The head of a major coalition recently pushed back against unfounded commentary about the domestic maritime industry.
Ku’uhaku Park is president of the American Maritime Partnership (AMP), a group whose members include the SIU along with representatives from every component of the industry. In late March, he posted an editorial under the headline: “American Maritime Serves Nation In Face of Baseless Criticisms.”
Park began, “There is an old yet familiar saying in politics that you should ‘never let a good crisis go to waste.’ As such, it has been no surprise to see the anti-Jones Act activists come out of the woodworks – yet again – as energy prices have increased around the globe in the wake of the war in Eastern Europe.
“The anti-Jones Act ideologues and oil trader opportunists, ever predictably, are now calling for waivers to undermine America’s cornerstone maritime law,” he continued. “They claim that the Jones Act is responsible for the increased price at the pump across America. Not only are they wrong on the facts but doing away with the Jones Act could have severe unintended consequences for our nation’s national security, homeland security, and economic security.”
He explained that gas prices have “skyrocketed in recent months in part due to uncertainty in global energy markets as Russia’s war in Ukraine continues.”
However, Park noted, “The fact of the matter is that, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, the price consumers face at the pump is directly correlated to the cost of crude oil – a global commodity. The fundamental relationship between crude oil price and gasoline price is consistent and fluctuates upwards and downwards in tandem. Similarly, when the price of wheat changes, so does the price of bread. They’re intertwined.”
In February and March, Park said, crude oil prices increased by almost 57%. Given that the cost of crude correlates to around 56% of at-the-pump gasoline prices, “it’s clear what is actually responsible for the increased cost of gasoline. By contrast, the incremental increase in transportation costs during this same time period due to rising fuel prices has been minuscule. In general, the cost of transportation is a small fraction of the delivered cost of gasoline.”
He then turned to a question often asked by other U.S.-flag advocates: Who might benefit from waiving the nation’s freight cabotage law?
“The main group of people looking to line their pockets with a Jones Act waiver for gasoline would be oil traders,” Park wrote. “In the wake of Hurricane Sandy in 2012, a reporter for Reuters coined the phrase ‘disaster arbitrage’ to describe situations where oil traders use broad Jones Act waivers to pocket millions of dollars. Under a broad Jones Act waiver, oil is transported on foreign vessels that pay no U.S. taxes, employ foreign mariners at substandard wages, and avoid other U.S. laws even when American vessels are standing by and available to transport the goods. ‘The traders pocket the difference,’ Reuters said, never passing along any savings to consumers. Despite the Jones Act exemptions, gas prices remained high only to the benefit of a select group of profiteering fuel brokers.”
While a waiver wouldn’t appreciably affect gasoline prices, it “could potentially have devastating consequences for our nation’s security, especially at a time of uncertainty around the world,” Park asserted. “If nothing else, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine underscores the importance of ensuring our nation’s ability to protect our economic and homeland security at home and to support our national security interests around the world. The Jones Act ensures that we have a domestic shipbuilding base as well as a pool of mariners to draw upon during cases of national emergency.”
He pointed out that the domestic maritime industry “has kept our nation supplied during the pandemic and the resulting supply chain crisis with consistent, reliable service,” and called it “an insult … to take jobs away from these Americans now, at a time of rising inflation and global uncertainty.”
Park concluded, “While it has become reflexive for some to point to the Jones Act in every crisis, waiving this law simply would not have an impact on lowering the price of gas. However, it would put money in the pockets of oil traders and foreign interests at the expense of American national security and American workers.”
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