http://www.publici.org/dtaweb/report.asp?ReportID=549&L1=10&L2=10&L3=0 
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Special Report
The Politics of Energy: Oil & Gas
How a gusher of giveaways to oil and gas industry was crafted in Congress

By Bob Williams and Kevin Bogardus

(WASHINGTON, December 15, 2003)-The sweeping energy bill now pending 
in Congress offers a geyser of new tax breaks and other government 
goodies for energy companies and related industries. Although the 
1,200-page bill stalled out in the Senate in November, legislative 
backers have sworn to revive it early in the 2004 session of Congress.

Not surprisingly, the well-connected oil and gas industry-which has 
been among the leading contributors to the presidential campaigns of 
George W. Bush as well as other Republican candidates and political 
committees-stands to reap the biggest bonanza should the legislation 
eventually become law.

Since 1998, oil, gas and related services companies on the Fortune 
1000 list gave $13.9 million to Republicans, compared to $3.2 million 
to Democrats-a ratio of more than four-to-one-according to figures 
compiled by the Center for Public Integrity.

In many ways, the $30 billion energy legislation is a classic example 
of money, influence and hardball politics at their worst-or 
best-depending on your point of view. Sen. John McCain, an Arizona 
Republican who helped Democrats temporarily sink the 
Republican-written legislation in November, dryly dubbed it "the 
No-Lobbyist-Left-Behind Act."

Even the conservative National Review editorialized that the bill was 
"pages of special-interest giveaways, almost devoid of worthwhile 
reforms."

Indeed, the bill seems to contain something to benefit just about 
every sector of the energy industry that bothered to ask. There were 
billions of dollars of subsidies for clean coal technology for 
utilities along with revisions to the Clean Air Act that would save 
them billions more; for the nuclear industry, there was the renewal 
of its federally subsidized catastrophic insurance plan and tax 
credits to build up to six new nuclear power plants.

Top Recipients of Oil and Natural Gas Industry Contributions
1997 to 2003

Recipient       Party, State    Oversight Roles
Amount

President George W. Bush        R        
$113,622

Rep. Don Young  R-Alaska        Transportation & Infrastructure, Resources
109,150

Rep. Joe Barton R-Texas Energy & Commerce
105,000

Sen. Mary Landrieu      D-La.   Energy & Natural Resources, Appropriations
102,000

Rep. Tom DeLay  R-Texas House Majority Leader
99,075

Rep. Barbara Cubin      R-Wyo.  Energy & Commerce, Resources
91,000

Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison       R-Texas Commerce, Science, and Transportation, 
Appropriations
90,270

Rep. Heather Wilson     R-N.M.  Energy & Commerce
85,183

Rep. W. J. "Billy" Tauzin       R-La.   Energy & Commerce, Resources
79,400

Sen. John Ensign        R-Nev.  Commerce, Science, and Transportation
78,500

Incumbents in Bold

But no group would get more than the oil and gas industry, which 
secured everything from the elimination of royalty payments for oil 
wells on public lands to a legislative shield from an estimated $29 
billion in lawsuits the petroleum industry is facing over a 
cancer-causing gasoline additive that has leached into the 
groundwater of hundreds of communities nationwide. In addition to 
such big ticket items, the legislation contains dozens of lesser 
provisions benefiting oil and gas companies, large and small-many 
inserted by legislators at the behest of industry lobbyists or 
individual companies back home.

Overall, the new tax breaks in the latest version of the energy bill 
were pegged at about $23.5 billion by Congress's Joint Committee on 
Taxation. There is also another $5.4 billion in grants, subsidies and 
loan guarantees.

But critics say those figures only represent a fraction of the true 
cost of the legislation.

For example, the minority staff of the House Committee on Government 
Reform says the total cost of the legislation to taxpayers will be 
more than $140 billion over the next 10 years. Besides the direct 
costs to the federal budget, that estimate takes into account 
secondary impacts of the legislation, including such items as higher 
prices for gas and electricity.

"This secretive, exclusive process has led to a 1,200-page 
monstrosity that is chock full of special interest giveaways and 
exemptions from environmental and other laws that frankly can't 
withstand the light of scrutiny," said McCain.

Both conservatives and liberals say that the energy bill represents 
new watermarks for political pork and policymaking.

"It became a total grab bag of handouts to special interests and 
campaign contributors, all of it done behind closed doors in 
consultation with energy industry lobbyists," says Alyse Campaigne, 
vice president for federal affairs at the liberal leaning Center for 
American Progress.

Charli Coon, an energy policy analyst with the conservative Heritage 
Foundation, says the bill had some positive provisions, but was far 
too weighted down with questionable handouts to special interests.

"Personally, I have never seen anything in the past that compares to 
(the energy bill) when it comes to political pork and serving special 
interest groups," she said. "Unfortunately, that appears to be the 
only way to get something through Congress these days."

Fouled Water, No Foul

One of the most controversial provisions in the energy bill-and what 
probably doomed its prospects for passage in 2003-involved a widely 
used gasoline additive called methyl tertiary butyl ether, or MTBE.

MTBE has been blended into gasoline since the 1970s, initially to 
boost the octane level in no-lead fuels and more recently to help gas 
burn more cleanly. It is the additive most commonly used to produce 
so-called "oxygenated" fuels, which have been mandated in many 
communities to help reduce pollution.

In recent years, MTBE-identified as a carcinogen by the U.S. 
Environmental Protection Agency-has been found in the groundwater of 
hundreds of communities around the country. Because it is highly 
soluble, when the additive leaches out of leaking underground storage 
tanks, it can spread quickly through local groundwater supplies.

So far, municipal governments in nearly two dozen states have filed 
lawsuits against MTBE manufacturers and petroleum companies to help 
cover the cost of removing the additive from local water supplies. At 
least 500 public drinking-water wells and 45,000 private wells across 
the country are contaminated, in addition to the approximately 
140,000 underground storage tanks still leaking gasoline containing 
the additive, according to the National Conference of Mayors.

"You cannot be held liable for making a legal and certifiable 
product," Scott Segal, a partner at the law firm Bracewell & 
Patterson, which has lobbied for companies that make and use MTBE, 
told the Center. "You can be held liable for mishandling it."

The estimated cost of a complete cleanup is $29 billion and rising.

Enter Rep. Tom DeLay, House Majority Leader and one of the most 
powerful people in Washington.

DeLay's Texas district is home to the country's largest maker of 
MTBE, Lyondell Chemical Corp. Two other major MTBE manufacturers, 
Huntsman Chemical and Texas Petrochemicals, are based in or near 
DeLay's district in Houston.

In addition to MTBE manufacturers, most major oil companies have also 
been named in the liability lawsuits, including ExxonMobil, 
ChevronTexaco and ConocoPhilips. All have major operations in DeLay's 
Houston District.

Lyondell has been the top single contributor to DeLay's 2004 campaign 
for reelection, giving $11,500 of the $779,486 he has raised so far, 
according to the Center for Responsive Politics. The oil and gas 
industry as a whole has given DeLay $48,575, or about six percent of 
his total contributions. Oil and gas companies have contributed more 
than any other industry to DeLay's 2004 campaign so far.

Top Contributors from the Oil and Natural Gas Industry
1997 to 2003

Company Location
Amount

ChevronTexaco   San Ramon, Calif.
$4,170,774

ExxonMobil      Irving, Texas
3,136,016

ConocoPhillips  Houston
1,513,466

Occidental Petroleum    Los Angeles
1,352,801

Halliburton     Houston
1,234,579

Anadarko Petroleum      The Woodlands, Texas
1,081,319

Kerr-McGee Corp.        Oklahoma City
909,948

Marathon Oil    Houston
787,583

FMC Technologies        Chicago
722,775

Sunoco  Philadelphia
616,750

During a closed-door, Republican-only, conference committee 
negotiation session in November, DeLay, along with Rep. Billy Tauzin 
of Louisiana and Rep. Joe Barton of Texas, slipped a provision into 
the energy bill exempting MTBE manufacturers such as Lyondell from 
product defect lawsuits involving the additive. The provision also 
calls for the exemption to be retroactive, covering all lawsuits 
filed after Sept. 5, 2003.

Another provision in the bill would have included $2 billion in 
grants to help MTBE manufacturers to branch out into other types of 
fuel additives. One of the most likely new businesses for such 
companies would be the manufacturing of ethanol, which had its own 
huge set of tax breaks and other incentives included in the energy 
bill.

That was all too much for several Republican senators from 
northeastern states where many MTBE lawsuits have only recently been 
filed. They sided with Democrats to effectively block the final 
version of the energy bill from reaching the Senate floor for action.

But DeLay would not relent, even when President Bush called him 
personally to urge him to drop the MTBE provisions, a move which most 
observers felt would have cleared the way for passage of the massive 
measure. Undeterred, DeLay, Tauzin and Barton say they will renew 
their push for the MTBE provisions in the 2004 session of Congress.

"With energy prices rising and America's dangerous dependence on 
foreign oil growing, the need to enact a comprehensive national 
energy bill is crystal clear to everyone except for a handful of 
disgruntled Senators," said Tauzin, following the vote that blocked 
final action on the bill by the Senate.

"Single handedly, they are holding up action on a much needed bill, 
which will provide jobs to nearly one million Americans and make our 
nation's energy supplies more stable and affordable in the future," 
said Tauzin. "Clearly, the time has come to stop playing politics and 
start putting people back to work again."

Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle, who had supported the bill 
because of provisions expanding the ethanol program-which is big 
business for Daschle's South Dakota constituents-blasted DeLay and 
other House Republican leaders for not relenting on the MTBE 
provisions.

"This was a choice between fighting for an energy bill and fighting 
for a special interest," says Daschle. "Congressman DeLay and others 
chose the special interest, and that decision is the only reason why 
Congress will adjourn for the year without an energy bill."

Critics say enactment of the bill would be a fiscal and environmental 
disaster, as well as a huge gouge of consumers.

"This energy bill, if enacted, will raise electricity rates, increase 
gasoline costs, and increase the federal budget deficit," says Rep. 
Henry Waxman, a California Democrat who has been one of the harshest 
critics of the legislation. "It will do this while degrading the 
environment and handing out billions in special interest giveaways to 
industry."

Special Treats for Special Interests

MTBE aside, according to the Democratic staff of the House Committee 
on Government Reform, the energy bill would deliver billions in new 
tax breaks, grants, rule rollbacks and other government gifts to oil 
and gas firms and related industries.

Among them:


* Oil and gas construction activities would be exempted from the 
Clean Water Act, even though most other large construction activities 
would still have to obtain permits and control their pollution runoff.
* Drilling companies would get an exemption from the Safe Drinking 
Water Act for hydraulic fracturing, an oil and gas drilling 
technique. This exemption allows diesel fuel to be injected into 
underground sources of drinking water without any federal oversight. 
Halliburton, Vice President Dick Cheney's former employer, is an 
industry leader in hydraulic fracturing services.
* Multiple provisions to spur oil and gas leasing and drilling on 
public lands and to minimize the inclusion of environmentally 
protective lease stipulations. An office would be established in the 
White House specifically to coordinate and expedite permitting of 
energy projects on public lands.
* $160 million to help speed leasing and permitting activities on public lands.
* Would require certain federal agencies (including EPA, the Army 
Corps of Engineers, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the 
National Forest Service) to detail staff to Bureau of Land Management 
field offices. The detailed staff would be responsible for asserting 
their home agency's concerns in the oil and gas permitting process, 
such as ensuring compliance with the Endangered Species Act and the 
Clean Water Act. They would be located in BLM offices and would 
report to BLM managers, however.
* Would reimburse oil and gas companies proposing to drill on federal 
lands for the cost of required environmental impact studies. Based on 
Congressional Budget Office estimates, this provision would cost the 
Treasury $330 million over the next ten years.
* Would establish a royalty stream of $1.5 billion, plus an 
authorization for an additional $500 million, for a research and 
development program for ultra deep and "unconventional" oil and gas 
drilling technologies. The program would be largely run by a private 
consortium, which could include oil companies. Members of the 
consortium may receive awards for projects, which include "commercial 
applications" of technology. Thus, commercial drilling projects are 
eligible for these funds. Halliburton is a leader in such drilling 
technologies.
* Would provide royalty incentives for offshore drilling for deep 
water production and ultra deep gas wells. CBO estimates this will 
cost the Treasury $95 million over the next ten years.
* Would allow the Secretary of Interior to waive or reduce royalties 
for oil and gas production in the western Arctic whenever the 
Secretary determines this would be in the public interest.
* Would remove the Secretary of the Interior's ability to deny 
applications to drill on public lands. Upon receiving an application 
for a permit to drill in a particular portion of a leased area, this 
section allows the Secretary just 30 days to determine if any 
additional information is necessary in order to grant the permit to 
drill. Once the applicant provides this information, the Secretary is 
required to approve the application regardless of whether drilling in 
the time and place proposed would do unnecessary environmental 
damage. Although the language is ambiguous on this point, the 
provision may also apply to drilling in national forests.

Oil Money Lubricated Process

Major campaign contributions by the oil and gas industry are widely 
credited with swelling the energy bill into one of the most 
pork-laden pieces of legislation to move through Congress in recent 
memory.

"Senators and representatives sprinkled the bill with sweeteners for 
supporters, home-district businesses and colleagues whose votes they 
needed," said Frank Clemente, director of Congress Watch, the 
lobbying arm of Public Citizen, the watchdog group created by Ralph 
Nader. "Lobbyists managed to insert favorable deals for their 
clients. And the White House used the energy legislation to deliver 
paybacks to the president's fundraisers."

The energy bill was a direct outgrowth of Vice President Dick 
Cheney's infamous energy task force.

In 2001, an unknown number of energy industry executives and insiders 
met with Cheney behind closed doors several times to draft a set of 
recommendations for a national energy policy, a report that formed 
the groundwork for the now-stalled energy bill.

The task force has been the subject of widespread criticism for its 
secrecy and the access granted to energy company executives. Cheney 
has steadfastly refused to release much of the information generated 
by the task force, even going to the mat in court with the General 
Accounting Office, Congress's investigative arm, to keep the task 
force's work private. In separate court cases, the government 
watchdog group Judicial Watch and the environmental group the Sierra 
Club are trying to obtain similar information about the task force; 
earlier today, the Supreme Court agreed to hear an unusual appeal 
from the administration, seeking to have the case against Cheney 
thrown out even before the lower court has ruled.

In addition to their campaign contributions, oil and gas companies 
have spent millions of dollars to lobby Congress and the Bush 
Administration. An analysis by the Center for Public Integrity found 
that the oil and gas industry reported spending $143.3 million in 
lobbying fees since 1998. ExxonMobil topped the list of over 30 
energy companies, doling $39.1 million out to lobbyists.

The oil industry's deep pockets explain its influence in national 
politics, as well as its well-publicized connections in Washington. 
ExxonMobil, ChevronTexaco, and ConocoPhillips together amassed more 
than $300 billion in 2002 revenues. At the start of the 21st century, 
all three completed historic mergers that attracted the attention of 
Congress.

While mergers reduced their numbers, it did little to limit their 
influence. ExxonMobil's $39.1 million led the way in lobbying 
expenditures, with ChevronTexaco close behind, spending $22.3 million 
on lobbying the federal government since 1998. ConocoPhillips spent 
$8.1 million on lobbyists. All three are among the country's twenty 
largest companies, easily outdistancing the nearest competitors in 
their market.

Executives from ConocoPhillips and ExxonMobil have also been active 
in the states. They continue to meet with Alaska's Republican Gov. 
Frank Murkowski, who served as an energy industry-friendly senator 
until his daughter succeeded him in 2003. Both companies are seeking 
Murkowski's help on their attempts to construct a $20 billion natural 
gas pipeline from his state through Canada to fuel America's lower 48 
states.

"If you calculate [lobbying] as a stock market return, it is a drop 
in the bucket considering the payoff they get," John Walke, the clean 
air director of the environmental advocacy group, the Natural 
Resources Defense Council, told the Center.

All three companies' in-house lobbying teams have also lobbied on 
liability protection for MTBE. Much is clearly at stake for the oil 
industry when it comes to government rules. Billion-dollar projects 
can fall to regulations, environmental law, and resident opposition. 
With that in mind, oil and gas companies took no chances on the 
energy bill, hiring both high profile Democrats and Republicans to 
represent their interests.

Fortune 500 companies Murphy Oil and FMC Technologies signed up 
lobbyist Beth Viola of Holland & Knight, a Washington law firm. A 
former environmental advisor to the Clinton Administration, she 
lobbied for both corporations on Clean Air Act issues and securing 
appropriations, records show.

Once a close campaign advisor to Vice President Al Gore, Viola has 
taken full advantage of her insider status. She has also lobbied for 
the American Chemistry Council, which critics allege stalled 
protections for children against harmful household chemicals. In 
addition, Viola has represented FirstEnergy, which has been linked to 
the August 2003 Midwest/Northeast blackout.

Ed Krenik joined Bracewell & Patterson, a Houston-based firm, in 
September 2003 after resigning from the Environmental Protection 
Agency. In addition to the EPA, Krenik learned the lay of the land in 
Congress as well: he served as the agency's associate administrator 
for congressional affairs. Now, he lobbies for major coal, oil, and 
gas companies.

According to former Rep. Jim Chapman, D-Texas, himself a partner at 
Bracewell & Patterson, Krenik is part of a "powerhouse team of 
professionals who are taking our government relations group to the 
next level." Mark Racicot, who served as chairman of the Republican 
National Committee in 2002 and 2003, is also a Bracewell & Patterson 
partner; when he took over the top job at the Republican Party, he 
declared that he'd continue playing on the firm's government 
relations "powerhouse team." The negative reaction from 
pundits-including conservatives-eventually led Racicot to rethink his 
dual career choice. Though he remained with the firm, he did not 
continue working as a registered lobbyist.

Disclosure forms filed with the Senate show that, in the fall of 
2003, Krenik lobbied to "protect liability reform" for Valero Energy, 
the country's fourth largest petroleum refining company. Valero, 
which also manufactures MTBE, sought to shield itself from the same 
potential liability involving groundwater contamination that worried 
DeLay's constituent, Lyondell Chemical Company. Krenik also lobbied 
for Lyondell.

Frank O'Donnell of the Clean Air Trust said of Bracewell & Patterson, 
"They represent virtually every bad guy on every environmental issue 
these days. They are in the middle of all of it." The Clean Air Trust 
is an environmental group founded to protect the Clean Air Act.

Revolving Door in Reverse

In addition, several industry heavyweights have left K Street 
lobbying shops to take influential jobs within the Bush 
Administration.

Steven Griles was confirmed as the Deputy Secretary of the Interior 
in November 2001. Before his appointment, Griles was a lobbyist for 
major trade associations such as the National Mining Association. 
Griles lobbied for Devon Energy, a $4.3 billion oil and gas company, 
with his own firm as well as National Environmental Strategies.

The Bush White House has stated it wants to open up federal lands for 
drilling and mining. Griles's old clients, who have been hindered by 
regulations that prevent them from exploiting public lands, soon 
landed him in hot water. Interior's inspector general is currently 
investigating him for possibly violating his recusal agreement by 
meeting with some of his past clients while at Interior. Griles still 
receives over a quarter of a million dollars annually from his 
lobbying clientele due to past contracts at National Environmental 
Strategies.

Thomas Sansonetti is the Justice Department's Assistant Attorney 
General for the Environment and Natural Resources. Like Griles, 
Sansonetti was a coal lobbyist at the firm Holland & Hart, 
representing Peabody Coal and Arch Coal.

Before his confirmation, Sansonetti also lobbied "to raise the 
federal acreage limitation for sodium leases" for FMC Technologies, a 
major oil and gas services firm.

The National Energy Policy Plan, the document developed by Cheney's 
energy task force and released in May 2001, calls for "examin[ing] 
land status and lease stipulation impediments to federal oil and gas 
leasing." Though subdued, the language is what most environmentalists 
fear: an intrusion of drilling by the oil and natural gas industry on 
wilderness preserves and closed federal lands.

The Center for Public Integrity found the oil and gas companies on 
the Fortune 1000 list had given $165,672 to the Bush/Cheney 
presidential campaigns. They have also given generously to key 
Republican members of Congress who have been the leading proponents 
of the energy bill.

Since 1998, the Center found that Fortune 1000 oil and gas companies 
have given $112,076 to DeLay and $88,400 to Tauzin. The companies 
have given $53,450 to Sen. Pete Dominici, a Republican from New 
Mexico who was the Senate's lead negotiator in the conference 
committee that drafted the final version of the energy bill.

The oil and gas industry has been the top campaign contributor to 
DeLay so far in the 2004 election cycle, according to CRP, giving the 
Texas Republican $48,575. The industry has been Tauzin's fourth 
largest contributor for Tauzin's 2004 campaign, giving the Louisiana 
Republican $34,780 so far.

Oil and gas companies have been Domenici's second biggest campaign 
contributors for 2004, surpassed only by electric utilities. The 
industry has given the New Mexico Republican $179,308, according to 
CRP. In late November 2003, Domenici called together energy industry 
lobbyists on Capitol Hill to discuss the bill that they had helped 
craft and that he had helped shepherd through Congress. Sensing a 
final vote was near, the New Mexico Republican thanked the group for 
their efforts in constructing the legislation. He then left the room 
to a standing ovation.

"[Lobbyists] all but held the pen since the days of the Cheney energy 
task force," said Walke. "They dictated the dirty, subsidized 
policies they wanted."

Despite such criticisms, proponents of the bill are unapologetic.

"Comprehensive energy legislation is difficult to pass under any 
circumstances," Segal, the Bracewell & Patterson partner, said. "The 
bill was more than a good faith effort at national energy policy." 
Although the energy bill has been derailed for now, lobbyists say 
they are ready to resume the fight next year.

"I do think there will be a lot of interest in passing an energy bill 
next year," said Segal. "It is possible to pass energy legislation 
during an election year."

Agustin Armendariz and Aron Pilhofer contributed to this report

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