US politicians up windfall tax rhetoric ante
Surging downstream profits add fuel to the fire, but the spectre of demand destruction lurks
Calls for a windfall tax on US oil and gas companies just notched up another gear after major refiners Marathon Petroleum, Valero, Phillips 66 and PBF Energy posted more than $15bn in combined earnings across Q2, adding to the $29.5bn reported by integrated majors Chevron and ExxonMobil over the same quarter. Politicians including Democratic senator Bernie Sanders were quick to highlight billions of dollars planned in stock buybacks this year, while soaring fuel prices have left President Joe Biden fuming. Clashes with the downstream have rumbled on for months, despite the sector running at near 100pc utilisation and reduced US refining capacity partially accelerated by the pandemic-driven d
Also in this section
18 December 2024
The energy transition will not succeed without a reliable baseload, but the world risks a shortfall unless more money goes into gas
18 December 2024
The December/January issue of Petroleum Economist is out now!
17 December 2024
Structurally lower GDP growth and the need for a different economic model will contribute to a significant slowdown
17 December 2024
Policymakers and stakeholders must work together to develop a stable and predictable fiscal regime that prioritises the country’s energy security and economy