Zürcher Nachrichten - Biden walks tightrope between need for oil and push to go green

EUR -
AED 3.977584
AFN 72.97331
ALL 98.471483
AMD 418.201653
ANG 1.947741
AOA 987.091608
ARS 1069.655368
AUD 1.646242
AWG 1.949276
AZN 1.840739
BAM 1.957212
BBD 2.182094
BDT 129.143152
BGN 1.954485
BHD 0.40824
BIF 3141.094707
BMD 1.082931
BND 1.432446
BOB 7.467386
BRL 6.240496
BSD 1.080689
BTN 90.843526
BWP 14.506732
BYN 3.536751
BYR 21225.450121
BZD 2.178391
CAD 1.507916
CDF 3151.329687
CHF 0.939378
CLF 0.037622
CLP 1038.09406
CNY 7.713394
CNH 7.709706
COP 4723.756412
CRC 554.797619
CUC 1.082931
CUP 28.697675
CVE 110.344593
CZK 25.387145
DJF 192.450594
DKK 7.461363
DOP 65.08785
DZD 144.589697
EGP 52.781738
ERN 16.243967
ETB 129.142344
FJD 2.469735
FKP 0.828625
GBP 0.834929
GEL 2.956749
GGP 0.828625
GHS 17.561667
GIP 0.828625
GMD 75.267848
GNF 9320.809259
GTQ 8.354026
GYD 226.10309
HKD 8.415793
HNL 27.261916
HRK 7.460345
HTG 142.424047
HUF 408.167823
IDR 16955.398534
ILS 4.018379
IMP 0.828625
INR 91.064166
IQD 1415.734256
IRR 45596.815328
ISK 148.535001
JEP 0.828625
JMD 170.972535
JOD 0.768122
JPY 165.738814
KES 139.697818
KGS 92.912751
KHR 4393.209432
KMF 493.221338
KPW 974.637772
KRW 1493.568127
KWD 0.331994
KYD 0.900658
KZT 529.777025
LAK 23692.089332
LBP 96831.145235
LKR 317.368921
LRD 207.503507
LSL 19.141684
LTL 3.197614
LVL 0.655054
LYD 5.216811
MAD 10.66149
MDL 19.371884
MGA 4995.695706
MKD 61.647512
MMK 3517.318063
MNT 3679.800005
MOP 8.648238
MRU 42.730822
MUR 49.934159
MVR 16.633359
MWK 1873.986334
MXN 21.805874
MYR 4.742197
MZN 69.210057
NAD 19.141684
NGN 1777.707392
NIO 39.769053
NOK 11.869548
NPR 145.351185
NZD 1.809573
OMR 0.416925
PAB 1.08068
PEN 4.067772
PGK 4.328162
PHP 63.051476
PKR 300.167099
PLN 4.342051
PYG 8603.285077
QAR 3.940242
RON 4.975657
RSD 117.071326
RUB 105.070444
RWF 1469.753361
SAR 4.06699
SBD 9.024652
SCR 14.734655
SDG 651.385063
SEK 11.556667
SGD 1.433535
SHP 0.828625
SLE 24.586475
SLL 22708.520838
SOS 617.64266
SRD 37.174834
STD 22414.487933
SVC 9.455908
SYP 2720.897239
SZL 19.146899
THB 36.570267
TJS 11.509502
TMT 3.790259
TND 3.347515
TOP 2.536337
TRY 37.11639
TTD 7.324283
TWD 34.63582
TZS 2945.573002
UAH 44.699568
UGX 3960.857004
USD 1.082931
UYU 44.972439
UZS 13816.96631
VEF 3922974.904603
VES 45.748164
VND 27392.742898
VUV 128.567792
WST 3.033489
XAF 656.427457
XAG 0.032104
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.926675
XDR 0.812301
XOF 656.436556
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.08476
ZAR 19.111081
ZMK 9747.674879
ZMW 28.774021
ZWL 348.703382
  • CMSC

    -0.1600

    24.57

    -0.65%

  • RYCEF

    0.0400

    7.25

    +0.55%

  • SCS

    -0.3800

    12.21

    -3.11%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.84

    -0.16%

  • RBGPF

    62.3500

    62.35

    +100%

  • RIO

    0.4000

    66.58

    +0.6%

  • VOD

    -0.2600

    9.28

    -2.8%

  • NGG

    -0.8800

    65.12

    -1.35%

  • AZN

    -0.7900

    75.22

    -1.05%

  • GSK

    0.2900

    38.17

    +0.76%

  • BCC

    -6.9800

    131.64

    -5.3%

  • JRI

    -0.0900

    12.98

    -0.69%

  • RELX

    -0.2500

    47.91

    -0.52%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    32.46

    -0.71%

  • BTI

    -0.4500

    34.46

    -1.31%

  • BP

    -1.6900

    29.36

    -5.76%

Biden walks tightrope between need for oil and push to go green
Biden walks tightrope between need for oil and push to go green

Biden walks tightrope between need for oil and push to go green

With the war in Ukraine causing oil prices to soar, US President Joe Biden's administration is treading a fine line between staying true to its commitment to clean energy, while seeking to ramp up petroleum production.

Text size:

Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm called on oil producers to open the taps to deal with the immediate crisis, but said that does not undermine the longer term goal of weaning the country off fossil fuels.

"We can walk and chew gum at the same time," said on Wednesday at the CERAWeek energy conference in Houston.

Industry participants bristled at the comment, saying the government's energy and environmental policies had been creating issues for months before Russia's invasion of Ukraine caused the most-recent surge in prices.

"The Biden administration continues to blame everybody but themselves for the increase in gasoline prices," said Phil Flynn, oil market analyst for Price Futures Group.

"They were blaming supply chains issues and now they're conveniently blaming (Russian President) Vladimir Putin," despite steps like canceling permits for the controversial Keystone XL Pipeline and drilling moratoriums on federal land, he said.

However, the White House has stressed that many of the permits already issued to oil companies have been left idle.

According to the Center for Biological Diversity, the Biden administration approved 3,557 oil and gas permits on federal lands in 2021, "far outpacing the (former president Donald) Trump administration's first-year total of 2,658."

Gasoline prices have leapt to heights not seen since the 2008 global financial crisis, with the national average hitting $4.32 a gallon on Thursday, about $1 higher than before the invasion of Ukraine.

Biden last week ordered the release of 30 million barrels from the strategic petroleum reserve in an attempt to nudge prices lower.

- Stagecoach, not FedEx -

Granholm said the country is on a "war footing," which justified the need to boost supply to lower prices even while reaffirming Washington's commitment to renewables.

"We're serious about decarbonizing while providing reliable energy that doesn't depend on foreign adversaries," she said.

But critics continue to hammer Biden's policies, including efforts to secure alternate sources to replace oil from Russia.

"This administration wants to ramp up energy imports from Iran and Venezuela: That is the world's largest state sponsor of terror and a thuggish South America dictator, respectively," Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said Tuesday.

"They would rather buy from these people than buy from Texas, Alaska, and Pennsylvania."

The United States is the world's largest oil producer and a net exporter thanks to the development of shale gas, but production has not yet returned to levels seen prior to the Covid-19 pandemic, which sharply curtailed demand.

However, government policies do not fully explain the hurdles to ramping up output.

Experts and industry executives caution that getting back to full speed, in particular the reopening of shale gas exploitations, cannot happen overnight.

"It just takes time," said oil market specialist Andy Lipow, noting that oil rig counts have been on the rise, climbing to 638 from 397 a year ago.

"The public wants FedEx overnight delivery. It's more like the stagecoach," he said.

Like many industries, oil companies also are facing a shortage of skilled labor.

"We are in a really dire situation," Occidental Petroleum CEO Vicki Hollub said at the CERAWeek conference, adding that supply chain challenges "makes any kind of attempt to grow now and at a rapid pace, very, very difficult."

- 'Lining their own pockets' -

Environmental groups say the crisis underscores the need to accelerate the green energy transformation. They have also denounced oil companies for raking in massive profits.

New analysis released Thursday by Friends of the Earth and BailoutWatch shows that just five "Big Oil CEOs" have sold millions of dollars worth of shares, profiting a combined total of almost $99 million in recent weeks.

"The CEOs of these companies have been caught cashing in on war," Lukas Ross, a program manager for Friends of the Earth, said in a statement.

Christopher Kuveke of BailoutWatch said the study "makes it clear that no matter how much they groan about the Biden Administration's environmental policies and geopolitics, their focus remains entirely on lining their own pockets."

M.Hug--NZN