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Gov’t Subsidizes Deepwater Drilling With Big Tax Breaks

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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-26-10 05:40 AM
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Gov’t Subsidizes Deepwater Drilling With Big Tax Breaks
http://www.propublica.org/ion/blog/item/oil-companies-still-get-billions-in-incentives-to-drill-in-deep-water

Gov’t Subsidizes Deepwater Drilling With Big Tax Breaks
by Marian Wang, ProPublica - May 25, 2010 5:07 pm EDT


By now there’s little debate that the technology used to obtain oil in deeper waters was developed and rapidly put into use before safety technology could keep up <1>. As we’ve noted, that’s a development that regulators allowed, despite their concerns.

But the expansion of deepwater drilling wasn’t solely a result of industry rushing into deeper waters and toward greater profit. According to the Los Angeles Times, it was also encouraged by the federal government, which gave oil companies tens of billions <2> in tax breaks, subsidies, and royalty relief. Many of these incentives have outlasted their initial purpose, according to the Times <3>:

The royalty waiver program was established by Congress in 1995, when oil was selling for about $18 a barrel and drilling in deep water was seen as unprofitable without a subsidy. Today, oil sells for about $70 a barrel, but the subsidy continues.

... Congress had originally intended to provide royalty relief only when oil prices were especially low. But an Interior Department error in the drafting of contracts in the 1990s led the industry to argue against pegging the relief to oil prices.


The oil industry argues that government subsidies and tax breaks for deepwater drilling have opened up domestic oil production and created jobs. This continued benefit to the industry, however, has long been flagged by watchdogs as a direct loss to taxpayers.

A March 2007 report <4> by the Government Accountability Office noted that “deep water regions are particularly costly to explore and develop,” but “as production from these leases has grown, and as oil and gas prices have risen dramatically in recent years, serious questions have been raised about the extent to which royalty relief has been in the interest of taxpayers.”

Senate lawmakers introduced a bill to close some of the tax loopholes enjoyed by the oil industry, according to the L.A. Times. Given that robust lobbying by industry has defeated previous efforts to curtail these incentives, it remains unclear whether the latest attempt will see any success.
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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-26-10 05:42 AM
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1. #@*&^%$#!
:argh:
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Hannah Bell Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-26-10 05:43 AM
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2. I believe if you look at a lot of policies that most of the public finds undesirable, you'll
find they're subsidized with tax breaks.

Like, for example, offshoring jobs & corporate headquarters.

These days it seems corps get tax breaks for anything they decide to do.
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Scuba Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-26-10 05:57 AM
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3. They need a break, they're only making billions
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