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Privatization of Israel's Refineries |
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Written by Shir Hever, Alternative Information Center (AIC)
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Monday, 12 March 2007 |
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In January and February 2007,
the Israeli government finalized the privatization of its state-owned
refineries. The Israeli Ministry of Finance contends that the
privatization was a success and that the state attained a good price for
the refineries. We must ask, however, whether the price paid for the
refineries was indeed a fair one, and whether the taxpayers’ money hasn’t reached
the pockets of the capital holders once again.
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Profits of the refineries are
influenced by the price of oil. The wars in the Middle East (in Iraq and Lebanon, for example) create
uncertainty regarding oil production and raise its price. Rather than
losing from the price increase of their primary raw material, the
refineries actually benefit as their profit is determined as a percentage
of the price of their products. Although the profits of the refineries
flowed to the state coffers, the government sold them to private capital
holders (the refinery in the city of Ashdod
was sold in January while that in Haifa
was sold in February), and replaced a stable source of revenue with a
one-time income. It is clear that capital holders only got involved in
this deal when they became convinced of its profitability, and therefore
the government had almost no chance to profit from it. The state lost
billions of shekels in previous privatizations. Numerous studies have
demonstrated that Bank Hapoalim, El Al, Tsim and other former Israeli
government companies were sold for peanuts.
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The winners of the refineries are
the Paz Group, under the ownership of Tsadik Bino, and Israel Corp, owned
by the Ofer brothers. Paz purchased the refinery in Ashdod
for NIS
3.25 billion (US$774 million) and thus in essence guaranteed for itself an
ongoing and cheap supply of gasoline for its petrol stations. Paz also
holds a monopoly over the sale of gasoline to the Palestinian Authority.
In addition, Paz is connected to Supersol and Bank Leumi, strong companies
in their own right. This privatization in essence creates a powerful group
of capital holders which can hold the economy hostage.
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A majority of the stocks—and
with them control of the refineries in Haifa—fell into the hands of Israel Corp,
which until last year held 26% of the refineries’ stocks. These stocks
were purchased by the state for $135 million and resold to Israel Corp at
a higher price. Israel Corp presented itself as the victim in this
transaction, but according to the law, the stocks of the company were
supposed to automatically return to state ownership in 2003, at no cost.
The Ofer Family, owners of Israel Corp, have a long history of denying deals
with the state (such as in the tenders for the power stations in Ramat
Hovav and Rotem). Despite this, the state awarded to Israel Corp a present
of $135 million. The High Court objected to this deal, but did not find a
legal way to negate it.
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Were the refineries sold at an
appropriate price? It is important to remember, for example, that the
worth of the stock in the refineries’ stores alone came to more than a
billion dollars. The state is proud of the fact that it attained a sum of $2.34
billion for the refineries, but Israel Corp claimed in 2005 that the worth of the refineries
is approximately $3 billion. In the proposal that it submitted to the
tender this year, it appears that it estimated the worth of the company at
$3.3 billion. If so, the state sold the refineries for approximately one
billion dollars less than the actual value. The losers in this deal are
not the government representatives, for this is not their private money,
but the public in Israel.
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The sale process itself is a
stark example of cooperation amongst capital owners at the expense of the
public. In the year preceding the privatization, profits of the refineries
dropped by 40%, but the salaries of the CEOs and chairpersons of the
refineries increased. This contributed to the appearance that the state
achieved a good price in the deal. A day before the sale, Israel Corp decided
to sign an agreement with the Petrochemical factories and Glancor and to
submit the tender as if they were one competitor (under the name
Ofer-Federman Group). Africa Israel, owned by Lev-Leveiv, dropped out of
the tender at the last moment, and thus permitted the Ofer-Federman Group
to win the refineries and pay approximately $200 million less. To this day
it is unclear why Africa Israel dropped out of the tender at the last
moment, and if it acted in cooperation with the Ofer-Feldman Group.
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The topic of the environmental
implications remained open following the sale. The government did not
include protections for the environment in the tender. Refineries in Israel pollute at a level 3-4 times higher
than that accepted in Europe, and the Haifa Bay
area suffers from a 20% higher rate of cancer than the Israeli national
average—approximately 500 additional cancer victims each year. Law suits
of more than NIS
500 million ($119 million) are pending against the refineries for health
and environmental damages. Can we trust the Ofer brothers to take care of
the public health at the expense of their profits?
(A Hebrew
version of this article appeared in the Israeli weekly newspaper Ha’ir on
Friday 9 March 2007).
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