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A downtown gas station displays high gas prices on March 25, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo: Mario Tama/Getty Images)
An analysis released Tuesday by a trio of groups highlights how Big Oil has cashed in on various crises over the past year--including the Covid-19 pandemic, Russia's war on Ukraine, and the global climate emergency--while enriching wealthy shareholders.
"Big Oil is living the second half of their unspoken mantra 'socialize losses, privatize gains.'"
The new report from BailoutWatch, Friends of the Earth, and Public Citizen explains that there are two main tactics that fossil fuel giants use to benefit investors: "First, they repurchase shares of their own stock and retire them, reducing the number of shares outstanding and driving up the value of each share remaining in investors' hands."
"Second, they increase dividends, the quarterly payments investors receive for owning shares," the report continues. "Oil and gas dividends, historically bigger than other sectors', have spiked in recent months, outstripping every other industry group."
"Amid high gas prices and war in recent months, oil and gas companies have kicked both tactics into overdrive," the groups found, based on reviewing public statements and securities filings from the 20 largest U.S.-headquartered fossil fuel corporations.
During the first two months of 2022, "seven companies' boards authorized their corporate treasuries to buy back and retire $24.35 billion in stock--a 15% increase over all of the buybacks authorized in 2021," the report states. "Six of those decisions came in February 2022, after Russian warmongering lifted stock prices. The total since the start of 2021 is $45.6 billion."
The analysis also reveals that in January and February, 11 companies raised their dividends--"often extravagantly"--and notes that "nine were increases of more than 15% and four were increases of more than 40%."
"Six companies have begun paying additional dividends on top of their routine quarterly payments, including by implementing new variable dividends based on company earnings--a way of directing windfall profits immediately into private hands without any possibility of investment, employee benefits, or other uses," the document points out.
"So far in 2022, these companies have started paying out an initial $3 billion in special windfall dividends," the report adds. "Four of these companies--Pioneer, Chesapeake, Conoco, and Coterra--announced variable dividends beginning August 2021, as prices began to rise."
Chris Kuveke of BailoutWatch said in a statement that "Big Oil is living the second half of their unspoken mantra 'socialize losses, privatize gains.'"
"Two years after winning multi-billion dollar bailouts from the Trump administration, these newly flush companies are pocketing billions from an international crisis, and they don't care how it affects regular Americans," Kuveke added.
\u201cNEW TODAY: Big Oil is cashing in on a wartime bonus. They\u2019re exploiting surging crude oil prices, a humanitarian disaster in Europe, and consumer pain at the pump. It needs to stop. \n\nRead the full report from BailoutWatch, @Public_Citizen & @foe_us \ud83d\udea8 https://t.co/rM9GXXaJTc \ud83d\udea8\u201d— BailoutWatch (@BailoutWatch) 1649168100
As Public Citizen researcher Alan Zibel put it: "Big Oil executives are reaping windfall profits while accelerating the climate crisis and sticking consumers with the bill."
Zibel also acknowledged efforts to blame President Joe Biden for rising prices, rather than industry profiteering.
"The oil industry and their allies on Capitol Hill falsely claim that the Biden administration's acceptance of mainstream climate science is stifling investment in the domestic oil industry," he said. "But the industry's actions show that they are intently focused on funneling cash to their shareholders rather than lowering prices for consumers."
According to Lukas Ross, climate and energy program manager at Friends of the Earth: "This is a master class in war profiteering. Oil and gas companies are feeding off humanitarian disaster and consumer suffering in order to reward Wall Street."
"Oil companies drove us into a climate crisis and are now price gouging us to extinction," he warned. "Congress and President Biden must take action by passing a windfall profits tax to rein in Big Oil's cash grab."
Related Content
The new analysis follows the introduction of multiple bills targeting Big Oil's windfall profits, including a proposal spearheaded by Senate Budget Committee Chair Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) designed to crack down on such behavior in all sectors, not just the fossil fuel industry.
Sanders on Tuesday morning held a hearing to call out how corporate greed and profiteering are fueling inflation. During his opening remarks, the chair took aim at Big Oil specifically while listing some examples.
"Yesterday, at a time when gasoline in America is now at a near-record high at $4.17 a gallon, guess what?" Sanders said. "ExxonMobil reported that its profit from pumping oil and gas alone in the first quarter will likely hit a record high of $9.3 billion."
"Meanwhile," he added, "Big Oil CEOs are on track to spend $88 billion this year not to decrease supply constraints, not to address the climate crisis, but to buy back their own stock and hand out dividends to enrich their wealthy shareholders."
The House Energy and Commerce Committee's Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations plans to hold a hearing Wednesday titled "Gouged at the Gas Station: Big Oil and America's Pain at the Pump." Top executives from BP America, Chevron, Devon Energy, ExxonMobil, Pioneer Natural Resources, and Shell USA are set to appear before the panel.
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An analysis released Tuesday by a trio of groups highlights how Big Oil has cashed in on various crises over the past year--including the Covid-19 pandemic, Russia's war on Ukraine, and the global climate emergency--while enriching wealthy shareholders.
"Big Oil is living the second half of their unspoken mantra 'socialize losses, privatize gains.'"
The new report from BailoutWatch, Friends of the Earth, and Public Citizen explains that there are two main tactics that fossil fuel giants use to benefit investors: "First, they repurchase shares of their own stock and retire them, reducing the number of shares outstanding and driving up the value of each share remaining in investors' hands."
"Second, they increase dividends, the quarterly payments investors receive for owning shares," the report continues. "Oil and gas dividends, historically bigger than other sectors', have spiked in recent months, outstripping every other industry group."
"Amid high gas prices and war in recent months, oil and gas companies have kicked both tactics into overdrive," the groups found, based on reviewing public statements and securities filings from the 20 largest U.S.-headquartered fossil fuel corporations.
During the first two months of 2022, "seven companies' boards authorized their corporate treasuries to buy back and retire $24.35 billion in stock--a 15% increase over all of the buybacks authorized in 2021," the report states. "Six of those decisions came in February 2022, after Russian warmongering lifted stock prices. The total since the start of 2021 is $45.6 billion."
The analysis also reveals that in January and February, 11 companies raised their dividends--"often extravagantly"--and notes that "nine were increases of more than 15% and four were increases of more than 40%."
"Six companies have begun paying additional dividends on top of their routine quarterly payments, including by implementing new variable dividends based on company earnings--a way of directing windfall profits immediately into private hands without any possibility of investment, employee benefits, or other uses," the document points out.
"So far in 2022, these companies have started paying out an initial $3 billion in special windfall dividends," the report adds. "Four of these companies--Pioneer, Chesapeake, Conoco, and Coterra--announced variable dividends beginning August 2021, as prices began to rise."
Chris Kuveke of BailoutWatch said in a statement that "Big Oil is living the second half of their unspoken mantra 'socialize losses, privatize gains.'"
"Two years after winning multi-billion dollar bailouts from the Trump administration, these newly flush companies are pocketing billions from an international crisis, and they don't care how it affects regular Americans," Kuveke added.
\u201cNEW TODAY: Big Oil is cashing in on a wartime bonus. They\u2019re exploiting surging crude oil prices, a humanitarian disaster in Europe, and consumer pain at the pump. It needs to stop. \n\nRead the full report from BailoutWatch, @Public_Citizen & @foe_us \ud83d\udea8 https://t.co/rM9GXXaJTc \ud83d\udea8\u201d— BailoutWatch (@BailoutWatch) 1649168100
As Public Citizen researcher Alan Zibel put it: "Big Oil executives are reaping windfall profits while accelerating the climate crisis and sticking consumers with the bill."
Zibel also acknowledged efforts to blame President Joe Biden for rising prices, rather than industry profiteering.
"The oil industry and their allies on Capitol Hill falsely claim that the Biden administration's acceptance of mainstream climate science is stifling investment in the domestic oil industry," he said. "But the industry's actions show that they are intently focused on funneling cash to their shareholders rather than lowering prices for consumers."
According to Lukas Ross, climate and energy program manager at Friends of the Earth: "This is a master class in war profiteering. Oil and gas companies are feeding off humanitarian disaster and consumer suffering in order to reward Wall Street."
"Oil companies drove us into a climate crisis and are now price gouging us to extinction," he warned. "Congress and President Biden must take action by passing a windfall profits tax to rein in Big Oil's cash grab."
Related Content
The new analysis follows the introduction of multiple bills targeting Big Oil's windfall profits, including a proposal spearheaded by Senate Budget Committee Chair Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) designed to crack down on such behavior in all sectors, not just the fossil fuel industry.
Sanders on Tuesday morning held a hearing to call out how corporate greed and profiteering are fueling inflation. During his opening remarks, the chair took aim at Big Oil specifically while listing some examples.
"Yesterday, at a time when gasoline in America is now at a near-record high at $4.17 a gallon, guess what?" Sanders said. "ExxonMobil reported that its profit from pumping oil and gas alone in the first quarter will likely hit a record high of $9.3 billion."
"Meanwhile," he added, "Big Oil CEOs are on track to spend $88 billion this year not to decrease supply constraints, not to address the climate crisis, but to buy back their own stock and hand out dividends to enrich their wealthy shareholders."
The House Energy and Commerce Committee's Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations plans to hold a hearing Wednesday titled "Gouged at the Gas Station: Big Oil and America's Pain at the Pump." Top executives from BP America, Chevron, Devon Energy, ExxonMobil, Pioneer Natural Resources, and Shell USA are set to appear before the panel.
An analysis released Tuesday by a trio of groups highlights how Big Oil has cashed in on various crises over the past year--including the Covid-19 pandemic, Russia's war on Ukraine, and the global climate emergency--while enriching wealthy shareholders.
"Big Oil is living the second half of their unspoken mantra 'socialize losses, privatize gains.'"
The new report from BailoutWatch, Friends of the Earth, and Public Citizen explains that there are two main tactics that fossil fuel giants use to benefit investors: "First, they repurchase shares of their own stock and retire them, reducing the number of shares outstanding and driving up the value of each share remaining in investors' hands."
"Second, they increase dividends, the quarterly payments investors receive for owning shares," the report continues. "Oil and gas dividends, historically bigger than other sectors', have spiked in recent months, outstripping every other industry group."
"Amid high gas prices and war in recent months, oil and gas companies have kicked both tactics into overdrive," the groups found, based on reviewing public statements and securities filings from the 20 largest U.S.-headquartered fossil fuel corporations.
During the first two months of 2022, "seven companies' boards authorized their corporate treasuries to buy back and retire $24.35 billion in stock--a 15% increase over all of the buybacks authorized in 2021," the report states. "Six of those decisions came in February 2022, after Russian warmongering lifted stock prices. The total since the start of 2021 is $45.6 billion."
The analysis also reveals that in January and February, 11 companies raised their dividends--"often extravagantly"--and notes that "nine were increases of more than 15% and four were increases of more than 40%."
"Six companies have begun paying additional dividends on top of their routine quarterly payments, including by implementing new variable dividends based on company earnings--a way of directing windfall profits immediately into private hands without any possibility of investment, employee benefits, or other uses," the document points out.
"So far in 2022, these companies have started paying out an initial $3 billion in special windfall dividends," the report adds. "Four of these companies--Pioneer, Chesapeake, Conoco, and Coterra--announced variable dividends beginning August 2021, as prices began to rise."
Chris Kuveke of BailoutWatch said in a statement that "Big Oil is living the second half of their unspoken mantra 'socialize losses, privatize gains.'"
"Two years after winning multi-billion dollar bailouts from the Trump administration, these newly flush companies are pocketing billions from an international crisis, and they don't care how it affects regular Americans," Kuveke added.
\u201cNEW TODAY: Big Oil is cashing in on a wartime bonus. They\u2019re exploiting surging crude oil prices, a humanitarian disaster in Europe, and consumer pain at the pump. It needs to stop. \n\nRead the full report from BailoutWatch, @Public_Citizen & @foe_us \ud83d\udea8 https://t.co/rM9GXXaJTc \ud83d\udea8\u201d— BailoutWatch (@BailoutWatch) 1649168100
As Public Citizen researcher Alan Zibel put it: "Big Oil executives are reaping windfall profits while accelerating the climate crisis and sticking consumers with the bill."
Zibel also acknowledged efforts to blame President Joe Biden for rising prices, rather than industry profiteering.
"The oil industry and their allies on Capitol Hill falsely claim that the Biden administration's acceptance of mainstream climate science is stifling investment in the domestic oil industry," he said. "But the industry's actions show that they are intently focused on funneling cash to their shareholders rather than lowering prices for consumers."
According to Lukas Ross, climate and energy program manager at Friends of the Earth: "This is a master class in war profiteering. Oil and gas companies are feeding off humanitarian disaster and consumer suffering in order to reward Wall Street."
"Oil companies drove us into a climate crisis and are now price gouging us to extinction," he warned. "Congress and President Biden must take action by passing a windfall profits tax to rein in Big Oil's cash grab."
Related Content
The new analysis follows the introduction of multiple bills targeting Big Oil's windfall profits, including a proposal spearheaded by Senate Budget Committee Chair Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) designed to crack down on such behavior in all sectors, not just the fossil fuel industry.
Sanders on Tuesday morning held a hearing to call out how corporate greed and profiteering are fueling inflation. During his opening remarks, the chair took aim at Big Oil specifically while listing some examples.
"Yesterday, at a time when gasoline in America is now at a near-record high at $4.17 a gallon, guess what?" Sanders said. "ExxonMobil reported that its profit from pumping oil and gas alone in the first quarter will likely hit a record high of $9.3 billion."
"Meanwhile," he added, "Big Oil CEOs are on track to spend $88 billion this year not to decrease supply constraints, not to address the climate crisis, but to buy back their own stock and hand out dividends to enrich their wealthy shareholders."
The House Energy and Commerce Committee's Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations plans to hold a hearing Wednesday titled "Gouged at the Gas Station: Big Oil and America's Pain at the Pump." Top executives from BP America, Chevron, Devon Energy, ExxonMobil, Pioneer Natural Resources, and Shell USA are set to appear before the panel.
"These are not abstract numbers," wrote National Education Association president Becky Pringle. "These are real children who show up to school eager to learn but are instead distracted by hunger."
The leader of the largest teachers union in the United States is sounding the alarm over the impact that President Donald Trump's newly enacted budget law will have on young students, specifically warning that massive cuts to federal nutrition assistance will intensify the nation's child hunger crisis.
Becky Pringle, president of the National Education Association (NEA)—which represents millions of educators across the U.S.—wrote for Time magazine earlier this week that "as families across America prepare for the new school year, millions of children face the threat of returning to classrooms without access to school meals" under the budget measure that Trump signed into law last month after it cleared the Republican-controlled Congress.
Estimates indicate that more than 18 million children nationwide could lose access to free school meals due to the law's unprecedented cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and Medicaid, which are used to determine eligibility for free meals in most U.S. states.
The Trump-GOP budget law imposes more strict work-reporting requirements on SNAP recipients and expands the mandates to adults between the ages of 55 and 64 and parents with children aged 14 and older. The Congressional Budget Office said earlier this week that the more aggressive work requirements would kick millions of adults off SNAP over the next decade—with cascading effects for children and other family members who rely on the program.
"Educators see this pain every day, and that's why they go above and beyond—buying classroom snacks with their own money—to support their students."
Pringle wrote in her Time op-ed that "our children can't learn if they are hungry," adding that as a middle school science teacher she has seen first-hand "the pain that hunger creates."
"Educators see this pain every day, and that's why they go above and beyond—buying classroom snacks with their own money—to support their students," she wrote.
The NEA president warned that cuts from the Trump-GOP law "will hit hardest in places where families are already struggling the most, especially in rural and Southern states where school nutrition programs are a lifeline to many."
"In Texas, 3.4 million kids, nearly two-thirds of students, are eligible for free and reduced lunch," Pringle wrote. "In Mississippi, 439,000 kids, 99.7% of the student population, were eligible for free and reduced-cost lunch during the 2022-23 school year."
"These are not abstract numbers," she added. "These are real children who show up to school eager to learn but are instead distracted by hunger and uncertainty about when they will eat again. America's kids deserve better.
Pringle's op-ed came as school leaders, advocates, and lawmakers across the country braced for the impacts of Trump's budget law.
"We're going to see cuts to programs such as SNAP and Medicaid, resulting in domino effects for the children we serve," Rep. LaMonica McIver (D-N.J.) said during a recent gathering of lawmakers and experts. "For many of our communities, these policies mean life or death."
In some cases, corporate groups have posed as small business owners besieged by rising crime rates.
U.S. President Donald Trump's military occupation of Washington, D.C. has been egged on for months by corporate lobbyists. In some cases, they have posed as small business owners besieged by rising crime rates.
According to a report Tuesday in The Lever:
Last February, the American Investment Council, private equity's $24 million lobbying shop, penned a letter to D.C. city leaders demanding "immediate action" to address an "alarming increase" in crime.
That letter was published as an exclusive by Axios with the headline: "Downtown D.C. Business Leaders Demand Crime Solutions."
But far from a group of beleaguered mom-and-pops, the letter's signatories "included some of the biggest trade groups on K Street," The Lever observed:
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which boasts its status as the largest business organization in the world; the National Retail Federation, a powerful retail alliance representing giants like Walmart and Target; and Airlines for America, which represents the major U.S. airlines, among others. These lobbying juggernauts spend tens of millions of dollars every year lobbying federal lawmakers to get their way in Washington."
It was one of many efforts by right-wing groups to agitate for a more fearsome police crackdown in the city and oppose criminal justice reforms.
On multiple occasions, business groups and police unions have helped to thwart efforts by the D.C. city council to rewrite the city's criminal code, which has not been updated in over a century, to eliminate many mandatory minimum sentences and reduce sentences for some nonviolent offenses.
The reforms were vetoed by D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser in 2023. After the veto was overridden by the city council, Democrats helped Republicans pass a law squashing the reforms, which was signed by then-President Joe Biden.
In 2024, groups like the Chamber of Commerce pushed the "Secure D.C." bill in the city council, which expanded pre-trial detention, weakened restrictions on chokeholds, and limited public access to police disciplinary records.
At the time, business groups lauded these changes as necessary to fight the post-pandemic crime spike D.C. was experiencing.
But crime rates in D.C. have fallen precipitously, to a 30-year low over the course of 2024. As a press release from the U.S. attorney's office released on January 3, 2025 stated: "homicides are down 32%; robberies are down 39%; armed carjackings are down 53%; assaults with a dangerous weapon are down 27% when compared with 2023 levels."
Nevertheless, as Trump sends federal troops into D.C., many in the corporate world are still cheering.
In a statement Monday, the D.C. Chamber of Commerce described itself as a "strong supporter" of the Home Rule Act, which Trump used to enact his federal crackdown.
The Washington Business Journal quoted multiple consultancy executives—including Yaman Coskum, who exclaimed that "It is about time somebody did something to make D.C. great again," and Kirk McLaren who said, "If local leaders won't protect residents and businesses, let's see if the federal government will step in and do what's necessary to create a safe and prosperous city."
Despite crime also being on the decline in every other city he has singled out—Los Angeles, Baltimore, Oakland, New York, and Chicago—Trump has said his deployment of federal troops "will go further."
"California will now draw new, more 'beautiful maps,'" wrote Newsom's press office in a Trump-style social media post.
The office of Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Tuesday night revealed that the governor was going ahead with plans to redraw California's congressional map with the goal of counteracting Republicans' planned mid-decade gerrymander in Texas.
In a post on X, Newsom's press office made the announcement while openly parodying the social media posting style of U.S. President Donald Trump.
"DONALD 'TACO' TRUMP, AS MANY CALL HIM, 'MISSED' THE DEADLINE!!!" the post began. "CALIFORNIA WILL NOW DRAW NEW, MORE 'BEAUTIFUL MAPS,' THEY WILL BE HISTORIC AS THEY WILL END THE TRUMP PRESIDENCY (DEMS TAKE BACK THE HOUSE!). BIG PRESS CONFERENCE THIS WEEK WITH POWERFUL DEMS AND GAVIN NEWSOM—YOUR FAVORITE GOVERNOR—THAT WILL BE DEVASTATING FOR 'MAGA.' THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER!"
The announcement came less than two days after Newsom sent a letter to Trump warning the president that he was "playing with fire" by pushing Texas to draw a new map that independent analysts have estimated could net Republicans five additional seats in the U.S. House of Representatives.
At the time, Newsom also left open the possibility of backing off his threat to redraw California's map if Texas did likewise.
"If you will not stand down I will be forced to lead an effort to redraw the maps in California to offset the rigging of maps in red states," Newsom said. "But if the other states call off their redistricting efforts, we will happily do the same. And American democracy will be better for it."
Newsom then informed Trump that he had until late Tuesday to respond to his letter before the California governor took action.
Before redrawing California's map, however, Newsom would have to undo his state's current redistricting process through a special ballot initiative this fall, as for years California's districts have been determined by an independent commission.
As the gerrymandering wars have escalated, pro-democracy watchdog Common Cause this week unveiled a new set of standards for any redistricting effort that includes measures such as using independent commissions and avoiding racial discrimination aimed at reducing the political power of minorities throughout the country.