https://insideevs.com/big-oil-new-attempt-kill-ev/
Big Oil Makes A New Attempt To Kill Electric Cars
2018-12-23  Charles Morris; Source: New York Times, EcoWatch; 

[images  
https://d2t6ms4cjod3h9.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/Screen-Shot-2014-12-10-at-10.39.53-AM.png

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Could electric vehicle charging stations gain popularity over gas pumps?
(Instagram: @archduke97)

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Companies like Tesla could pose a challenge to the oil industry (Instagram:
teslaownersitalyticinorsm)

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Big Oil isn’t keen on change in the energy sector (Instagram: @energialivre)

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A not-so-subtle message from this Tesla owner (Facebook: Leilani Münter)
 eff oil


video  
https://youtu.be/aUC6lsLr04I
Now You Know
The Impending Big Auto/Oil Implosion Explained | In Depth
]

BIG OIL TRIES TO KILL THE ELECTRIC CAR (AGAIN)

Electric vehicles are getting close to a major tipping point, and it isn’t
just fans who are taking notice. The powerful enemies of transportation
electrification and renewable energy are beginning to launch a serious
counterattack.

Check Out These Stories:
-Former EPA Head Says Big Oil Is Peddling Misinformation About EVs [
https://insideevs.com/former-epa-head-says-big-oil-peddling-misinformation/
]

-Big Oil Is Not Prepared For The Electric Car Revolution [
https://insideevs.com/big-oil-is-not-prepared-for-the-electric-car-revolution/
]

-Big Oil Continues To Push Back Against Electric Cars [
https://insideevs.com/big-oil-fights-against-electric-cars/
]

*This article comes to us courtesy of EVANNEX (which also makes aftermarket
Tesla accessories). Authored by Charles Morris. The opinions expressed in
these articles are not necessarily our own at InsideEVs.

Is this a conspiracy theory that can be dismissed? Not really. The
definition of a conspiracy is different actors working together in secret.
While the efforts of EV enemies – legacy automakers, oil interests and
“conservative” governments – do complement one another, as far as we know
they haven’t formed any formal cartel (nor do the Lizard People, aliens or
Elvis seem to be involved). And there’s not much secrecy about what they’re
doing. The efforts of oil industry-backed groups to hold back the electric
tide are well-documented, most recently in a lengthy article in the New York
Times.

The Trump administration has been working with auto industry trade groups
(openly, not in secret) to water down federal fuel economy standards since
before the president’s inauguration. This is a legal process that will take
many months to play out, and advocates on both sides of the issue are
working to sway public opinion. As the Times reports, Marathon Petroleum,
the country’s largest refiner, has devoted much effort and money to ensure
that the standards get rolled back. Along with its allies – oil industry
trade groups and a network of conservative “think tanks” financed by
billionaire bogeyman Charles G. Koch – Marathon argues that the US now has
so much oil that it no longer needs to worry about energy conservation.

“With oil scarcity no longer a concern,” Americans should be given a “choice
in vehicles that best fit their needs,” read a draft of a letter that
Marathon helped to circulate to members of Congress. According to the Times,
official correspondence later sent to regulators by more than a dozen
lawmakers included phrases or sentences from the industry talking points,
and the US administration’s proposed rule rollback relies on similar
arguments.

Marathon Petroleum has also teamed up with the American Legislative Exchange
Council, a reliable opponent of environmental regulation, to draft
pro-industry legislation for state governments. ALEC’s handy guide to the
issue describes current fuel-efficiency rules as “a relic of a disproven
narrative of resource scarcity” and says “unelected bureaucrats” shouldn’t
tell Americans what cars to drive.

Meanwhile, a major Facebook campaign, covertly run by an oil-industry lobby
representing Exxon Mobil, Chevron, Phillips 66 and other oil giants, urged
people to write to regulators to support the rollback. The Facebook ads
linked to a website with a picture of a grinning President Obama and the
question, “Would YOU buy a used car from this man?” The site appears to have
been so effective that a quarter of the 12,000 public comments received by
the Department of Transportation can be traced to the petition, according to
a Times analysis.

The Times article documents the influence Marathon wields over Trump
administration officials and state lawmakers around the country. The refiner
was a major donor to former Oklahoma State Senator and Attorney General
Scott Pruitt, and its CEO, Gary Heminger, met with Pruitt several times
after he became Trump’s EPA Administrator (Pruitt resigned in July, under
the shadow of at least 14 separate federal investigations).

Marathon lobbyists provided a letter containing industry talking points to
federal lawmakers, according to evidence unearthed by the Times. Nineteen
lawmakers from the delegations of Indiana, West Virginia and Pennsylvania
sent letters to the Transportation Department that included phrases quoted
verbatim from the industry letter to the effect that oil scarcity is no
longer a concern.

Marathon sponsored an event in New Orleans that was attended by some 1,500
state legislators and other officials from across the country. There,
Secretary of Transportation Elaine Chao, a longtime opponent of federal fuel
economy rules, praised the administration’s “regulatory reforms,” to copious
applause.

Meanwhile, oil interests are mobilizing on another front: ending the federal
tax credit for EV purchases. In October, Senator John Barrasso (R-Wyoming)
introduced legislation that would not only abolish the tax credit, but also
slap EV owners with a user fee, arguing that the market for electric
vehicles “no longer needs the crutch of government assistance.”

In a recent article in EcoWatch, Elliott Negin details the support Barrasso
and other lawmakers pushing to eliminate the tax credit have received from
oil industry groups. Koch Industries has been one of the senator’s top 10
supporters since 2013. The company has also given copious amounts of cash to
most of the Republicans on the Senate Finance Committee and the House Ways
and Means Committee, which will have to approve any change to the EV tax
credit.

Shortly before Barrasso introduced his bill, 30 “free-market organizations”
signed a letter to Kevin Brady (R-Texas), Chairman of the House Ways and
Means Committee, urging Congress to either retain the 200,000-EV cap or
“eliminate the tax credit entirely.” The letter was organized by the
American Energy Alliance, the political lobbying arm of the Institute for
Energy Research. The president of both groups is a former lobbyist for Koch
Industries, and Koch foundations gave $8.9 million to the two groups between
2012 and 2016. ExxonMobil and the American Petroleum Institute are also
patrons.

A spokesman for Koch Industries told the Times that the company has “a long,
consistent track record of opposing all forms of corporate welfare,
including all subsidies, mandates and other handouts that rig the system.”
In fact however, the efforts of Koch and its free-market-loving allies tend
to focus on tax breaks for clean energy – they seem to have no objections to
subsidies for the oil and gas industry. Mr. Negin cites a 2011 study by
investment firm DBL Partners, which found that, since 1918, permanent oil
and gas tax breaks and other subsidies have averaged $4.86 billion per year
in 2010 dollars – the equivalent of $5.62 billion per year today.

Zac and Jesse discuss some of the reasons the oil industry is trying so hard
to prevent the advent of electric vehicles (Youtube: Now You Know)

There’s much, much more in the New York Times and EcoWatch articles, which
are both very long and very well-documented. EV advocates who feel like
getting depressed (or oil lovers looking for some heart-warming Christmas
cheer) may choose to delve further into the vast networks of influence,
misinformation and money wielded by those seeking to smother the electric
baby in its cradle. Suffice it to say here that oil industry groups are
attacking electric vehicles on many fronts all over the world, and their
efforts are well organized and extremely well funded.

Is there any hope? Mr. Negin thinks so. Demand for EVs is growing, and there
are now more than 40 plug-in models on the market. The costs of batteries
and other key components are steadily falling, and they should become even
cheaper as more automakers ramp up production. Policymakers in California,
China and Europe have (so far) held out valiantly against anti-EV pressure.
The global auto industry is in turmoil, and there are pro-EV factions in the
boardrooms that may yet gain the upper hand.

Every major technological shift meets with resistance, but the defenders of
the past seldom prevail for long. The battle for the future will be a long
and bloody one, and it will claim many innocent victims (such as the GM
employees who lost their jobs just in time for the holiday season), but it’s
one that we can win.
[© insideevs.com]


[ref
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/Koch-Killing-the-EV-Tax-Credit-Keeping-public-Oil-Addicted-tp4692185.html

http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/Koch-Killing-the-EV-Tax-Credit-Keeping-public-Oil-Addicted-tp4692185.html

http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/Koch-Big-Oil-Likes-Its-Own-Giant-Subsidy-not-EVs-tp4691884.html

http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-That-70-s-nEV-Elcar-it-in-response2-OPEC-oil-crisis-r-55mi-tp4690794.html
]




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