Latest News

United States Democrats advise antitrust regulator to probe oil, gas mergers

Nearly 50 Democrats in the U.S. Congress on Wednesday urged the Federal Trade Commission to probe oil and gas business deals and broaden present investigations to protect consumers and market competition.

The market went on a $250 billion purchasing spree in 2023, benefiting from business' high stock prices to protect lower-cost reserves. Exxon Mobil Chevron Corp, and Occidental Petroleum made acquisitions worth an overall of $135 billion in 2023.

The trend has continued this year with offers such as Chesapeake Energy concurring in January to purchase Southwestern Energy, a $7.4 billion deal that will make it the largest independent U.S. gas manufacturer.

If a little group of dominant firms is allowed to control this market, American customers and industry competition will only suffer, the Democrats, including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, and Representative Ro Khanna, wrote in a letter to the FTC.

For that reason, we prompt the FTC to extend its present examinations, open inquiries into these brand-new offers, and take all appropriate actions to protect competition in this industry.

U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm, inquired about current mergers at an occasion held by Axios, said she was concerned about monopolies since President Joe Biden is obsessed about bringing down rates consisting of for gas.

Granholm also revealed hope that mergers could accelerate a trend by some big oil and gas business to act upon climate and clean energy.

A lot of the majors, many of them not all ... have been taking action on environment and tidy energy and a great deal of the folks who are small level manufacturers were not as interested, or didn't. have the resources to attend to

(source: Reuters)