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Statement-Continued

Shillito, Hon. Barry J., Assistant Secretary of Defense (Installations
and Logistics) ---

Capital cost of 45 days additional storage in free world countries.
Biographical sketches of:

Barry James Shillito, Paul H. Riley, and Richard T.
Mathews___.

Soule, Arthur T., president, Independent Fuel Terminal Operators
Association....

Table.-Crude yields of U.S. refineries.

Table.-Estimated domestic middle distillate production_
Members of Independent Fuel Terminal Operators Association__
Attachment B:

Attachment C:

Page

81

88

97

704

706

707

709

Comments on appendix L to task force report‒‒‒‒‒

709

Comments on point No. 15 of the appendix to Secretary
Schultz's statement to the Senate subcommittee, March 3,
1970_

710

Attachment D:

711

Fact sheet..

Southern California Edison Co., presented by Alan Nedry-
Appendix A.-Applicable air pollution laws and regulations,
Health and Safety Code of the State of California__.
Appendix B.-Southern California Edison Co., electric produc-
tion and energy sources, 1966-75 and chart_-

414

416

421

Stiles, Stanford G., vice president, transportation and supplies, Shell
Oil Co..

Appendix C.-Southern California Edison Co., low sulfur fuel oil
supply and inventory, 1970-71 plus charts---

421

700

Stroock, Thomas F., chairman, Wyoming Higher Education Council Swearingen, John E., chairman of the board, Standard Oil Co. (Indiana).

Comparison of projections-1980 (table)

True, H. A. (Dave), Jr., independent oil operator, Casper, Wyo...-
Questions asked by Mr. Wold and answers received from Mr.
True.

Tunnell, Byron, member, Railroad Commission of Texas, Austin, Tex-
Wall, William E., vice president, public affairs, Consolidated Édison
Co. of New York, Inc.--

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Winger, John G., vice president, the Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A.,
New York, N.Y.

466

Wold, Hon. John S., a Representative in Congress from the State of
Wyoming..

3,573, 608

Wyoming Geological Association, Casper, Wyo.-
Wyoming Oil Industry Committee, Casper, Wyo...

610

694

Letters:

Arnold, Carl F., American Petroleum Institute, to Hon. Wayne N.
Aspinall, dated March 12, 1970-----

692

Boren, David L., State representative, Oklahoma, to Hon. Wayne
Aspinall, dated April 13, 1970 plus Resolution No. 1073..
Byrd, Richard C., Anderson, Byrd, Richeson & Jones, Ottawa,
Kans., to W. L. Shafer, dated May 8, 1970 (plus additional infor-
mation)_

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Amazon Petroleum Corp. v. Railroad Commission of Texas, 5 Fed.
Supp. 633 (1934).

496

Federal Power Commission, Lawrence J. O'Connor, Jr., John A.
Carver, Jr., Carl E. Bagge, and Albert B. Brooke, Jr., Commis-
sioners, to Hon. Ed Edmondson, dated May 4, 1970.......
Federal Power Commission additional comments to the Oil Import
Task Force__

210

211

Appendix A.-FPC staff estimates of the elasticity of the demand
for natural gas with respect to changes in fuel oil prices - - -
Estimated reduction in gas consumption (table) -

217

217

Appendix B.-Electric utility, fossil fuel requirements (table) -
Appendix C.-Electric utility-primary energy requirements

218

(table).

218

Letters-Continued

Gill, Hon. Thomas P., Lieutenant Governor, State of Hawaii, to
Hon. Ed Edmondson, dated March 20, 1970_.

Griffith, Maurice F., Natrona County High School District and
School District No. 2, Casper, Wyo., to Hon. John Wold, dated
March 5, 1970__

Havdahl, B. G., executive director, Montana Petroleum Association,
Billings, Mont., to Representative Ed Edmondson, dated April 3,
1970 (plus table)..

Table.-Taxable values, oil-producing counties, Montana, 1968-
69 oil evaluations___

Hummel, Jack L., Marathon Oil Co., Denver Research Center, Little-
ton, Colo., to Hon. John S. Wold, dated April 1, 1970___
Ikard, Frank N., American Petroleum Institute, to Mr. Lewis Berg-
man, editor, New York Times Sunday Magazine, dated March 9,
1970___.

Page

676

6

736

737

609

692

Lengnick, Lewis W., Hawaiian Electric Co., Inc., Honolulu, Hawaii,
to Hon. Wayne N. Aspinall, dated March 10, 1970.-
Litman, E. N., ECHO Oil Corp., to Congressman John S. Wold,
dated April 9, 1970-

691

608

Mink, Hon. Patsy T., to Hon. Wayne N. Aspinall, dated March 17, 1970_

685

6

Moore, Eddie, president, Wyoming Wool Growers Association, to
Hon. Richard M. Nixon, dated February 24, 1970 (plus resolution).
Norman, John E., president, Wyoming Association of Petroleum
Landmen, Casper, Wyo., to Hon. John S. Wold, dated March 9,
1970...

Schwinn, Tom L., Kansas Independent Oil & Gas Association, Wichita,
Kans., to Hon. Ed Edmondson, dated March 19, 1970 (plus reso-
lution)_

White, Vincent L., Casper, Wyo., to Representative John Wold, dated March 10, 1970.

Wilder, Richard, president, Wyoming Retail Merchants Association, Casper, Wyo., to Hon. John S. Wold, dated March 20, 1970 (plus table).

Table.-Oil industry valuations, 1969_.

Winger, John G., the Chase Manhattan Bank, National Association,
to Hon. Ed Edmondson, dated April 13, 1970 (plus table).
Table.-Exploration and development expense, United States--
Wolfe, P. J., Mobil Oil Co., to Hon. Ed Edmondson, dated April 22,
1970 (plus statement).

5

667

575

576

512

512

713

Additional information:

Kansas Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 61...

668

Oklahoma enrolled House Concurrent Resolution No. 1037, dated
January 12, 1970-

668

Oklahoma enrolled Resolution No. 1073, dated March 26, 1970. Wyoming Wool Growers Association resolution adopted February 20, 1970...

581

6

OIL IMPORT CONTROLS

MONDAY, MARCH 9, 1970

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES,

SUBCOMMITTEE ON MINES AND MINING OF THE
COMMITTEE ON INTERIOR AND INSULAR AFFAIRS,

Washington, D.C. The subcommittee met, pursuant to call, at 10 a.m., in room 1324, Longworth House Office Building, Hon. Éd Edmondson (chairman of the subcommittee) presiding.

Mr. EDMONDSON. The Subcommittee on Mines and Mining will come to order.

This morning is the first of a series of hearings which will be held by the subcommittee to examine recent executive actions with regard to the oil-import quota program.

I might say initially that we are very pleased to have with us this morning as our first witness on behalf of the administration, the Hon. George Lincoln, director of the Office of Emergency Preparedness, who is newly named the chairman of a Presidentially designated Oil Policy Committee. I know that the members of the committee are going to be extremely interested in the testimony which General Lincoln gives us here this morning.

This subcommittee has jurisdiction over the mines and mining industry of the United States. We are always concerned about anything that appears to affect the basic health and viability of this major industry. We have for quite some time taken an interest in the operation of the oil import control program. I think the hearings by this committee go back to the 1950's on this subject, and as one member of the subcommittee, I am deeply and very, very seriously disturbed by press reports that have reached the committee indicating that a report was impending from a Presidential Cabinet task force which was going to recommend the scrapping of the mandatory oil import program and the substitution of a totally new approach to the problem of oil import controls, an approach which was widely publicized as one that would confer great benefits upon the American consumer but which has as its announced objective the depressing by a very substantial amount the market price on crude oil in the United States. To my knowledge, this is the first instance in which any executive agency has ever proposed the use of a tariff plan to depress substantially the price of a domestically produced product of major importance, and in the process confer a very significant benefit upon a foreign industry and foreign investors.

The committee undertook to schedule hearings upon this report as soon as information that it was before the President came out. It initially scheduled hearings in February and was informed that the

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members of the Presidential group would not be available at that time for questioning and so the hearings were rescheduled for March 9 and 10.

I have read hurriedly, I must confess, the complete report of the oil import question, and I find much in it that is in many ways a repetition of some of the findings of this subcommittee in hearings that we have held on the administration of the oil import control program.

I also find in it much that I think is very, very highly debatable in the way of conclusions that have been reached and it is my overall judgment that it is a report that will require a very searching examination by the committees of Congress that have jurisdiction on this subject.

I hope that these hearings serve to provide a forum for that examination and I hope that we can have frank testimony from the administration witnesses who will be speaking to the points in this report.

I personally believe the issue that is before this subcommittee is an issue of life and death for a great American industry and for literally tens of thousands of American workmen who are involved in that industry and literally millions of Americans who have a stake in continuing to have a strong and viable domestic petroleum industry. I yield at this time to the chairman of the committee.

Mr. ASPINALL. Mr. Chairman, I, of course, find myself in agreement with the position that you have taken.

Mr. Chairman, and members of the committee, I want to make a brief statement regarding this committee's interest in the matter of minerals in general and oil imports in particular. I also want to refer to previous committee hearings, held during 1968 and earlier, as the chairman has already done on the general topic of domestic and foreign oil supplies.

The committee's interest in oil imports came about as a result of our responsibility for the stability and well-being of the domestic mining and minerals industry, of which petroleum and other energy fuels are an important part. To the extent that a change in the import program has an impact on the domestic industry and its ability to produce minerals in time of war or peace, we have an interest and must assume our responsibility. In many respects our responsibility is oversight; nevertheless, this committee does have a responsibility for the well-being of the domestic mining industry and we shall exercise that responsibility without infringing upon the more direct legislative responsibility of other committees.

The consideration of oil import by this committee is not a new matter, as the chairman has stated. During the last Congress we held extensive hearings on the mandatory oil import program and issued a report on our findings and recommendations. We found that the mandatory oil import program had many deficiencies. We also found that most of these deficiencies were not the fault of the basic program, which was founded upon national security needs, but that they were deficiencies in administration and because of the use of the program to serve purposes other than national security needs. Exceptions became the rule. The program was used as a means of stimulating local economies, to establish foreign trade zones and to relieve individual and

many uses other than national security detracted from its effectiveness. There was no other alternative. It was my position 2 years ago, and it is my position today that if a meaningful program is to be continued, it is imperative that a clear and definite policy be established under which the domestic petroleum industry and all other interested parties are fully informed as to the ground rules and the future of the program. If national security is of paramount consideration, together with the preservation of the domestic petroleum industry, then the program should be used for that purpose. If considerations other than national security are to be given equal or greater weight, whether these be hardship cases, price control, or temporary shortage or whatnot, then in fairness and equity to all, these should be spelled out, and defined for all to know and all to follow.

If these hearings accomplish nothing else I hope they can clarify the future of this program. How will it be used and for what purpose in the days ahead?

These hearings are timely as the President has recently made available the report of the Cabinet Task Force on Oil Import Control. He has also established a new Oil Policy Committee. I am sure that members of this Committee will be interested in learning some of the thinking that went into the Cabinet task force report and will also be interested in the plans of the recently established Oil Policy Committee. I want to mention that originally we had scheduled these hearings for February 16 and 17. However, as the Cabinet task force report had not then been submitted to the President, they were rescheduled at this time.

Now I would like to say something else. This committee is not representing any influence, any operation, or any particular issue that is involved in this program. We are looking at this as a national security proposition or whatever it is supposed to be, and not sitting here trying to make headlines, trying to pull somebody's irons out of the fire and reheat them, or anything at all like that. We want the facts. By some means or other, we will get them sooner or later, and I would suggest to those who are going to testify today that they give us the facts as they know them. If they do not have them, be honest and say so, and get them to us later.

Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.

Mr. EDMONDSON. Does the gentleman from California care to make a statement at this time?

Mr. HOSMER. Not at this time.

Mr. EDMONDSON. Any other members care to make a statement?
Mr. WOLD. Mr. Chairman.

Mr. EDMONDSON. Mr. Wold.

STATEMENT OF HON. JOHN S. WOLD, A REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF WYOMING

Mr. WOLD. First of all, I would take this opportunity to commend my colleague, the chairman of this subcommittee, for taking the initiative in calling these hearings so the petroleum industry and the oil producing States can have the opportunity to present their views

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