S 680 · 94th Congress · Foreign Trade and International Finance
A bill to amend the Emergency Petroleum Allocation Act of 1973 so as to encourage and protect investments in research, exploration, development, and production of the energy resources of the United States, and to reduce the prices of energy sources and products.
Bill Progress
✓
Introduced2
Committee3
Senate Vote4
House5
EnactedLatest: Referred to Senate Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs.(1975-02-13)
Plain Language Summary
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Directs the President, under the provisions of the Emergency Petroleum Allocation Act, to specify the maximum and minimum prices which may be paid by importers for crude oil, residual fuel oil, refined petroleum products, natural gas, and coal. Specifies a maximum price of $9.50 per barrel of crude oil. Authorizes the President to lower minimum prices per barrel if world prices permit. Requires the President to establish maximum and minimum prices within which the first sale or exchange of domestic crude oil, residual fuel oil, refined petroleum products, natural gas, and coal must be made. Provides criminal penalties for violations of the provisions of this Act. Directs the President to issue a proclamation whenever he determines that any foreign country has placed a direct or indirect embargo on oil and petroleum product exports to the United States. States that such countries shall not be eligible for foreign aid, military, or financial assistance until such embargo ends. Stipulates that reductions in the prices of oil, petroleum products, gas, and coal must be passed through on a dollar-for-dollar basis to subsequent purchases or consumers.…
Summarized by Claude AI · Non-partisan · For informational purposes only