Page added on December 16, 2015
The United States appears on the brink of ending a four-decade ban on most exports of crude oil, which would end a years-long fight brought about by a boom in domestic shale output that contributed to a supply glut and depressed prices.
The measure is part of a sprawling deal wrapped up by congressional leaders late on Tuesday to keep the U.S. government open through September. The $1.15 trillion spending bill, negotiated in secret talks over the last two weeks, would be difficult for President Barack Obama to veto despite his opposition to ending the oil export ban.
In a partial victory to Obama and other Democrats, the spending bill also includes granting tax incentives to boost wind and solar development, according to lawmakers involved in the talks. Shares of solar companies rose sharply.
Republican and Democratic lawmakers will meet separately on Wednesday to discuss the bill and hope to vote on it as soon as Friday.
Allowing oil exports would be a win for the U.S. oil industry and Republicans, who had argued the ban was a relic of the 1970s Arab oil embargo.
Exploration and production companies, many saddled with billions in debt and struggling to avoid bankruptcy after a 60 percent slide in oil prices forced them to halt most new drilling, had viewed exports as a lifeline of sorts.
But with U.S. output now falling as oil prices slump to seven-year lows, traders say foreign buyers may not materialize in a glutted global market.
The S&P Energy Index was down over 1 percent in early afternoon trading on Wednesday.
Some Democrats in the Senate say lifting the ban would put oil refining jobs at risk and that more drilling would harm the environment, though Democratic Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, from the No. 2 oil state North Dakota, has supported its repeal.
The drop in oil prices, now below $40 a barrel, has helped ease worries about higher gasoline prices for consumers.
Producers say eliminating the ban would help revive a U.S. drilling boom by closing the years-long gap between cheaper domestic crude prices and higher global rates. The move would also give U.S. allies alternatives to Russia and the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries for their supplies.
“Lifting the oil export ban is very important to our industry to enable them to compete on a global basis,” said Senator John Hoeven. The Republican from oil-producing North Dakota has pressured Congress to axe the trade restriction.
Chief executive officers of U.S. oil producers, from integrated global majors Exxon Mobil Corp to frackers like Continental Resources Inc, had urged the ban be lifted.
Gregory Hill, president of U.S. oil independent Hess Corp , said this month that ending the prohibition would boost domestic crude prices by about $3 a barrel, or about 8 percent, from around $36.
Refiners have been divided on the issue, as exports of crude would increase their costs after a bounty of cheap domestic oil brought several years of surging profits.
Four U.S. independent refiners, three of which operate on the East Coast, have opposed exporting domestic crude. Their so-called CRUDE Coalition says lifting the ban will lead to higher pump prices when once-landlocked domestic crude commands higher prices in global markets.
PBF Energy Inc, Philadelphia Energy Solutions LLC, Alon USA Energy Inc and Delta Air Lines unit Monroe Energy also say the ban protects national security and supports economic growth by keeping energy prices low for manufacturers.
Other refiners, including Valero Energy Corp, Marathon Petroleum Corp and Phillips 66, have expressed support for free markets or said they would not oppose the ban’s repeal.
Some pipeline and terminal companies have already started adding infrastructure along the U.S. Gulf Coast to handle potential crude exports, augmenting systems geared toward imports.
Republicans made lifting the ban a priority and swapped it for measures Democrats wanted to reduce carbon emissions and protect the environment.
For the solar industry, the deal marks its second big recent victory since a global agreement to curb carbon emissions and encourage investment in renewable energy, reached in Paris on Saturday.
SolarCity Corp, First Solar Inc, Abengoa SA, SunEdison Inc and Sunrun, as well as the industry’s trade group, have spent more than $2 million lobbying Congress this year, according to public records compiled by the Center for Responsive Politics.
They pushed hard this month to safeguard the Investment Tax Credit for the industry, which they say has underpinned an annual growth rate of 76 percent in solar installations over the last decade.
SolarCity shares jumped 26 percent, First Solar rose 9 percent, SunEdison was up 19 percent, and Sunrun gained 21 percent.
The bill, posted early on Wednesday morning, allows the U.S. president to stop oil exports for one year if he or she declares a national emergency, or if the administration decides the exports are causing a domestic oil shortage or raising prices.
6 Comments on "US On Verge Of Lifting 40-Year Oil Export Ban"
makati1 on Wed, 16th Dec 2015 7:28 pm
RIGPORN
Spec on Wed, 16th Dec 2015 8:33 pm
I’m very happy to see Congress actually GET SOMETHING DONE. Not only that . . . they made deal! They worked together. GOPers got the oil export ban lifted and Dems got renewable energy tax-credits extended. Well done, Congress.
I doubt the export ban being lifted will change prices much. I suspect it will just be a small amount of light sweet sold to Canada that wants to use it to dilute their Bitumen. And probably some light-sweet to other foreign refineries that can’t refine the heavy stuff.
rockman on Wed, 16th Dec 2015 9:21 pm
Spec – I won’t go into details again…done it many times already. There is no US oil export ban. Last Nov the US was exporting CRUDE OIL at the rate of 200 million bbls per year. Oil has been exported to EU and S American countries thanks to EXEMPTIONS granted by the feds. Exemption requests that have never been denied. But the vast majority of US oil exports go to Canada. And guess what: companies don’t even have to request an exemption… decades ago congress passed law allowing UNRESTRICTED oil exports to Canada. Think about that net time you hear them talk about the “ban”: Canada, thanks to a congressional law passed many years ago, is free to import as much US oil as any company here wants to sell them.
And guess what else almost no one else knows: under certain conditions the US govt is already authorized to export some of our SPR oil reserves to Canada
And even that 200 million bbl per year pales in comparison to the 1 BILLION BBLS of EXPORTED refinery products made from US oil every year. So a simple question: what’s the practical difference between exporting 1 billion bbls of US oil per year and exporting the refinery products made from 1 billion bbls of US oil per year?
bug on Thu, 17th Dec 2015 7:39 am
Thanks rock, so to clarify for me, it is all smoke and mirrors and double talk and bs.
Sort of what is normal nowadays from the govt and higher ups and people crying about how people were meanies not to let us export oil. When are the refiners going to cry out that they are being hurt by the exporting and govt should stop it?
I love this show.
rockman on Thu, 17th Dec 2015 8:18 am
bug – The really amazing thing about all the “ban” bullsh*t being tossed is the sources of what I post: its from govt websites and not some radical “think tanks”. The same govt that so many asshole politicians are a part of who are demanding an end to the “ban”. Either their staffs are incredibly stupid/lazy or they understand exactly what the reality is but just want to play the public.
Jugohugo on Fri, 18th Dec 2015 3:58 pm
40 yr ban…… Let me think here.. Tap tap…what happened 40 yrs ago…let me think..ummm. Oh yeah, 1972 the petrodollar was born and i think just maybe, just maybe in 1975 OPEC agreed to sell oil in US currency. Not all of OPEC signed up immediately but Saudi was one of the first, they convinced the rest to sign up cause old US kept sweetening the deal – arms, protection, cheap trades, financial backing, and i think just maybe one of the parts of the deal was the US not ship oil outside its boarders……now with OPEC pumping record amounts, forming ISIS fighting coalitions with such great people in Chad, Sierra Leon, and Turkey the US decides the ban is over. Wonder how OPEC will take this? Good old US tired of Saudi trying to flex muscle and control world commodities. Lifting the ban is a great move, gotta save the petrodollar some how and this is step one. A lot of countries, Russia tops the list – want an end to petrodollar. It won’t happen though.