CBO report says consumers would benefit from repeal of crude oil export ban December 10, 2014

George Baker, executive director of the Producers for American Crude Oil Exports (PACE) coalition, has commented in response to a new report by the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO), which concludes that American consumers would benefit from repeal of the crude oil export ban.

“The Congressional Budget Office now joins a long list of independent and government analysts who have concluded that repealing the crude oil export ban will benefit American consumers by lowering gasoline prices,” Baker said. “This conclusion, also drawn by, among others, the Brookings Institution and the Government Accountability Office (GAO), merely reflects the reality of how US gasoline prices are determined. As the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) has shown, they are determined by supply and demand in global crude oil markets. Repeal of the ban will encourage more US production, adding to global oil supplies, which will help apply downward pressure on gasoline prices.

“As the conversation about exports progresses in Congress, we hope policymakers will consider the expert and complimentary conclusions of the CBO, GAO, and EIA studies, demonstrating how repealing the crude oil export ban will help consumers at the pump, as well as workers and the overall US economy, as it will create and protect jobs, spark innovation, strengthen national security, and allow domestic oil and gas producers to compete in the global marketplace.”

via CBO report says consumers would benefit from repeal of crude oil export ban – Oil & Gas Financial Journal.