Thu Nov 15, 2012 7:54pm EST
* Lawmakers consider state fuel reserve, refinery oversight
* Worries over "black hole" in state energy picture
* Senator says gasoline market has gone askew
Nov 15 (Reuters) - California lawmakers on Thursday proposed more oil refinery oversight and the creation of a state fuel reserve as possible measures to prevent future gasoline price spikes like those that hit motorists in May and October.
A state Senate hearing on Thursday was held to consider the threats to supply in a state where, due to strict air pollution standards and higher taxes, drivers already pay far more than the national average for gasoline.
This situation was then exacerbated in early October when the unplanned shutdown of a key Exxon Mobil Corp refinery sent prices close to $5 a gallon, the California Energy Commission said.
While a refining industry representative at the hearing said the price swells were a natural market reaction to a dearth of supply, Robert McCullough, an independent energy consultant, suspects the picture is not quite so simple.
He released a report on Thursday that said two West Coast refineries may have produced oil throughout May despite reports they were shut for maintenance. The report also found West Coast oil inventories were at historically high levels in October - and rising in May - which should have kept prices from spiking.
McCullough said there was no way to know for sure whether the gasoline market was being manipulated or not because of a fundamental lack of information on the sector.
"This is a black hole in our energy picture," he said at a hearing of the state Senate Select Committee on Bay Area Transportation. "We know very little about what is happening in those markets."
For example, refineries have no obligation to alert the state in advance when they plan to shut down for maintenance, making it difficult for the California Energy Commission (CEC), which oversees the market, to know the full supply picture.
And while inventories are reported to the CEC, the industry does not have to say who owns what portion of those reserves, McCullough said.
Tupper Hull, spokesman for the Western States Petroleum Association, which represents 12 of the state's 14 refineries, dismissed McCullough's claims, saying the industry is already highly regulated.
"The fact that Mr. McCullough hasn't been able to find market manipulation or something illegal doesn't suggest that he needs more information," Hull said. "Perhaps he should reach the conclusion that there is no market manipulation."
Senator Mark Leno, chair of the committee that held the hearing, said the market should be more transparent, and that without legislative action, it would only be a matter of time before gas prices spike again, especially since ownership of refineries is growing more concentrated.
"We don't know enough to be able to make any determination as to what actually has occurred," Leno said. "We will continue to see what we can do legislatively to correct what I think is a market that's gone askew."
The supply squeeze in October led to a renewed call by a consumer advocate for the state to block a proposed acquisition of BP Plc's southern California refinery by Tesoro Corp , unveiled in August.
Supply in the state has been particularly squeezed ever since a major fire at the Chevron Corp refinery in Richmond, California, which has put the key crude unit out of action until early next year.
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