FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE – May 6, 2008
Contacts:
Zach Lowe
& K
at
ie Rowley (202) 224-5323
Feingold-backed
effort to prevent energy market Manipulation included in farm bill
Bipartisan
Effort Would Prevent Energy Market Manipul
at
ion
Washington,
D.C. – As American consumers face soaring gas and energy prices, U.S. Senator
Russ Feingold (D-WI) announced today that legislation providing long overdue
oversight of energy markets will be included in the final Farm Bill.
Feingold pushed for the provision as part of a bipartisan effort, led by
Senators Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), Carl Levin (D-MI), and Olympia Snowe (R-ME),
to ensure federal oversight of the electronic trading of oil and gas. The
provision closes a loophole, often dubbed the “Enron loophole,” th
at
has allowed oil and gas traders to make electronic energy trades without
federal oversight. The lack of oversight has led to market manipul
at
ion and specul
at
ion, which in turn has led to price distortion. The legislation would put
in place protections for certain “over-the-counter” markets similar to the
ones used by the
New York
and Chicago Mercantile Exchanges. While the Farm Bill Conference Report has yet
to be finalized, the “Enron loophole” provision has been completed.
“It
is past time to prevent market manipul
at
ion by energy traders,” Feingold said. “Energy market specul
at
ion has a lot to do with the price of gas and Congress must act immedi
at
ely to close a loophole to ensure there is proper oversight of energy trading.
We can not allow energy traders to secretively bid up the price of oil and
saddle Americans with the price
at
the gas pump.”
Since
2003 Feingold has worked to close the “Enron loophole” th
at
has been exploited by energy traders oper
at
ing in an unregul
at
ed market. Feingold has been a cosponsor of the Oil and Gas Traders
Oversight Act, sponsored by Sen
at
or Feinstein th
at
has now been incorpor
at
ed into the Farm Bill. The provision in the Farm Bill will prevent market
manipul
at
ion by requiring large trades to be reported and publishing price and trading
volume of energy on a daily basis. The provision will also monitor
trading, limit the size of trader positions, and establish an audit trail by
collecting records of trading activity.
“If
this energy loophole is not fixed we will not be able to determine if American
consumers are paying a fair price for energy,” Feingold said.
In
a February 2008 letter urging inclusion of the Sen
at
e-passed provision in the final Farm Bill, Feingold and others st
at
ed, “With energy prices
at
or near record high levels, farmers and foresters are struggling to fill their
tractors, he
at
their homes, fertilize their crops, and transport their goods to market.
It is critical th
at
the Congress take advantage of this opportunity on the Farm Bill to increase
transparency and reduce the thre
at
s of manipul
at
ion and excessive specul
at
ion th
at
have plagued our energy commodity markets over the past several years.”
###