NEWS RELEASE
September 17, 2007
CONTACT: Judy Dugan, 213-280-0175 (cell), or Jamie Court, 310-392-0522 ext. 327
Gov. Schwarzenegger Urged to Veto Fake ‘Consumer Protection’ on Hot Fuel Rip-off;
Foundation Says Legislation, AB868, Will Delay or Prevent Fair Sales of Gasoline
Santa Monica, CA — The Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights
today asked Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to veto a bill now on his desk
that would delay any remedy to the "hot fuel" rip-off of California
consumers and mire the decision in politics. The nonprofit, nonpartisan
foundation sent a detailed letter to the governor outlining the
deceptions and faults of the legislation, AB868 by Asm. Mike Davis.
(See full letter here.)
"This legislation, billed by Asm. Davis and Assembly Speaker
Fabian Núñez as a consumer protection, is in fact the opposite of
consumer-friendly. The measure was written and supported by the
California Independent Oil Marketers Association, an industry lobbying
group," said the letter.
The bill is deceptively titled as "Gasoline Dispensing,
Weights and Measures." As the letter notes, the state’s own weights and
measures experts were apparently not consulted about the bill. Nor was
consumer input solicited.
The issue involves well-understood science. The letter says:
"California’s estimated year-round average fuel temperature at the pump
is 75 degrees Fahrenheit, according to a 2002-2004 federal study.
California drivers thus lose 1% on each purchase to fuel expansion,
when compared to a gallon at the national temperature standard of 60
degrees. At 90 degrees, a common gasoline temperature in the summer
driving season, the loss is 2%, according to the National Conference on
Weights and Measures and the National Institute of Standards and
Technology."
The total yearly cost to California drivers of buying fuel
hotter than 60 degrees is estimated at $450 million dollars. FTCR has
called for California to encourage installation of gasoline pump
equipment that would compensate for expansion of hot fuel, always
giving drivers a fair gallon’s worth of energy.
The letter includes a list of specific reasons for vetoing AB868 (see below).
"The bottom line of our opposition is that the measure calls for
politically tinged studies that will delay or block any resolution and
add nothing to the science of hot fuel," said Judy Dugan, research
director of FTCR and its OilWatchdog.org project. "The Davis bill punts
the issue to the California Energy Commission, which has no oversight
role in retail fuel sales and no expertise in the matter. An ‘advisory
committee’ that must be built from scratch will only further delay and
muddy the process."
The letter’s specific objections include:
– California’s own Division of Measurement Standards is more
than halfway through a year-long confirmational study of the state’s
gasoline temperatures. AB868 would take the results of the study
out of the hands of the state’s weights and measures experts and bury
them in a political process that will certainly delay and may prevent
the sale of gasoline adjusted for temperature. The facts of the study
will not require additional "study" and interpretation. The numbers are
what they are. In addition, the California Energy Commission will be
required to study effects of temperature on alternative fuels, which
will repeat work already done or in progress by state and national
weights and measures bodies. This is an unnecessary burden on the
California budget.
– The measurement standards agency has already stated that
there is no legal barrier to the sale of temperature-adjusted gasoline
in California and has certified American-made temperature-adjusting
pump equipment for California use. AB868 is a direct repudiation of
the state regulators’ action. It could undo the agency’s work by
putting temperature adjustment on indefinite hold or, in
recommendations to the Legislature, disallowing temperature adjustment
at the pump. These are the outcomes desired by the oil marketing lobby
as well as by the major integrated oil companies, in statements before
the House Domestic Policy subcommittee.
– The Division of Measurement Standards, in conjunction with
the National Council on Weights and Measures, is well along in the
process of developing national standards for the retail sale of
temperature-adjusted gasoline. At a special meeting in Chicago Aug.
27 and 28, NCWM experts indicated it was likely that standards long in
place in Canada could be largely transferable to U.S. sales. The
process should be in the hands of the California DMS and national NCWM,
not of a politically appointed committee.
– National and regional weights and measures officials are
finding that installation costs of temperature measuring equipment for
retail sale will be a fraction of the $4,000 per pump that oil
companies and gasoline marketers assert. This is especially true if
the change occurs as part of regular equipment upgrades, which occur in
roughly 8-year cycles. The cost of phasing in temperature adjustment
should not be estimated by a committee that lacks technical expertise
and is under political pressure.
– Temperature adjustment is not a recently discovered issue requiring study.
Weights and measures officials long ago developed the standards for
wholesale and other bulk transactions to be temperature adjusted.
Temperature adjusted sales are seen as the only fair transaction method
at the wholesale level. This issue does not require reinvention by a
new state body or committee. The only point of such extended study
would be to delay or prevent the introduction of
temperature-compensated retail sales.
– A study of "costs and benefits" may not account for fundamental fairness and is an opening for lobbyists’ exaggerations.
Consumers have no way of knowing the temperature of gasoline they are
buying, and the business incentive is for wholesalers to deliver and
retailers to sell the warmest possible fuel. The CEC, which the bill
instructs to conduct this study, has no experience in overseeing retail
sale of motor fuels. Its appointment of an "advisory group" for this
study will increase the politicization of the outcome.
Political interference in government regulatory processes discredits and embarrasses legitimate government agencies.
This recently happened when the Federal Trade Commission, using
arguments that could not have come from weights and measures officials,
issued an "opinion letter" Aug. 28 on fuel temperature adjustment that
underestimated the loss to consumers by more than 90%. The National
Institute of Standards and Technology issued the rebuttal data that
slammed this politically motivated cost-benefit opinion. FTC chairwoman
Deborah Majoras was forced to apologize and rescind the letter.
"Gov. Schwarzenegger has an opportunity to stand up for
science-based public policy and for the interests of the state’s
consumers by vetoing this bill," said Jamie Court, president of FTCR.
"By signing it, he would ingratiate himself with industry lobbies at
the expense of a reasonably paced fix for a consumer rip-off that can
be fixed simply by encouraging the retail sale of temperature-adjusted
gasoline."
Click here for more information on the science and effects of hot fuel.
– 30 –
OilWatchdog.org is a project of the Foundation for Taxpayer and
Consumer Rights, a nonprofit, nonpartisan consumer watchdog
organization. Its websites are www.OilWatchdog.org and www.ConsumerWatchdog.org.