Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Congress wants to increase the tax from 8 cents to 32 cents for a barrel of oil!

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Congress wants to increase the tax from 8 cents to 32 cents for a barrel of oil!

    Would your energy bills, food, gasoline, cost of raw materials to build products increase, stay the same or decrease? Would this increase of 300% tax on oil bring the economy to a halt, no change, slow the economic recovery or speed up the economic recovery?

    Syndicated news and opinion website providing continuously updated headlines to top news and analysis sources.


    sunrise

    In print;



    Oil tax increase would help pay to clean up spills
    May 24 04:20 PM US/Eastern
    By STEPHEN OHLEMACHER
    Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON (AP) - Responding to the massive BP oil spill, Congress is getting ready to quadruple—to 32 cents a barrel—a tax on oil used to help finance cleanups. The increase would raise nearly $11 billion over the next decade. The tax is levied on oil produced in the U.S. or imported from foreign countries. The revenue goes to a fund managed by the Coast Guard to help pay to clean up spills in waterways, such as the Gulf of Mexico.
    The tax increase is part of a larger bill that has grown into a nearly $200 billion grab bag of unfinished business that lawmakers hope to complete before Memorial Day. The key provisions are a one-year extension of about 50 popular tax breaks that expired at the end of last year, and expanded unemployment benefits, including subsidies for health insurance, through the end of the year.
    The House could vote on the bill as early as Tuesday. Senate leaders hope to complete work on it before Congress goes on a weeklong break next week.
    Lawmakers want to increase the current 8-cent-a-barrel tax on oil to make sure there is enough money available to respond to oil spills. At least 6 million gallons of crude have spewed into the Gulf of Mexico since a drilling rig exploded April 20 off the Louisiana coast.
    President Barack Obama and congressional leaders have said they expect BP to foot the bill for the cleanup.
    "Taxpayers will not pick up the tab," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said Monday.
    BP executives told Congress last week they would pay "all legitimate claims" for damages. But the government needs upfront money to respond to spills, as well as money to pay for cleanups when the responsible party is unable to pay, or is unknown. Money spent from the fund can later be recovered from the company responsible for the spill.
    The Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund has about $1.5 billion available. Under current law, only $1 billion can be spent from the fund on a single incident. The bill would increase the spending limit to $5 billion.
    The U.S. Chamber of Commerce said the tax increase was hastily put together, without adequate study, to help pay for an unrelated bill. The tax increase was unveiled Thursday, without any congressional hearings to study its impact.
    Even with the tax increases, the bill is projected to add $134 billion to the federal budget deficit.
    "I have seen no analysis on how this would impact energy security, how this would impact domestic production, how this would impact the overall economics in the country," said Christopher Guith, vice president of the chamber's energy institute. "There hasn't been any sort of deliberation on this."
    The American Petroleum Institute has not taken a position on the tax increase, though a spokeswoman said Congress should study the ramifications before acting.
    "We understand we need to have an insurance policy in order to cover people in the event of a spill," said the spokeswoman, Cathy Landry. "At the same time we need to have a vital oil and gas industry."
    The bill does not address a federal law that caps liability at $75 million for economic damages beyond direct cleanup costs. Democratic Senators tried to pass a bill last week that would have increased the cap to $10 billion, but they were blocked by Republicans.
    The oil industry says such a high cap would make it difficult, if not impossible, to insure oil rigs.
    BP said Monday its costs for responding to the spill had grown to about $760 million.
    ___
    The bill is H.R. 4213
    Congress: http://thomas.loc.gov

    Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
    Last edited by sunrise; 05-24-2010, 06:58 PM.

  • #2
    OK, lets put a monetary value on this proposed tax. Lets assume that 20 million barrels of oil is used per day in the US. I heard this figure on the radio. The tax per day generated is

    20,000,000 barrels of oil used per day x 0.32 cents per barrel = $ 6,400,000.00 tax per day;

    $ 6,400,000.00 per day x 365 days in the year = $2,336,000,000.00 tax per year;

    that is 2.3 billion US tax dollars collected per year by the US government!

    sunrise

    Home Depot annual earnings after taxes is 2.62 billion dollars from 2009 annual report.
    Last edited by sunrise; 05-26-2010, 02:09 PM. Reason: added Home Depot annual earnings

    Comment

    Working...
    X