Energy industry - May 20
by Staff
Click on the headline (link) for the full text. Many more articles are available through the Energy Bulletin homepage
Guardian.co.uk has learned that F&C Asset Management, Morley Fund Management, the Co-Operative Insurance Society and the West Midlands Pension Fund are throwing their weight behind a resolution demanding that ExxonMobil appoints an independent chairman to stimulate debate on the company's board. Exxon is facing a rebellion from its investors over its hardline approach to global warming. The firm has refused to follow rival oil companies in committing large-scale capital investment to environmentally friendly technology such as wind and solar power.
The Rocky Mountain drilling boom has been aided by the 2005 Energy Policy Act, which was once considered a partisan political masterstroke. In providing incentives for energy development, Republicans delivered a profitable gift to an industry that directs most of its campaign contributions to G.O.P. candidates. That gift was sweetened by the Bureau of Land Management, which, under President Bush, has expanded the amount of federal land open to energy development and increased the number of drilling permits. But the acceleration of energy exploration has split the national Republican Party from local Republicans upset by the downsides of the energy boom. “Republicans created a monster for themselves,” said Rick Ridder, a Colorado-based Democratic consultant. “They put public policy in direct conflict with their base voters.”
But replacing the experienced work force isn't so easy - particularly scientists and engineers. Their starting salaries are high, and that's largely because there still aren't enough of them. Last year's Rice University graduates with bachelor's degrees in engineering got average offers of $72,029, according to data provided by the university. One impediment to the energy industry's effort to attract qualified graduates has been its boom and bust cycle, said Dina Pyron, a Houston native whose parents worked in the energy industry. When the industry slumps, companies are quick to pass out pink slips, as they did during the big energy bust of the 1980s, when oil plunged from more than $30 a barrel to less than half that. |
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