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June
27, 2000
Statement
of Brian Petty, Senior Vice President, Government Affairs, International
Association of Drilling Contractors
Click Here to view his Bio
IADC
represents virtually the entire US drilling industry. What isn't commonly
known is that the oil and gas industry doesn't own drilling equipment.
Instead, oil and gas producers contract for drilling services. IADC's
members own the equipment and are nomadic, seeking market opportunities
elsewhere once oil or gas is found at a specific site.
Drilling
equipment is steel and fuel-intensive. Two major elements of a drilling
operation continuously consumed are diesel fuel and drill pipe. Drill
pipe is a specialized product composed of a steel tube with joints for
coupling forged on its ends.
Over
the 1980's and early 1990's, the US domestic drilling industry - vital
to the discovery of new sources of energy - suffered a huge decline. That
can be best expressed in terms of the working rig count, which stood at
over 4200 in 1982 and was slightly over 600 in 1993.
During
that same period, manufacturers of drilling equipment - including drill
pipe - declined. By the mid '90's, there remained but two US makers of
drill pipe, with one company accounting for nearly 80% of all production.
Following
its success in insisting that US antidumping and CVD laws be walled off
from any interference from the newly created WTO, the steel industry -
sensing a long-deferred rebound in the domestic oil and gas industry -
pounced. A petition was filled at the ITC by makers of Oil Country Tubular
Goods (OTCG) to exclude foreign imports from seven countries. The consuming
oil, gas and drilling industries protested, but under current law have
no standing in the ITC dumping proceedings. Ultimately, and predictably,
the ITC recommended antidumping duties which had the effect of foreclosing
most drill pipe and other OCTG from the US market, and this at the very
time the domestic drilling industry was beginning to rouse itself from
a long depression.
The
Commerce Department - again, predictably - followed the ITC's recommendations,
and almost immediately prices of OCTG spiked. Then came larger and larger
delays in delivering drillpipe from the two surviving US mills - at one
point as long as two years. The burden fell most heavily on smaller,
less well capitalized companies. Also, the mills favored their bigger
customers in terms of delivery. Smaller companies understood they dare
not complain to the mills, lest they be bumped to the back of the order
queue. IADC appealed to the Commerce Department to waive dumping duties
until a more reasonable supply and demand balance was found. Commerce
vacillated, first insisting IADC had no standing to request such a waiver.
Then, under political pressure from Capitol Hill, Commerce claimed it
could entertain such a request if framed as asking for the Department
to "self-initiate" a review of the order. IADC then formally
submitted its request in July 1997. No response came until March 1998
- eight months later. And that response was a flat no. Commerce
claimed it had gathered information from the petitioners enjoying the
fruits of the order and was satisfied no waiver was necessary. Of course
IADC never saw the information or had the opportunity to rebut it.
That
brings us pretty much up to where we find ourselves today. But the situation
grows more ominous, especially as the economy grows and demand for energy
- especially clean energy like natural gas - grows. Earlier this year,
the National Petroleum Council report to the Secretary of Energy forecast
natural gas demand to grow by 60% in the next decade. That demand will
be driven by environmental considerations and a wholesale shift of new
electric generating capacity from coal to natural gas. However, the antidumping
walls thwart these goals, affecting not just drill pipe, but other steel
goods necessary for energy production and transportation.
Much
of this nation's new supplies of natural gas are located in new fields
in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico. But much of the OCTG necessary to produce
that gas is excluded from the US from the US market by operation of dumping
duties. Casing for well completion and tubing to bring the gas ashore
are subject to rigid, market-blind dumping orders. Because of the deepwater
depths, conventional undersea pipelines are generally unfeasible. New
technologies involving miles-long refrigerated coils of gas brought by
tankers will have to be employed, and that will require specialized steel
alloys and dimensions available only on the other side of our high dumping
walls.
I
will close by quoting from a letter Exxon Corporation wrote in 1995 at
the initiation of the OCTG investigation by the ITC. The points made then
remain as valid today, but with more urgency:
"If
granted, the Oil Country Tubular Goods (OCTG) anti-dumping petition currently
being investigated by the United States International Trade Commission
(ITC) would effectively eliminate the importation of products not currently
available from US manufacturers that are essential to the domestic petroleum
industry. Moreover, imposition of duties on imported OCTG would increase
costs for this industry, directly impact the prices consumers ultimately
pay for petroleum products, and could result in further declines in oil
and gas production and employment in this country. For these reasons,
we respectfully request your consideration of the following comments and
the potentially negative effects these proceedings could have..
"On
several occasions, we have requested bids from our domestic OCTG distributors
to supply these specific items but have not received any bids for qualified
products from domestic steel mills. As a result, we have had to rely on
imported products to meet our essential needs..
"In
summary, this petition raises serious concerns over the potential production
and employment impacts of higher costs on the domestic petroleum industry
and the prices consumers ultimately pay for petroleum products. Moreover,
no one will benefit if duties are assessed on essential goods that are
available only from imported sources.."
It's
high time this nation's energy security no longer be held hostage by those
in the steel industry who enjoy government protected markets and profits.
The oil and gas exploration and production industry accepts the rigors
of global competition so - should steel.
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