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9.16.2010

Koch Industry News-Climate Change

It's The Real Thing: The Power of Koch

September 8, 2010 by David Levy
1

We are at a critical juncture, as a backlash appears to be derailing action on climate change. If progressive groups want to address this threat, we need to understand the interests, strategies, and cultural politics at play.

Brian Flannery, chief climate strategist for ExxonMobil, recently circulated his rather depressing report from the UN climate August negotiations in Bonn regarding the future of the Kyoto Protocol. After the failure to reach agreement last December at Copenhagen, the plan was to encourage countries to sign up to the bare-bones Copenhagen Accord and build momentum for a treaty this December in Cancun, Mexico. But according to Flannery, "Governments and the Secretariat have been lowering expectations for a legally binding agreement, or even substantive progress, at CoP 16 in Cancun. Attendees were well aware of setbacks to climate legislation in Australia, Japan and the USA. The Bonn meeting continued to dampen expectations." Flannery observed that the discussions continue to be deadlocked over fundamental issues, and that the consensus is that "Cancun at most will produce CoP decisions, not a legally binding treaty". There even seems to have been some backsliding regarding REDD (forests) and the Technology Mechanism, while "the status of CDM going forward may be questionable".

This news comes at the end of a summer that has seen record temperatures in the Eastern US and Europe, floods in Pakistan, and an iceberg four times the size of Manhattan breaking away from the Petermann ice shelf on Greenland. Global average temperatures in 2010 are on track to be the highest ever, and the Arctic is melting at an unprecedented pace, stirring fears of major shifts in the jet stream and global weather patterns. How can we square the ever-mounting evidence of climate change with national and global policy paralysis?

During the 1990s, it was easy to blame business lobbying and public misinformation campaigns for US inaction. But this explanation seemed less tenable after the Global Climate Coalition (GCC) collapsed in early 2000 (see my earlier post). Some former GCC companies have since joined more progressive organizations that espouse sustainability and support action on climate, such as the Pew Center Business Environmental Leadership Council and the US Climate Action Partnership (though there have also been some recent high level defections). I suggested that business had called a ceasefire in the carbon wars and was joining the grand "Carbon Compromise". A weak carbon regime would not threaten core business operations in the short-to-medium term, leaving adequate time and resources for longer-term strategic repositioning as the climate issue plays out.

Even Exxon, historically the strongest opponent of mandatory carbon controls, has shifted its stance, and now calls for a carbon tax (instead of a cap-and-trade system) while investing heavily in biofuels. Flannery's report from Bonn was not celebrating the political quagmire; at this stage, big business is looking some regulatory predictability, so that it can plan investments. Flannery commented that:

By and large business groups would like to see focus on some issues, such as the Technology Mechanism and Finance, if only to build trust and create some tangible progress.  Business is also involved in a dialog session… to explore establishing a recognized process for formal business input to the UNFCCC.

Conventional wisdom holds that the political stalemate over climate stems in large part  from the dramatic rise in populist climate denial and opposition to any policy measures that would raise fuel prices during a tough recession. Public opinion polls in the US and the UK show a dramatic jump in the last year in the percentage of people who don't think that climate change is a priority issue. Climategate and last year's unusually cold winter in Europe and the eastern US fired up the rhetoric of climate deniers, and their voices have been channeled to mass audiences through the tabloid press and talk radio.

The populist climate backlash is not, however, a purely organic movement driven from the grassroots. Rather, it's been organized and nurtured through a carefully crafted and well funded strategy. This second wave of corporate opposition emanates more narrowly from the oil industry. As I discussed in Carbon Wars II: The Sequel, last year the industry front-group Energy Citizens contracted with a professional events management company to plan about 20 large rallies against carbon regulation during August 2009, with a focus on energy producing southern states such as Texas and Louisiana. Member companies encouraged their employees to join in. Energy Citizens' website proclaims that it is "a nationwide alliance of organizations and individuals formed to bring together people across America to remind Congress that energy is the backbone of our nation's economy and our way of life." In fact, Energy Citizens was set up and financed primarily by the American Petroleum Institute (API), with support from the National Association of Manufacturers and other groups. This project complements a massive increase in lobbying efforts by the fossil fuel industry in the last six months.

The groundwork for the climate backlash had been well prepared. Jane Mayer describes  in the New Yorker how the billionaire brothers David and Charles Koch (pronounced 'Coke') have for decades funded organizations fighting regulation and taxes. Mayer's article has caused quite a stir (see here and here), and anyone who wants to understand the flows and contours of power in the US and the rise of tea party politics should read the full version. Particularly remarkable is the Koch brothers' focus on environmental regulation and climate change, and the way they have stitched this campaign into the broader right-wing agenda to attack the Obama administration.

The Koch brothers own Koch Industries, a Wichita, Kansas based private conglomerate  with annual revenues of around $100 billion, including a number of oil refineries and thousands of miles of pipelines. The brothers have a combined personal fortune of about $35 billion, a little behind Bill Gates and Warren Buffett, but more than enough to support a range of right-wing libertarian organizations. It was the Kochs who funded the 1977 launch of the Cato Institute, a think tank that has risen to prominence in the media as a source of anti-regulatory comment. According to Mayer, since 1980:

they poured more than a hundred million dollars into dozens of seemingly independent organizations. Tax records indicate that in 2008 the three main Koch family foundations gave money to thirty-four political and policy organizations, three of which they founded, and several of which they direct. The Kochs and their company have given additional millions to political campaigns, advocacy groups, and lobbyists….. So far in 2010, Koch Industries leads all other energy companies in political contributions, as it has since 2006.

The focus on the environment isn't surprising, as a report earlier this year from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst's Political Economy Research Institute named Koch Industries one of the top ten air polluters in the United States. A Greenpeace report from this spring provides details on the Kochs' funding of climate denial organizations, and "showed that, from 2005 to 2008, the Kochs vastly outdid ExxonMobil in giving money to organizations fighting legislation related to climate change, underwriting a huge network of foundations, think tanks, and political front groups." In addition to high profile think tanks such as Cato and Heritage, The Kochs have funded more obscure organizations, such as the Independent Women's Forum, which Mayer states, "opposes the presentation of global warming as a scientific fact in American public schools." Some of these groups have played a key role in hyping the "climategate" affair regarding leaked emails from climate researchers.

Other foundations such Olin and Richard Mellon Scaife, have been funding right-wing think tanks for years, helping to seed and legitimize these ideas in policy circles and the media. The Koch brothers were pioneers, however, in grassroots organizing, or at least the appearance of it. In 1984, they created Citizens for a Sound Economy, in 1990 Citizens for the Environment (which claimed that most environmental problems are myths), and in 2004 Americans for Prosperity Foundation, which has played a key role in the rise of tea party politics. To some degree, these organizations are astroturf front groups, run by lawyers and PR companies, with very few real citizens. But increasingly they are engaged in "grasstops" organizing as well, which involves recruiting and training thousands of people at the local level who are or can become leaders in their churches and communities. Mayer interviewed Matt Kibbe, the president of FreedomWorks, a Tea Party advocacy group, who said the mission:

was to take these heavy ideas and translate them for mass America. . . . We read the same literature Obama did about nonviolent revolutions—Saul Alinsky, Gandhi, Martin Luther King. We studied the idea of the Boston Tea Party as an example of nonviolent social change. We learned we needed boots on the ground to sell ideas, not candidates.

The Americans for Prosperity Foundation has held more than eighty events targeting climate legislation, complementing the work of Energy Citizens, and similar actions against health care reform. According to Grover Norquist, also interviewed by Mayer, these events have had a cascading impact:

last summer's raucous rallies were pivotal in undermining Obama's agenda. The Republican leadership in Congress, he said, "couldn't have done it without August [2009], when people went out on the streets. It discouraged deal-makers"—Republicans who might otherwise have worked constructively with Obama. Moreover, the appearance of growing public opposition to Obama affected corporate donors on K Street. "K Street is a three-billion-dollar weathervane," Norquist said. "When Obama was strong, the Chamber of Commerce said, 'We can work with the Obama Administration.' But that changed when thousands of people went into the street and 'terrorized' congressmen. August is what changed it. Now that Obama is weak, people are getting tough."

Tea party activism has elevated climate change to the status of a litmus test of cultural politics in the US, up there with abortion, guns, god, gays, immigration and taxes. A local Tea Party Group in Erie County, Ohio, recently sent candidates for this November's elections a 15-point questionnaire to help identify the true believers, on which question 2 reads: "The regulation of Carbon Dioxide in our atmosphere should be left to God and not government and I oppose all measures of Cap and Trade as well as the teaching of global warming theory in our schools."

The success of anti-climate politics illustrates the dynamic complexities of power in our society. Money is important, of course, but so is the effective molding of ideas. Crucial as well is building organizations and alliances that can mobilize people's energies, generate resources, and influence policy. In my academic work, I've built on the work of Niccolò Machiavelli and Antonio Gramsci and developed the concept of 'strategic power', the ability to study a political arena and deploy resources in a way that integrates economic, cultural, and political forces to create real change. For Gramsci, political struggle takes place largely in the realm of ideas and culture, which in turn are rooted in the mass media, people's daily lives at work and play, and civil society organizations such as the church and community groups. Ideas become powerful when they become part of "common sense", when they are linked together in a way that appears coherent and to carry moral and intellectual authority. This linking together of ideas as part of a broader ideology also helps to glue political alliances together.

The Koch brothers obtain their legitimacy, in part, through their generosity to cultural and medical causes, particularly in New York. David Koch recently donated $2.5 million toward the upcoming season of the American Ballet Theatre, and in 2008 gave $100 million to modernize and rename Lincoln Center's New York State Theatre building. Illustrating Gramsci's point that culture and politics are inseparable, David Koch has given $20 million to the American Museum of Natural History, on which he also serves as a trustee. According to Joe Romm, the David Koch Hall of Human Origins spins climate change as a purely natural phenomenon that has stimulated the evolution of humans into the smart, adaptable strategists we are. This might be amusing were the human race not displaying such collective inertia in the face of potentially catastrophic climate change.

Perhaps the greatest success of anti-climate politics has been to weave a discourse that resonates with broader cultural-political themes dominant in the US, such as individualism and consumerism, suspicion of government and foreigners, hostility to taxes, and antagonism toward scientific, political, and financial elites. Especially in the current recession, there is good reason for many people to feel angry about bank bailouts and nervous about higher fuel prices when they are losing jobs, even their homes. But as Thomas Frank has explored in What's the Matter with Kansas?, the right have been able to reframe blue-collar concerns in ways that support a low-tax, anti-regulation agenda, despite the most glaring contradictions.

Americans for Prosperity has been training tea party activists do the same thing with climate. Mayer describes how a training session for Tea Party activists in Texas was shamelessly cast as a populist uprising against vested corporate power. "Today, the voices of average Americans are being drowned out by lobbyists and special interests," it said. "But you can do something about it." Tim Phillips, the head of Americans for Prosperity, went to the UN climate summit at Copenhagen in December 2009 to stage a protest, where he declared: "We're a grassroots organization. . . . I think it's unfortunate when wealthy children of wealthy families . . . want to send unemployment rates in the United States up to twenty per cent." These messages are amplified and endlessly repeated through the Murdoch media empire, from Fox News to the New York Post, Wall Street Journal, and Glenn Beck.

Politics is a complex and uncertain multi-level chess game, and Koch's money does not assure a victory for groups opposing climate regulation. The tea party is a tiny and extreme movement, though it seems to inspire fear as the vanguard of a much larger populist backlash. The alliance among elements of the oil industry, the tea party, and the religious right on climate change is somewhat tenuous and full of contradictions. The oil sector is largely owned and managed by wealthy elites, relies heavily on science and technology, receives huge governmental subsidies, and depends on open borders for trade and investment.

Environmental and progressive business groups have also been active trying to stitch together their own ideas and coalitions, not without some success, around win-win approaches to sustainability. The appeal to mobilize innovation, entrepreneurship, venture capital and carbon markets as a means to reduce carbon emissions, revitalize the economy and generate 'green jobs' has proven attractive, helping to forge a loose alliance of business, regulatory agencies, scientists, and the financial sector. We are now at a critical juncture, as this alliance appears in danger of collapsing. Perhaps the elements of US business that have tentatively embraced the clean energy economy now see a larger opportunity to roll back the regulatory state. It's now more important than ever to develop a climate strategy that reconnects with the needs and fears of business as well as ordinary people battered by the recession.



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Scott's Contracting
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Forecasts Peak Oil in Seven Years

Maxwell Forecasts Peak Oil in Seven Years

September 13, 2010 by Robert Rapier
1

Respected oil analyst and oil industry veteran Charles Maxwell (nicknamed the "Dean of Oil Analysts") has forecast peak oil by 2017 or 2018:

Bracing For Peak Oil Production By Decade's End

His prediction is not so remarkable, as is where he made his prediction. The prediction was in Forbes, which has often scoffed at the notion of a near-term peak. Some of Maxwell's comments:

Maxwell: A bind is clearly coming. We think that the peak in production will actually occur in the period 2015 to 2020. And if I had to pick a particular year, I might use 2017 or 2018. That would suggest that around 2015, we will hit a near-plateau of production around the world, and we will hold it for maybe four or five years. On the other side of that plateau, production will begin slowly moving down. By 2020, we should be headed in a downward direction for oil output in the world each year instead of an upward direction, as we are today.

As far as the impact, you can put Maxwell down as a Long Recession believer. In 2008 interview, he predicted:

"[Maxwell] expects an oil-induced financial crisis to start somewhere in the 2010 to 2015 timeframe," Energytechstocks.com reported. "He said that, unlike the recession the U.S. appears to be in today, 'This will not be six months of hell and then we come out of it.' Rather, Maxwell expects this financial crisis to last at least 10 or 12 years, as the world goes through a prolonged period of price-induced rationing (eg, oil up to $300 a barrel and U.S. pump prices up to $15 a gallon)."

Maxwell and I are also on the same page regarding what will happen with the oil companies. Some people think that as oil declines, the oil companies will go out of business. I have a different view. I think that the rise in oil prices will be faster than the decline in production for most oil companies. Thus, they will make more money on less production. This will infuriate the public and the politicians, who will see sky-high pump prices at the same time the oil companies are raking in record profits (reminiscent of 2007-2008). Thus, there will be many calls for additional windfall profits taxes, and more calls for nationalizing the oil companies. Maxwell's take:

Maxwell: In this case, "allow" means to allow the profits to flow through to the shareholders. What they will do is to put in excess profit taxes or windfall profit taxes on oil. That is the main problem that the oil industry will be dealing with in those future days. But even so, it looks like profits will rise significantly.

While there are some differences in the details, what Maxwell articulated approximates my own views. I view a global oil production peak within the decade as a near-certainty. I think there is a small probability that the peak has already occurred, but we won't know that until several years after the fact. I don't believe that there is anything in the technology pipeline that can prevent a growing gap between supply and today's demand. I believe that gap will be closed by price-induced rationing, which will be very hard on businesses and individuals. Higher prices will result in a very difficult transition period in which we are forced to use less because we simply don't have the money to use the oil that we have historically used. This will be a period of great economic difficulty, lasting for years. At the same time that the economy is in great difficulty, oil companies will continue to reap big profits, causing an enormous amount of resentment and calls for higher taxation and greater regulation of the oil industry.

However, I also believe that humans are very resilient, and that we will eventually come through this. This is why I do not characterize myself as a 'doomer.' We do use a lot more energy than we absolutely have to use. I would bet that most people – if they really had to – could cut their fuel consumption by 50%. It wouldn't necessarily be convenient or easy, but it could be done. But it takes planning to do this, and it is our collective failure to plan that is going to lead to the difficult period. It is during the difficult period that we will get serious about planning, and the subsequent modifications in our energy usage pattern will ultimately lead to recovery on the other side of the crisis. Energy transitions take time, but our energy consumption patterns will be forever altered relative to what they are today. I simply do not believe it will ever be possible to replace major shortfalls in oil production with renewables. It may be possible to replace 20% of today's oil production, but beyond that there will be increasing competition with arable land for food production — and pressure to turn forested land into arable land.



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Scott's Contracting
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Despite Struggles, Entrepreneurs Find Ways to Give Back

Small-Business Guide

Despite Struggles, Entrepreneurs Find Ways to Give Back

The economic slowdown that started in 2008 affected just about every aspect of Gumas Advertising's business — including the company's long-time support for charities in the San Francisco area. "In good times, we did not have to scrutinize our charitable giving or employee perks," said John Gumas, the company's president. "But in these economic times, we've really had to think through what we could afford to give and still be able to make a difference."

Michele McDonald for The New York Times

Larry O'Toole founded Gentle Giant, a moving company that collected medical supplies for Haitian earthquake victims.

Quick Tips:

When cash is tight, give time, services or products.

Use the opportunity to build relationships with important contacts and references.

Make sure the charity qualifies for tax-exempt status by reviewing its I.R.S. Form 990.

Create opportunities to allow employees to volunteer time and expertise.

Combine your efforts with other businesses or service organizations to multiply your impact.

Suggested Resources:

The Better Business Bureau Wise Giving Alliance offers advice on philanthropic giving.

The Charity Navigator vets charitable organizations and community foundations.

You're the Boss

Have you found creative ways to give back? Let us know.

By the end of 2008, some 60 percent of small-business owners like Mr. Gumas reported that the economic downturn had affected their charitable giving, according to a study whose sponsors included The Chronicle of Philanthropy, a newspaper that covers nonprofit organizations. Tough times have compelled small-business owners like Mr. Gumas to rethink long-held business practices. But many are finding creative ways to continue their support for good causes — a practice that can have positive side effects. Here are some suggestions based on the experiences of small-business owners.

GIVE TIME AND SERVICES "We want to give back," said Larry O'Toole, founder of Gentle Giant, a moving company based in Massachusetts. "That's an important part of our company culture."

A depressed housing market has meant less demand for the company's services, which has forced it to cut back on cash donations. But with more down time, said Stephen Coady, the company's marketing manager, it has been able to do more pro bono work. In the spring a local real estate agent approached Gentle Giant about collecting donated medical supplies for victims of the Haiti earthquake. Volunteering its trucks and movers, the company collected supplies like crutches, canes, walkers and wheelchairs — filling two large moving vans over the course of two months. Gentle Giant turned the supplies over to Partners in Health, a nonprofit group based in Boston that provides medical services to the poor.

Along with supporting a good cause and bolstering employee spirits, providing the pro bono services enabled the company to build connections with important business contacts, like real estate agents, who are a frequent source of referrals. "We would do this kind of thing anyway," Mr. Coady said, "but you can also use this time to build relationships that you wouldn't have time to cultivate when you are busy."

Small businesses can help nonprofit organizations in a number of ways that may not seem obvious at first, said Christine Marquez-Hudson, the executive director of Mi Casa Resource Center, a nonprofit human services group that helps Latino families in Denver. For instance, Mi Casa called upon a multicultural marketing agency, The Idea Marketing, to create brochures and other marketing materials. When the firm recognized that Mi Casa would also need a cost-effective way to distribute this material, it helped negotiate discounts with one of its suppliers for printing and bulk mail services. "They have the clout and volume of business to get these discounts that we couldn't get if we approached the vendor directly," Ms. Marquez-Hudson said.

GIVING AND OUTREACH Trevor Dierdorff, owner of Amnet, an information technology company in Colorado Springs, has continued to support the Humane Society and the local Veterans Day parade, but he said, "we've had to be more selective this year."

Before the recession, Amnet spent money every year to entertain crucial customers on expensive golf outings. The company also contributed time and money to several local charities. When the economic crunch hit, Mr. Dierdorff looked for creative ways to combine these efforts.

He had been making cash donations to a local charity, but this year saw the opportunity to use his donation to become one of the sponsors of the charity's annual golf tournament. As a result, not only did Amnet gain visibility, but it also received a round in the tournament that Mr. Dierdorff plans to use to entertain clients.

REBUILD EMPLOYEE MORALE While layoffs and shrinking budgets can take a toll on morale, Mr. Gumas said, getting employees involved in pro bono projects can rebuild enthusiasm.

His advertising company has designed marketing brochures, TV commercials, billboards, and print ads for the San Francisco Giants Community Fund, a nonprofit organization that works with underserved youth in the areas of education, health and violence prevention. Mr. Gumas's employees take part in many of the fund's events. "It gives us all a rallying point," he said, "and as tough as things are, we are reminded how lucky we are compared to the next guy."

Research has shown that the most successful company-run volunteer programs allow employees to select the causes they support, said Dr. Dwight Burlingame, who is director of academic programs for Indiana University's Center on Philanthropy. Nonetheless, he suggests that you make sure your small business organizes these volunteer days on behalf of the employees. The most effective morale builders, he said, were programs "organized by the company, especially where there's a company match of time or money and the company provides recognition for the volunteers' efforts."

TAKE THE TAX BREAK Amnet used to offer a discounted rate on information technology services for nonprofit organizations, a practice that helped the nonprofits without affording Mr. Dierdorff any tax benefits. When the economy worsened, he decided to eliminate the discounted rate for nonprofits. Instead, he now charges the standard rate but then donates the equivalent of the discount back to the organization in cash, which allows him to take the tax deduction.

FIND A PARTNER Joining forces with other organizations can compound your impact. If you belong to a local service club like the Chamber of Commerce, Lions or Rotary, look for ways to partner with them on their outreach efforts.

For example, said Rick Wells, chief executive of the San Rafael Chamber of Commerce in California, if cash is tight, "the local business can volunteer employee time, help with logistics, or donate products and services which can be given away as raffle prizes." Donating products, he noted, can also help the business clear out excess inventory.

Like so many companies, Dairy Specialists, which designs, builds and supplies commercial dairies in Colorado, has had to trim its work force. But when the decline in revenue put a squeeze on the company's long-standing college scholarship program, Robert Brown, the company's chief financial officer, went looking for partners. He found many of the businesses that served the same agricultural community were receptive to donating matching funds. "If you can't do these things on your own anymore," Mr. Brown said, "look to some of your bigger business partners to help you."

REVIEW YOUR STRATEGY "Businesses are bombarded with requests for contributions," said Sandra Miniutti, vice president of marketing with Charity Navigator, a nonprofit organization that tracks public charities. "It's important to have some standards in place."

This is also a good time to review the strategic purpose of your philanthropy, said Scott Hauge, president of CAL Insurance, a San Francisco-based agency. Developing a philanthropy "playbook," he said, makes it easier for you to stick to your mission and keep it aligned with your business goals.

While many small businesses are learning to do more with less, said Mr. Gumas, giving to good causes will always be the right thing to do. He subscribes to a karmic view of the business cycle. "When you are doing the right things for the right reasons," he said, "good things will come of it."



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Scott's Contracting
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Gov't say banks should share Fannie, Freddie costs


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Source: Associated Press/AP Online
Publication date: September 15, 2010

By ALAN ZIBEL

WASHINGTON - The nation's largest banks have an obligation to pay some of the cost for bailing out mortgage buyers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac because they sold them bad mortgages, a government regulator said Wednesday.

Edward DeMarco, the acting director for the Federal Housing Finance Agency, said the banks this summer have refused to take back $11 billion in bad loans sold to the two government-controlled companies, in written testimony submitted for a House subcommittee hearing Wednesday. A third of those requests have been outstanding for at least three months.

DeMarco said the banks have a legal obligation to buy back the loans and called the delays "a significant concern." He said the government may take new steps to force those buybacks if "discussions do not yield reasonable outcomes soon."

In an interview with reporters after the hearing, DeMarco declined to give further details on what the government might do next. He said only that "we're looking for contractual obligations to be fulfilled."

The two mortgage giants nearly collapsed two years ago when the housing market went bust. The government stepped in to rescue them and it has cost taxpayers about $148 billion so far. The rescue is on track to be the most expensive piece of stabilizing the financial system.

Investors who buy loans from banks have the right to force lenders to repurchase them if they later discover fraudulent statements on loan applications.

The leading Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee subcommittee indicated the banks bear some responsibility.

"We must begin to think about approaches for recouping taxpayers' money in the long run," said Rep. Paul Kanjorski, D-Pa. "We found a way to pay for the savings and loan crisis, and we can survey find a way to recover the costs associated with this crisis."

Wall Street has worried that the costs of bailing out Fannie and Freddie could get pushed back on big banks. Fitch Ratings said in a report last month that the four largest U.S. banks could book losses of up to $42 billion if Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac force them to take back troubled mortgages they made. It also estimated that JPMorgan Chase & Co., Citigroup Inc., Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo & Co. could record $17 billion in losses if they repurchase a quarter of the mortgage giants' seriously delinquent loans.

Fannie and Freddie buy mortgages and package them into securities with a guarantee against default.

The Obama administration is working on a plan to restructure the mortgage market and make sure home loans are affordable. Officials don't plan to release details until next year. But Michael Barr, an assistant Treasury secretary, told the panel Wednesday that Fannie and Freddie "will not exist in the same form as they did in the past."

Figuring out what to do about Fannie and Freddie is a divisive issue on Capitol Hill, and it could grow even more contentious if Republicans take control of one or both houses of Congress.

Republicans have seized on the administration's management of Fannie and Freddie to illustrate Democrats' push for broadening the reach of the federal government. They say loans acquired by Fannie and Freddie since the September 2008 takeover have put taxpayers at risk.

"It's time for the government to get out of that business," said Rep. Spencer Bachus, the top Republican on the House Financial Services Committee.

But Democrats and regulators say the loans acquired by Fannie and Freddie before their takeover represent the overwhelming majority of the companies' losses. New loans acquired since then have been performing well, they note.

"There is no urgency," to reform the two companies, said Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., chairman of the House Financial Services Committee. "The pattern of abuse they had engaged in has been changed...Fannie and Freddie are behaving differently and are causing far less problems."

A service of YellowBrix, Inc.



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