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Transportation

Chevron Exec is Secretly Pushing Anti-Electric Car Effort in Arizona (azcentral.com) 130

A California lobbyist for Chevron is urging retirees of the oil company in Arizona to oppose electric-car policies, saying the vehicles are too expensive for most people and should not be promoted. From a report: A handful of people who either retired from Chevron or from Unocal, which Chevron acquired in 2005, have used the form letter to urge Arizona Corporation Commissioners not to require electric companies here to build electric-car charging stations. Form letters are commonly used to lobby commissioners, but the secretive nature of this campaign has drawn criticism, including from a retiree who alerted commissioners to the lobbyist's effort.

The letters discourage electric-car infrastructure. "Let the electric vehicle industry finance the construction of the infrastructure from which it will benefit, rather than burdening most Arizona ratepayers with the costs of supporting the electric vehicle market," wrote Sel Larsen, the president of the Arizona retirees group. The letter-writing campaign is a response to a March document from the Corporation Commission asking electric companies in Arizona to propose how they will roll out electric-vehicle infrastructure and incorporate electric vehicles into their business.

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Chevron Exec is Secretly Pushing Anti-Electric Car Effort in Arizona

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  • So, ask yourself, why are we paying so much?

    Yup, it's so Chevron execs have bigger pensions.

    • Same reasons their cheapest gas cars [alibaba.com] are so much cheaper than ours. So unfair!
    • Why does Tesla sell their electrics for $60k when China makes electrics for $4k? What does that have to do with Chevron execs?

    • LOL. No China does not make $4K cars. They make $4K golf carts that you do not want to have an accident with a real car.
  • >"saying the vehicles are too expensive for most people and should not be promoted."

    Free market and supply and demand will do the job, thanks. The government doesn't need to push or pay for electric car infrastructure or try to restrict it either. The market will decide- and it is deciding. It is why for electric cars, the prices keep dropping, demand and sales keep increasing, and more models are coming out.

    The advantages of electric cars are many (reliability, simplicity, packaging, charge-at-home,

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      This is a good argument EXCEPT FOR THE PART where oil/gas extraction got hundreds of Billions if not several trillions in tax breaks, subsidies, sweetheart deals, etc. Other than that sure, the invisible hand is doing all the lifting here.

      • >"This is a good argument EXCEPT FOR THE PART where oil/gas extraction got hundreds of Billions if not several trillions in tax breaks, subsidies, sweetheart deals, etc"

        Actually, the electric car industry has also, through government rebates, incentives, tax breaks, etc. Whether it is to the same levels, I don't know, but probably not. I am (and have been) in favor of dropping any such nonsense for oil related stuff, too. So the question is- do we move forward and let things evolve on their own? Or d

      • by vix86 ( 592763 )

        Since you didn't really mention the number I'll add it. The IMF found that in 2015 the oil and gas industry received ~$650B in subsidies from the government. The Pentagon's budget that year was $500B. The US govt could have took in enough money to fund the entire US military and have cool 150B left over in pocket change.

        • >"Since you didn't really mention the number I'll add it. The IMF found that in 2015 the oil and gas industry received ~$650B in subsidies from the government."

          That is not for a single year. You are probably quoting the 2017 study from MISI in which that number is $666B in total (in 2015 dollar value) from 1950-2016 (66 years). So no, you could fund the military for about 36 days per year with that.

          In 2016, there were way, way more allocations of "energy related tax preferences" for Renewables (59%) th

        • Here's the IMF report [imf.org] and it's bunk. It's a "we think there was this much cost, and since it wasn't charged that's a subsidy!" type fantasy.

          Here's the real data [eia.gov] and you can see that the "subsidy" for natural gas and petroleum was around $-1 billion - yeah, and negative subsidy (meaning - tax increase). Coal was just over $1 billion, so I guess we can say fossil fuels were somewhere around $100-$200 million. Wind, solar, biomass combined for around $6 billion. Somewhere around 30-60 times that of fossi

  • Half the story (Score:3, Informative)

    by tomhath ( 637240 ) on Wednesday May 29, 2019 @04:55PM (#58674798)

    What's the big deal there? Look at the groups supporting the construction of charging stations at public expense, e.g.:
    Solar Industries Association
    National Energy Marketers Association
    Direct Selling Association
    Energy Storage Association
    Renewable Energy Systems Americas
    The Vote Solar Initiative
    The Alliance For Solar Choice

    So someone is opposing this proposal to add more subsidies. Boo Hoo.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The person opposing subsidies that will benefit everyone (less pollution, improved environment) is taking subsidies that harm everyone.

      The moral thing would be to pivot and start installing EV infrastructure himself. Probably a sensible business move too, given that his gas stations will probably be going out of business in the next 20 odd years.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 29, 2019 @04:58PM (#58674838)

    Seriously, does Chevron get their public relations directions from Dick Dastardly during sneering mustache-twirling sessions?

    Buying up the rights to produce EV batteries and refusing to allow them to be made, placing media stories that firemen and other emergency responders would not rescue you if you were trapped in a hybrid vehicle "for fear of electrocution", and now this...

    They're so clumsily incompetent at this ridiculous skulduggery it makes you almost feel bad for them.

    • The oil and gas industry is obsolete and they know it. It shows they're scared, especially if we get nuclear fusion off the ground in the mid future. Electing Republicans who'll undo emissions regulations won't help either unless we go to a planned economy where the government mandates oil and gas propulsion systems.
      • by Livius ( 318358 )

        in the mid future.

        Is that half of infinite time, or is it something like 50 trillion years, or what?

        Either way sounds like about the right time frame.

    • by shilly ( 142940 )

      The icing on the cake that I enjoyed in this particular story was that the lead shill used to work in their Global Lubes division. I shit you not.

      https://www.linkedin.com/in/se... [linkedin.com]

  • But he shouldn't complain about other people getting government subsidies.. Just sayin'

    • Of course he should! How else do you expect him to maintain his publicly-funded unfair advantage?

    • Why? Natural gas and oil [eia.gov] have no subsidy, they actually had a negative subsidy (tax increase), to the tune of $1 billion. That's the actual subsidy - rather, lack thereof.
      • by shilly ( 142940 )

        Yeah, it's not like the US government ever went to war to secure oil supplies, after all. Whereas we all remember the Great Lithium War of 2016.

        • You know all the machinations and jostling with China, and a big chunk of the trade deficit? It's over rare earth metals - which China rules. It may not be bullets, but it's just as costly...
          • by shilly ( 142940 )

            I'm sure rare earth metals provide some of the justification, but the tensions with China go a lot wider than resource conflicts, and the resource conflicts aren't driven solely (and not even primarily) by the demands of the US renewables industry (or EVs). And the rare earths trade dispute has been nowhere near as costly as Iraq I or II, or propping up the Saudis etc: not in treasure and not in blood.

            • Nah, the issues with China are pretty much resource-based. China's trying to accumulate more and more (mainly in Africa and SE Asia), and is bullying other nations to get what they want. Those others come and whine to the US and - once again - we go to save their asses with our own blood.

              And you do realize, don't you, that the US really never got much oil from the Middle East? What we "protected" there was oil supplies for our allies in Asia and Europe. We've almost always gotten 85% or more of our oil

              • by shilly ( 142940 )

                I am really bored of hearing from authoritatively wrong right wingers. We have enough of them in the UK.

  • at stopping electric cars for the last 100 years; what makes you think they would stop trying now?
  • Charging in the daytime will increase the grid load during peak times. Instead, utilities should work to get level 2 installed at residential rentals and on maybe street lights.
    • by shilly ( 142940 )

      Or they could encourage the development of solar canopies in car parks, as happens in Caribbean islands. That would make it more pleasant to walk to the car, as well as making use of all that Arizonan sunshine.

  • For remote fuel / charging stations, the station can use diesel to power a generator or fuel cell that charges up the super capacitors used to rapid charge the electric cars.
  • by AnalogDiehard ( 199128 ) on Wednesday May 29, 2019 @09:35PM (#58676448)
    Chevron has openly opposed EVs because they are a threat to their oil business, and have even acquired the patenst for NiMH batteries [ev1.org] to prevent them from ever being used for EVs [abovetopsecret.com]. The patents thankfully have expired, but the Chevron uses aggressive lobbying to keep EVs off the market.
    • Chevron has openly opposed EVs because they are approaching their obsolescence in an incredibly stupid way. While other majors are making investments in biofuels, natural gas, actively promoting EV chargers, getting into solar and wind, Chevron seems to only invest in marketing and lobbying.

      There's many ways to approach the downturn of your industry, I think the American majors are going to be on the wrong side of history for this one.

  • by Bandraginus ( 901166 ) on Thursday May 30, 2019 @01:55AM (#58677396)
    "Let the fossil fuel vehicle industry finance the removal of the pollution from which it will benefit, rather than burdening most Arizona ratepayers with the costs of abating a changing climate"

If all the world's economists were laid end to end, we wouldn't reach a conclusion. -- William Baumol

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