WASHINGTON – Senate
Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and House Judiciary
Committee Chairmen Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.) requested input from the Justice
Department’s antitrust division on a proposal to hold OPEC members accountable
for antitrust violations. In a
letter
to Assistant Attorney General Makan Delrahim, the lawmakers touted the
bicameral, bipartisan support for the
No
Oil Producing and Exporting Cartels Act,
or NOPEC.
“The
average U.S. household spends over $2,000 a year on gasoline. That might
be one thing if fuel prices were set by the free market. Unfortunately,
however, prices are heavily influenced by the coordinated efforts of the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), which controls 82% of the
world’s proven oil reserves,” the lawmakers wrote. “We believe
this legislation is consistent with the administration’s goals of ensuring a
fair and competitive global marketplace.”
Grassley
and Goodlatte note that both President Trump and Delrahim have expressed
concerns about OPEC’s anticompetitive behavior.
August
20, 2018
The
Honorable Makan Delrahim
Assistant
Attorney General
Antitrust
Division
United
States Department of Justice
950
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington,
DC 20530
Dear
Mr. Delrahim,
We
seek your views on the No Oil Producing and Exporting Cartels Act
(NOPEC).
NOPEC
would explicitly authorize the Justice Department to sue oil-producing cartel
members for antitrust violations. It would clarify that neither sovereign
immunity nor the “Act of State” doctrine should stop a court from hearing a
case. Importantly, NOPEC would authorize DOJ alone to sue, ensuring that
courts only hear cases that the Executive Branch affirmatively elects to bring
after considering the foreign policy and national security implications. On
June 13, 2018, following a hearing, the House Judiciary Committee passed NOPEC
(H.R. 5904) by voice-vote. The Senate bill (S. 3214) was introduced on
July 16, 2018. The bills were led by Representative Chabot and Senator
Grassley, respectively, with strong bipartisan support.
NOPEC
is a necessary tool to ensure consumers in the United States are no longer
beholden to artificially inflated gas prices. The average U.S. household
spends over $2,000 a year on gasoline. That might be one thing if fuel
prices were set by the free market. Unfortunately, however, prices are
heavily influenced by the coordinated efforts of the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC), which controls 82% of the world’s proven oil
reserves. For example, in April 2018, OPEC and non-OPEC producers agreed
to continue a deal they struck in 2016 limiting production. In 2016 oil
was at $43 per barrel. It is now around $70.
We
believe this legislation is consistent with the administration’s goals of
ensuring a fair and competitive global marketplace. In his 2011 book,
Time
to Get Tough, President Trump, then a private citizen, called for passage
of NOPEC to bust OPEC’s cartel: “The way to fix this is to make sure that
Congress passes and the president signs the ‘No Oil Producing and Exporting
Cartels Act.’”
[1] More recently, President Trump expressed
frustration with the OPEC cartel in a series of tweets, noting that “Oil prices
are artificially Very High!” and that the “[t]he OPEC Monopoly” is “driving
prices higher.”
[2] You too, have written that “there is simply
no reason to treat cartel members differently based on their connection to a
national government.”
[3]
This
legislation has strong bipartisan and bicameral support. Your additional
support would help us to pass NOPEC and ensure a fair and competitive
marketplace.
We
look forward to hearing from you.
Sincerely,
__________________________________
Charles
E. Grassley
Chairman
Senate
Judiciary Committee
|
__________________________________
Bob
Goodlatte
Chairman
House
Judiciary Committee
|
-30-
[1]
Donald J. Trump,
Time to Get Tough
(2011).