billS4222Event Thursday, March 26, 2026Analyzed

End Polluter Welfare for Enhanced Oil Recovery Act of 2026

Bearish
Impact2/10

Summary

S.4222, the End Polluter Welfare for Enhanced Oil Recovery Act of 2026, is an early-stage Senate bill that would eliminate tax credits for CO2-based enhanced oil recovery for new projects. With 5 cosponsors and referral to the Finance Committee, passage is highly uncertain and years away. Direct financial impact on ExxonMobil and Chevron is negligible in the near term given grandfathering of existing projects and the bill's early legislative stage.

See which stocks are affected

Key takeaways, market implications, full AI analysis, and connected signals are available to HillSignal members.

Already have an account? Log in

Key Takeaways

  • 1.S.4222 is early-stage legislation with 5 cosponsors and no committee action — near-zero probability of passage in this Congress
  • 2.Existing CO2-EOR projects are grandfathered; only new projects lose tax credits, limiting immediate dollar impact
  • 3.ExxonMobil and Chevron see negligible near-term revenue risk, with estimated annual impact under $50M combined if enacted
  • 4.Companion bill HR8108 exists in House but faces identical Republican-controlled chamber headwinds

Market Implications

The market has correctly priced zero risk from this bill. ExxonMobil at $155.19 has rallied 4.21% in the last week while Chevron at $193.42 has gained 4.43%, moves driven by crude oil fundamentals and sector rotation, not legislative risk. Both stocks remain well within their 52-week ranges ($101-176 for XOM, $134-215 for CVX). There is no actionable trading signal from S.4222 at this stage. Investors should ignore this bill until it demonstrates committee traction, which is unlikely before 2027.

Full Analysis

On March 26, 2026, Senator Merkley introduced S.4222, the End Polluter Welfare for Enhanced Oil Recovery Act of 2026. The bill was read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance. It has 5 cosponsors (Van Hollen, Markey, Booker, Sanders, Warren) and an identical companion bill HR8108 in the House. The legislation is at the very beginning of the legislative process. The bill has no funding mechanism — it is a tax credit elimination bill. It removes two tax preferences: (1) the ability for new CO2-EOR facilities built after enactment to claim the 45Q carbon oxide sequestration credit for CO2 used as a tertiary injectant, and (2) full repeal of Section 43 of the Internal Revenue Code, which provides a 15% credit for qualified enhanced oil recovery costs. Existing EOR projects are grandfathered — only facilities constructed after enactment lose access. The structural losers are oil majors with CO2-EOR operations such as ExxonMobil ($XOM) and Chevron. However, the impact is small for two reasons. First, existing projects are unaffected, meaning the vast majority of current EOR production capacity retains its tax treatment. Second, new EOR investment is a small fraction of these companies' upstream capex. Independent EOR operators like Denbury (acquired by Exxon in 2023) are now subsumed within $XOM. Real market data shows ExxonMobil at $155.19 (down 8.53% over 30 days but up 4.21% over 7 days) and Chevron at $193.42 (down 6.52% over 30 days, up 4.43% over 7 days). These movements reflect broader oil price dynamics and Q1 earnings sentiment, not this bill. The 7-day rallies of ~4% for both names are inconsistent with any bearish legislative overhang, confirming the market views this bill as noise. The timeline is extremely long: committee markup, floor vote in Senate, House passage via companion bill or stand-alone, differences resolved in conference, and presidential signature. With Democrats in the minority in the 119th Congress, this bill has no realistic path to enactment before 2027 at the earliest, and likely never without a change in congressional control.

Intelligence Surface

Cross-referenced against federal contracts, SEC insider filings & congressional trade disclosures

Unconfirmed

No confirming evidence found yet from contracts, insider trades, or congressional activity

$$XOM▼ Bearish
Est. $50.0M revenue impact

What the bill does

Elimination of Section 45Q tertiary injectant credit for new CO2-EOR facilities and repeal of Section 43 enhanced oil recovery credit

Who must act

Oil producers using CO2 for enhanced oil recovery in new projects built after enactment

What happens

Loss of up to ~$15/tonne 45Q credit for CO2 used as tertiary injectant and loss of 15% Section 43 EOR credit on qualified costs for new projects

Stock impact

ExxonMobil operates CO2-EOR projects in West Texas and Wyoming (e.g., LaBarge, Permian Basin CO2 flood). New project economics face ~$2-5/BOE margin headwind, but existing projects are grandfathered. Impact limited to new greenfield EOR capex decisions. Exxon's Q4 2025 upstream capex was ~$4.5B; EOR-specific new investment is a small fraction.

Market Impact Score

2/10
Minimal ImpactModerateMajor Market Event

Connected Signals

Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight

Related Presidential Actions

Executive orders & memoranda affecting the same sectors or companies

Exec OrderMay 1, 2026

Imposing Sanctions on Those Responsible for Repression in Cuba and for Threats to United States National Security and Foreign Policy

This Executive Order expands the existing national emergency against the Government of Cuba by imposing broad secondary sanctions and asset freezes on foreign persons operating in key sectors of the Cuban economy (energy, defense, metals/mining, financial services, security). It authorizes the Treasury and State Departments to block property and deny entry to individuals and entities involved in repression, corruption, or support for the Cuban government, and empowers Treasury to sanction foreign financial institutions that facilitate transactions for designated persons. The order effectively tightens the U.S. embargo by targeting third-country companies and banks that do business with Cuba.

presidential_memorandumApr 30, 2026

Presidential Permit: Authorizing Bridger Pipeline Expansion LLC to Construct, Connect, Operate, and Maintain Pipeline Facilities at the International Boundary at Phillips County, Montana, Between the United States and Canada

This Presidential Memorandum grants a permit to Bridger Pipeline Expansion LLC to construct and operate a new 36-inch diameter crude oil and petroleum products pipeline crossing the U.S.-Canada border in Montana. The permit authorizes bidirectional flow and variable throughput capacity without requiring further presidential approval, while maintaining existing regulatory oversight from agencies like PHMSA and reserving the government's right to seize the facilities for national security with compensation.

presidential_memorandumApr 20, 2026

Presidential Determination Pursuant to Section 303 of the Defense Production Act of 1950, as Amended, on Grid Infrastructure, Equipment, and Supply Chain Capacity

This Presidential Memorandum invokes Section 303 of the Defense Production Act (DPA) to address critical deficiencies in the domestic electric grid infrastructure and its supply chains. It authorizes the Secretary of Energy to make purchases, commitments, and provide financial support to expand the domestic capacity for designing, producing, and deploying grid infrastructure components like transformers, transmission lines, and related manufacturing tools, waiving certain DPA requirements for expediency.