MEC&F Expert Engineers : If You Pay Enough Money to Business Consultants, They Will Say Whatever You Want: Consulting Group: U.S. Should Halt 'Outdated' Oil Export Ban

Sunday, June 14, 2015

If You Pay Enough Money to Business Consultants, They Will Say Whatever You Want: Consulting Group: U.S. Should Halt 'Outdated' Oil Export Ban


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U.S. Should Halt 'Outdated' Oil Export Ban

Published in Oil Industry News on Saturday, 13 June 2015


If You Pay Enough Money to Business Consultants, They Will Say Whatever You Want.  A group of these hired snake oil salepeople has come up with another article to sell our oil and gas abroad, creating the risk of higher energy prices.  What a bunch of crooks these people are.  Here is what these people are up to, along with the Republican crooks.
 
The United States must lift an "outdated" ban on oil exports to take full economic and geopolitical advantage of its hydraulic fracturing boom, according to a study by Harvard Business School and Boston Consulting Group released on Wednesday.

Lifting the 40 year-old ban imposed after the Arab oil embargo and easing restrictions on liquefied natural gas export terminals would add $23 billion to the economy by 2030, create tens of thousands of jobs, and provide the United States with additional clout overseas, the paper said.

"Our energy resources have given the U.S. important new diplomatic tools that can aid allies and counteract the ability of unfriendly countries to use oil and gas access to achieve political aims," according to the research authored by Harvard Business School Professor Michael Porter and Boston Consulting Group’s David Gee and Gregory Pope.

"Today, the ban on crude exports ... is reducing market opportunities for producers and reducing U.S. growth, with no clear offsetting benefits for America or Americans," said the study, which outlined several steps the country should take to fully benefit from the fracking boom.

The call comes during intensifying debate in Washington on whether to reverse the oil export ban after Republicans introduced bills in both the House and the Senate in recent months. Oil producers eager to ship to markets in Asia and Europe say the ban has led to a glut of U.S. sweet crude that could eventually choke the domestic drilling boom. Some Democrats have been cool to the idea, citing concerns that exports would raise domestic energy prices.

The rise of fracking technology, which involves pumping water, sand and chemicals into a well to extract oil or gas, has helped lift U.S. production of natural gas by 35 percent since 2005 and oil by 45 percent since 2010.

The Harvard paper said fracking now contributes about $430 billion to annual U.S. gross domestic product and supports more than 2.7 million jobs. It called the industry "perhaps the largest single opportunity to change America’s competitiveness."

It said, however, that the oil industry and regulators needed to work hard to counter weak public support for fracking, mainly by addressing concerns about potential air and water pollution, and the practice's links to earthquakes.

A report by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency this month said fracking had not led to widespread pollution of drinking water, but it added that some drilling activities could cause health risks.

It takes years to realize the health problems and damages to our water resources from these industrial activities.  You can open so many holes in the ground without creating a widespread problem.  As more drilling holes are created and more land is contaminated, the problem will be intensified.

These studies of these hired crooks ignore the deaths caused by traffic accidents related to fracking,   they ignore the respiratory illnesses to the workers, they ignore the massive nuisance issues, and so on.  

It is simply not just a water pollution argument against fracking.  All this technology was able to be become economically feasible only because of the extremely low interest rates and the cheap financing these people received from Wall Street.  Their articles are only an attempt to recover their significant financial losses from the reduction in oil prices.
Source: www.reuters.com