California Governor Gavin Newsom proposed legislation Thursday that would require oil refiners in the state to maintain minimum reserves of gasoline and other fuels in an effort to prevent supply shortages and price spikes during refinery outages.
The California Energy Commission said refiners in the state maintained less than 15 days of supply of gasoline on 63 days last year, which it said caused prices to spike and cost drivers $650M.
“Price spikes at the pump are profit spikes for Big Oil,” Newsom said. “Refiners should be required to plan ahead and backfill supplies to keep prices stable, instead of playing games to earn even more profits.”
Under the proposal, California refiners would be required to present resupply plans that are adequate to address losses in production when their plants are undergoing maintenance work.
Claims that refiners intentionally idle plants to perform maintenance during driving season are false and “purposely misleading,” the Western States Petroleum Association said. “To impose new operational mandates on energy producers based on such falsehoods is regulatory malpractice, and ignores the logistical challenges and costs associated with such a plan.”
Companies that own refineries in California include Marathon Petroleum (NYSE:MPC), Chevron (NYSE:CVX), PBF Energy (PBF), Valero Energy (VLO) and Phillips 66 (PSX).
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