked
what he is doing to try to get Saudi Arabia to pump more oil, Bush
didn't answer directly. "We've got to understand there's not a lot of
excess capacity in the world right now," he said. Blaming "the lack of
refinery capacity" for high energy prices, he said Congress has
rejected his proposal to use shuttered military bases for refinery
sites.
FACT:
Global oil supplies are tight, in part because
OPEC nations including Saudi Arabia are refusing to open their spigots.
But Saudi Arabia has considerable additional production capacity. It's
pumping a little over 8.5 million barrels a day, compared to about 9.5
million barrels a day two years ago and has acknowledged the ability to
produce as much as 11 million barrels a day.
On refineries,
Congress has ignored Bush's proposal to use closed military bases. But
the oil companies haven't shown much interest in building refineries
either and have dismissed suggestions that military bases might be of
use. They note, for example, that few bases are near pipelines needed
to bring crude in and move finished product out.
When top
executives of the country's five largest oil companies earlier this
month were asked at a House hearing whether they wanted to build a new
refinery, each said no.
While no new refinery has been built in
more than 30 years, companies have been adding on to existing
refineries. The Energy Information Administration estimates an
additional 800,000 barrels a day of production will be added to
existing refineries in the next three years. A joint venture between
Shell Oil Co. and the Saudi Arabian oil company is expected to double
capacity at a Port Arthur, Texas, refinery.
Even the industry's
refinery expansion plans have been scaled back over the last few years
because companies anticipate less demand for gasoline since the
government now requires a huge expansion of ethanol as a motor fuel.
They ask: Why should refiners make more gasoline if ethanol is to be
used?
THE SPIN:
Bush has long called for opening the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska to oil development, and on Tuesday
he chastised Congress for repeatedly blocking the proposal.
"If
Congress is interested, they can send the right signal by saying we are
going to explore for oil and gas in U.S. territories, starting with
ANWR," said Bush, adding that opening the Alaska refuge to oil
companies "likely will mean lower gas prices."
FACT:
Strongly
opposed by environmentalists, most Democrats and a few moderate
Republicans, drilling in the Arctic refuge indeed has been blocked, as
the president complained.
Energy experts believe ANWR's likely 11
billion barrels of oil — pumped at just under 1 million barrels a day —
would send a signal of increased U.S. interest in domestic energy
production. However, in the long run, it likely would not significantly
impact oil or gasoline prices. And it likely would have little impact
on today's prices.
In 2005, the Energy Information Administration
estimated that it would take about 10 years before oil would flow from
ANWR if drilling were approved. By 2025, it said, the additional oil
would have only a slight impact on global oil prices and cause a
decline in gasoline prices of less than a penny a gallon, using
constant 2003 dollars. Oil imports would drop from an expected 68
percent of U.S. demand to 64 percent, the EIA said.
THE SPIN:
Bush
said "it is in our national interest" to continue pumping oil into the
government's Strategic Petroleum Reserve — about 70,000 barrels a day —
"in case there is a major disruption of crude oil around the world."
FACT:
While
some Democrats argue that halting the SPR fill would lower prices, most
energy experts agree with the president that it likely would not. But
the assertion that continued deliveries to SPR, which already holds 701
million barrels, is needed as a safeguard against a possible supply
interruption may be a stretch.
"We have today a three-month
supply of oil for emergencies," noted Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison,
R-Texas, who would like to see the deliveries stop. And that would
assume a total cutoff of oil imports, an unlikely occurrence even if
there are major supply disruptions. In the meantime, said Hutchison,
"over the next four months we will deposit over 8 million barrels into
the SPR at a very high price."
THE SPIN:
The president said
Congress was "demanding emissions cuts that would shut down coal
plants" and criticized lawmakers for hindering the expansion of nuclear
power.
FACT:
His remarks about coal were an apparent
reference to climate legislation that would cap carbon dioxide
emissions to address global warming. While such caps would
significantly affect coal-burning power plants, the legislation also
envisions having emission allowances, many of which would be used by
utilities to keep coal plants running, though electricity prices would
increase. And the emission limits also would spur development of carbon
capture technologies from power plants.
On the nuclear issue,
Congress has provided the industry loan guarantees, a streamlining of
reactor permitting and other measures, all aimed at spurring
construction of power reactors. It has shown little interest in a Bush
plan to resume nuclear waste reprocessing, or in pressing ahead with
the Yucca Mountain underground waste dump in Nevada.