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Tuesday, May 20, 2008
House action targets OPEC
By H. JOSEF HEBERT
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The House voted Tuesday to let the Justice Department pursue energy antitrust and price fixing cases against members of the OPEC oil cartel, although critics said such attempts would likely be fruitless and could prompt a backlash from oil producers.

The bill, approved 324-84, also would create a special Justice Department task force to investigate energy markets to root out manipulation and unwarranted speculation.

Similar measures are part of a package of Democratic energy proposals being considered in the Senate.

The White House said President Bush would be advised to veto the bill, should it be sent to his desk.

The legislation could "harm U.S. interests abroad, discourage investment in the U.S. economy, potentially limit the availability of gasoline, and possibly further increase fuel prices," the White House said in a statement to lawmakers.

The House passed much the same bill targeting OPEC last year and the Senate embraced it, only to see the provision subsequently taken out of a broader energy bill. The legislation passed Tuesday would remove the current prohibition against pursuing antitrust actions against a sovereign country.

Many energy experts and legal scholars doubt that such an enforcement action would be successful.

But Rep. Steve Kagen, D-Wis., chief sponsor of the anti-OPEC bill, contended it's time to stand up to the international oil cartel that openly establishes production limits among member countries to influence prices. Recently OPEC has refused to increase production, although oil prices have reached record levels, nearing $130 a barrel as the House voted Tuesday. OPEC leaders argue that there's plenty of oil and the high prices are not the result of a supply shortage.

Separately, three senators sent a letter to Bush urging him to create a task force at Justice to investigate possible fraud and manipulation in oil and gasoline markets. The White House, opposing the House-passed bill, said such a task force isn't needed because the Federal Trade Commission already deals with such matters. Continued...

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