Speaker of the House John Boehner is bringing his controversial highway bill (H.R. 7) to the floor this week. The Speaker has included Rep. Doug Lamborn’s oil shale boondoggle (H.R. 3408) as one of his funding sources.
Today, in a desperate move to salvage his highway bill, it was announced that the Speaker is splitting off the energy package under the PIONEERS Act (H.R. 3408). Fitting, since there's no energy or revenue in oil shale.
We thought pointing out the truth behind Boehner’s and Lamborn’s bills was worth a new Checks and Balances Project video.
The Speaker is saying that we will pay for millions of dollars’ worth of repairs to highways and bridges with revenue from oil shale.
The problem with that plan is that oil shale creates zero revenue. And for that matter, zero energy and zero jobs.
Lamborn’s bill actually creates a new subsidy for oil companies by setting “bargain basement” royalty rates for oil shale. And that it would hand over two million acres of public land to oil companies for the sake of oil shale speculation and mandate commercial leasing on 125,00 acres of public lands even though there is no commercial oil shale industry.
In 100 years, oil shale has never been commercially developed in the United States despite billions in taxpayer-funded research and development handouts to industry.
In fact, Shell Oil, which is recognized as a leader in oil shale research, says the earliest that commercial oil shale technology is nowhere near ready: "A commercial decision would be in the middle of the next decade and possibly later depending on the sequence and outcome of research activities." – Shell Oil website
Last week, the Congressional Budget Office reported “the legislation would not affect revenues” and projected zero revenue between 2012 and 2022.
Even Lamborn admitted to Allison Sherry at the Denver Post that oil shale "is not a real contributor to the highway transportation needs we have.”
So in addition to our video, I sent a letter to Speaker Boehner and Rep. Lamborn. In the letter I asked a very simple question:
“We respectfully request an explanation to the American taxpayer of this disconnect between fact and rhetoric.”
I’m hoping to hear back from the Speaker or Rep. Lamborn soon, but I’m not holding my breath.
The facts are clear. If America tries to fund highway repairs with oil shale revenues, we’re just looking at an increase in deficit spending. We need to spread the word, so people are educated. Watch our video. Share it with your friends.
And whenever you’re tweeting or facebooking, use the hashtag #oilshalefail. If we work together and make enough noise, maybe we can drown out the spin and rhetoric politicians are putting out there on oil shale.