This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 28, August 21-27, 2005
The Myth of Arroyo’s
Power Crisis
Oil companies have been
overpricing the public in the past years, as they took advantage of automatic
price hikes allowed under a deregulated regime. In a review of pump prices from
2000 to 2004, Ibon Philippines found that oil products have been overpriced by a
total of PhP3.68 per liter.
By Maria Salamat The Arroyo government is
projecting a vigorous can-do attitude vis-à-vis what they call as looming oil
crisis in the Philippines. Scaring the public that it will be more severe than
the 1974 and 1979 oil crisis, President Macapagal-Arroyo is also using the oil
issue to try to stabilize her presidency and twit the ouster moves against her.
She has been calling for “unity” to face the said oil crisis; her press
secretary has said it’s an issue far more important than politics. To address this looming
crisis, Malacañang (the presidential palace) unveiled a set of measures last
week designed to conserve energy, reduce its overall consumption, and exploit
alternative sources of fuel. Macapagal-Arroyo called for a "change of
lifestyle.” She appealed to businesses to reduce oil and electricity
consumption, modify work hours and implement measures in their operations to
"strengthen productivity while saving on energy." She urged the granting of
public transportation franchises to vehicles using alternative, renewable and
indigenous fuels. Her cabinet also lined up
specific measures. The Department of Energy (DoE) is working for the opening of
the first compressed natural gas (CNG) mother-daughter stations and its use by
few buses utilizing CNG. These have been delayed for months, but Energy
Undersecretary Peter Abaya said it will start operation by September this year.
The DoE also plans to push for the establishment of a CNG depot next year to
ensure supply in Metro Manila. In a conference on oil
prices, Abaya stressed the need for it as no one so far wants to invest in a
pipeline which will bring CNG from Batangas to Metro Manila. The DoE is also searching
for foreign investors to fund projects in putting up power plants that use
indigenous energy sources like wind, sun, hydrothermal and geothermal. They're
also studying the possibilities of coal liquefaction. And with the Supreme
Court’s decision on allowing foreign equities in mining, the energy department
is also attracting mining corporations to pursue oil drilling, exploration and
extraction in the Philippines’16 identified petroleum basins. The Department of Finance (DoF),
meanwhile, has lined up several measures like removing the excise tax on diesel,
kerosene and bunker fuel, and slashing import tariffs on petroleum products from
5 percent to 3 percent, except for LPG on which no tariff is imposed. These
would reduce the price of diesel by as much as P1.63 per liter and the pump
price by as much as P0.50 per liter, according to Finance Secretary Margarito
Teves. Still, Energy Secretary
Raphael Lotilla warned the public not to allow a situation where the government
would have to ration gasoline and diesel to them. Energy
measures’ ignored realities All these talks of
conservation and possible rationing are not signaling an imminent global oil
shortage, however. Crude supply is plentiful. Spurred by high oil prices, most
oil-producing countries are cranking up their production. According to Sheikh
Ahmad Fahad Al Sabah, Kuwait's oil minister, "These incremental volumes have led
to global supply exceeding demand over the last two years." At the end of July,
too, crude stocks in the United States were at their highest since 1999. Though some U.S. refineries
are getting bogged down lately by a mismatch in grade of available crude and
what they can refine (they prefer “sweet” crude, not “sour) and from sheer
overwork, and despite so-called threats in Iran, the world is still reportedly
awash in crude. Speculation, according to The Economist, is the main driving
force of the unprecedented oil price hikes. On one estimate, it reported that
$22 billion of net new investment has entered the oil futures market this year,
$8 billion of it flooding in since the end of June. As a result, The Economist
said, forward prices have risen by even more than spot prices. Over the past 18 months,
the world has seen oil prices shoot up from $40 to $50, then to $67 a barrel,
and still, analysts have $70 and beyond in their sights. The biggest winners
here are the oil companies –- the global oil companies and in the Philippines,
the local oil companies which are mostly global oil majors’ subsidiaries and
affiliates. When oil was averaging $50
a barrel in 2004, it was already adjudged as “especially good for oil companies”
by Forbes in its latest report on Global 500 corporations. Profits keep gushing,
exclaimed Forbes, noting how “high oil prices pushed up revenues and earnings of
energy companies.” For example, the Royal
Dutch Shell, despite widely publicized reserve trouble, saw its revenues
increase by 33 percent and profits soar to 46 percent in 2004. Chevron and
Total, which ranked Nos. 11 and 12 respectively in the top Global 500 companies,
saw their revenues grow by 29 percent. Chevron’s profits leapt to an amazing 84
percent. British Petroleum (BP), No. 2 among global corporations, reported that
their profits increased by 50 percent in 2004. Third-ranking ExxonMobil posted
$25.3 billion in profits – a record-breaking amount of money for any global 500
company, according to Forbes. Some of these global oil
giants are in control of the Philippines’ Big Three (Shell, Caltex and Petron),
and even of the newcomers like Total. Royal Dutch Shell controls Pilipinas
Shell, ChevronTexaco owns Caltex Philippines, and Saudi Arabian Oil Company
(Saudi Aramco), which has joint ventures with Royal Dutch Shell and ExxonMobil
in refining and marketing of petroleum products, owns 40 percent of Petron
Corporation. Since these local oil
companies are sourcing their crude oil from their affiliates or parent companies
abroad, they can insulate themselves from the speculative ups and downs of
international market trends in oil. In fact, according to Ibon
Philippines, these oil companies have been overpricing the public in the past
years, as they took advantage of automatic price hikes allowed under a
deregulated regime. In a review of pump prices from 2000 to 2004, Ibon found
that oil products have been overpriced by a total of PhP3.68 per liter.
Consumer and Oil Price
Watch chairman Raul Concepcion, meanwhile, has accused last week major oil
companies Shell and Petron of “overrecovering” 35 centavos per liter of diesel
and 14 centavos per liter of gasoline. These, even as Eastern Petroleum
president Fernando Martinez was announcing that oil companies still have
“under-recoveries of almost P2 for diesel and P3.50 for gasoline”, so price
adjustments of 50 centavos per liter on a weekly basis are to be expected.
The Arroyo government’s
measures to address the oil price hikes are ignoring these issues of “overrecovery.”
In fact, it totally ignores the matter of local oil companies’ pricing, or these
companies’ profitable local operations as a result of their extensive vertical
integration with parent oil majors. Shunning regulation of the oil industry, the
Arroyo administration simply resorts to moral suasion to convince the oil
companies to raise pump prices weekly, in staggered basis, to reflect the
increases in the world market.
Alternative measures The Arroyo government
sounds convinced that, as oft-repeated by Energy Undersecretary Abaya, rising
oil prices are here to stay. In fact, Carlos Alindada, chairman of the
Independent Review Committee on the Oil Deregulation Law, has recommended that
the "DoE should accustom the public that we are now in a regime of high price
increases." The Independent Review Committee has also blamed devaluation and
rising oil prices in the international market as the culprits in RP’s continuous
oil price woes, and not the oil deregulation law. But if the government will
scrap the oil deregulation law, and serve as the central importer of crude oil,
the government can minimize, or eliminate, the local oil companies' practice of
transfer pricing (or artificially jacking up the prices of imported crude oil),
according to Ibon Philippines. The government can also seek out concessionary
sellers of crude oil. Ibon Philippines also calls for developing alternative
energy sources, but in a more systematic and thorough manner. Sen. Franklin Drilon has
also called on the Arroyo administration to regain control of Petron, one of the
Big Three oil companies in the Philippines, so the government could directly
determine and influence pump pricing. All these proposals are
dismissed, though, by the Arroyo government. In the case of oil deregulation
law, its independent review committee has already declared it sound and good for
the country’s oil industry. Asked in an oil conference about the billions of
profits freely being reaped by oil companies, the review committee’s chairman,
Carlos Alindada, replied that “the amount is not the only thing that matters,
but the rate of return.” The DoF has likewise
dismissed Drilon’s proposal for Petron. The looming oil crisis is
shaping up into another likely trigger for Arroyo's ouster. Militants have been
picketing government offices and gas stations, branding the Oil Deregulation Law
as "executioner" of Filipino consumers, and blasting Arroyo for not scrapping
the law and taking charge of local pump pricing. Even as the Arroyo government
contemplates imposing the value added tax on petroleum products, a move that
would drastically hike oil prices further, protest actions are reportedly
gearing up for a transport strike. Even administration Sen.
Joker Arroyo has observed that "while the provincial public could be indifferent
to the impeachment, the national public will be outraged if prices keep going
up.” Which is why even former staunch promoters of the EVAT law have started
describing its potential implementation as “holocaust-like,” disastrous and
“suicidal.” The Arroyo administration
is now angling for emergency powers, similar to strongman Ferdinand Marcos’
Batasang Pambansa 73 which was used during the oil crisis in early 1980s, to
have more teeth in dealing with the looming oil price crisis. Bulatlat © 2004 Bulatlat
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