[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 89 (Tuesday, June 15, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Page S4934]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BIG OIL
Mr. FEINGOLD. Mr. President, the explosion on the Deepwater Horizon
oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico was a tragedy for the workers killed and
their families. It has also become an economic disaster for the people
of the gulf coast and an unparalleled environmental disaster for our
Nation. As we work to stop and clean up the spill, we also need to end
the coziness between big oil and the Federal agencies that regulate the
industry. That chummy relationship has shielded big oil from being held
accountable for years, and it is high time we make sure that government
is cracking down on, not cozying up to, the oil companies.
As I discussed a few days ago at a Judiciary Committee hearing
examining liability issues related to the BP oilspill, Congress should
take action right away to deter wrongdoing and encourage the kind of
responsible, careful drilling we need. One way to do that is to
eliminate big oil's liability cap for natural resources and economic
damage caused by oilspills, such as the loss of travel and tourism
revenue that businesses across the gulf are experiencing. I am a
cosponsor of Senator Menendez's legislation to do just that. The
oilspill in the gulf has made it painfully clear that this liability
cap is far too low. The existing $75 million liability cap is less than
1 day's worth of profits for BP, which earned almost $6 billion in
profits in the first quarter of this year.
But that must be just the beginning of a comprehensive effort to
change the way government approaches big oil. For far too long, the oil
industry has gotten special treatment, in large part because it is one
of the wealthiest, most powerful special interests in Washington. The
oil and gas industry gave $35 million in political donations in the
last Presidential election cycle, and $\1/4\ billion in donations over
the last 20 years. One of the reasons I have worked to curb the
influence of money in politics for so many years is because of the
undue influence of big oil.
Those donations have contributed to the oil industry's access to
Congress and to the agencies that are supposed to regulate oil
exploration and production. It is no coincidence that the oil industry
has received unjustified tax breaks and other favorable treatment for
years. That has to change, and we can start by getting rid of taxpayer-
funded giveaways for the oil and gas industry, as I have proposed in my
Control Spending Now Act, legislation to cut the deficit by about $\1/
2\ trillion over 10 years. Part of that bill would end a taxpayer
subsidy for the processing of oil company permits. I also support
efforts to repeal over $35 billion in oil and gas tax breaks targeted
by President Obama for elimination. As we seek to rein in record
deficits, it is time to end these unjustified giveaways to an industry
that doesn't need taxpayer support.
Congress must also make sure that regulators aren't simply acting as
rubberstamps for whatever the oil industry wants. Unfortunately, too
often the Federal Government ends up listening more to the powerful
industries it is supposed to be regulating than to the consumers it is
supposed to be protecting. Whether it is Wall Street or big oil that is
calling the shots, the result is rarely good for my constituents in
Wisconsin.
Another critical way to hold big oil accountable is to pass my ``Use
It or Lose It'' legislation to ensure oil companies are diligently
exploring the Federal leases they currently have, and not sitting on
those leases in an effort to drive up gas prices. We should also
restore the Clean Water Act, CWA, to its full strength. The CWA is the
main statute used to prosecute polluters who dump oil into waters of
the United States, and it is never been more important to ensure that
polluters are held accountable for the damage they do to our economy
and our environment.
Congress has the responsibility to look ahead and do what it takes to
prevent a disaster like the one in the gulf from happening again. We
have to come at this issue from all sides to make sure that BP is held
accountable for the current spill, that we work to prevent future
spills with proper regulations, and that we upend the culture that
provides tax breaks and special treatment for big oil in the first
place. Working to stop and clean up the spill in the gulf is not
enough. Congress has to clean up the cozy Washington culture that
favors big corporations over the needs of American people, and over the
protection of our economy and our air and water.
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