On energy and the environment, the Department of Energy and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will remain in the hands of conservation-minded policymakers, who want to tilt the energy market in favor of clean technologies, back strict controls on greenhouse emissions and vehicle efficiency and are somewhat skeptical about drilling for oil and gas.

BACKING THE LOSING SIDE

In the past 18 months, the financial services and fossil energy industries moved into outright opposition to the Obama administration and the Democratic Party, making little secret of their desire to see a Republican takeover in Washington.

Employees of banks such as Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase and Co, as well as many brokerages and derivatives dealers poured millions of dollars into political action committees that supported Romney for president and backed other Republicans in a bid to seize control of the Senate.

The American Petroleum Institute (API), which lobbies on behalf of the oil and gas industry, created and funded Vote4Energy to campaign for oil- and gas-friendly policies in battleground states. The organization was nominally independent, but its positions and advocacy closely mirrored the views of the Romney campaign.

In return, Romney's campaign promised to repeal the hated Dodd-Frank law and ease restrictions on the development of fossil energy.

MORE GUERRILLA WARFARE?

Wall Street and the fossil energy industry now must decide how to cope with the new reality that the White House and the executive branch will remain under Democratic control for the next four years, while Democrats will control the Senate until the start of 2015.

One option is to maintain a strong oppositional stance. The U.S. House of Representatives remains in the hands of a solid Republican majority and can be counted on to block any attempts to pass fresh legislation on energy or financial services that the industries do not like.

The U.S. District Court and Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, which review most financial and environmental regulations, remain in the hands of conservative judges, most appointed by Republican presidents, and will continue to review regulations critically.

Lobbying groups such as the Securities Industries and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA), the International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA), the API and the U.S. Chambers of Commerce have mounted a series of legal challenges to regulations implementing Dodd-Frank and in some cases have won the first round.

It is part of a broader coordinated effort to roll back financial, energy and environmental regulations by citing cost-benefit concerns.

The two industries could continue to mount a guerrilla campaign against the new regulations in the courts and the House, harrying regulators with legal challenges, cuts to agency budgets and congressional hearings.

But most of the legal victories that the industries have won so far have been on peripheral issues, such as lack of adequate cost-benefit analysis. They have been unable to prevail on the substance of the new laws and regulations. And regulators now have four more years to redraft any regulations that the courts find deficient.

BURYING THE HATCHET?

In 2012, business lobby groups and the Republican Party made some headway among voters with their argument that the Obama administration was over-regulating the economy and harming the recovery, but it was not enough. By 2016, Dodd-Frank and the administration's energy policies will be well entrenched and the argument may not have so much resonance with the electorate.

So industry leaders will come under intense pressure in the weeks and months ahead to bury the hatchet and take a more conciliatory approach to the administration and Senate Democrats.

Banks and energy companies have spent record amounts on lobbying in Washington in the past four years. Goldman Sachs, for example, spent almost $3.3 million lobbying senators and representatives in the 12 months to September, according to filings with the congressional lobbying database, on issues connected with derivatives reform and tax policy.

But however much money they pour into lobbying efforts, the perception that energy companies, banks and brokerages, as well as most of their employees, are solidly behind the Republican Party will limit their future influence on a range of issues that are vital for both industries.

Pressure to rebuild a constructive relationship with the White House and at least part of the Senate Democratic Caucus will therefore be intense.

In fact there are a variety of issues on which the two sides could reset the relationship. Fiscal reform is one area in which there could be scope for compromise. Business and financial leaders have been signaling for weeks that they are ready to support moderate tax increases as part of an overall tax and spending package to avert the fiscal cliff.

The Keystone XL pipeline is another early decision where the president could reach out to the industry and appear to back the development of fossil fuel resources, albeit with strict safety and environmental safeguards.

But it will take a spirit of compromise on both sides. After a resounding defeat, the energy and financial services industries would be wise to repair relationships.

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Can you imagine how much it would cost to get that much horsepower and pumps on an offshore platform?  Not to mention the weight requirements for all those pumps and sand.

Ghawker, we use massive specialized workboats loaded with proppant and pumps with a huge high pressure hose to pump through that runs from the boat to the rig. Rarely do they ever put the sand and pumps on the rig anymore and when they do the jobs are small gravel pack jobs.

Very, very interesting article.  What's not discussed is what will happen as the price of energy rises.  Government is changing that dynamic through regulation and such, and the industry will pass on those costs to the consumer.  Since oil underpins this economy, as the price goes up and the consumer pays more at the pump, for electricity, etc., then in my opinion, this whole dynamic will change.  I think the energy industry needs to maintain it's opposition to the green energy initiatives, and argue based on the economic realities around transitioning to a green energy economy.

I also want to mention a couple of quick things.  The Keystone Pipeline has planned a leg into North Dakota, so it will help ease the cost of transporting oil from there.  However it's a small amount of the total Bakken production.  Also, remember it terminates in Cushing, OK for the first phase, then down to Houston for the second (which I believe is being built now) - so I guess I don't understand the "Tariff Free Zone".  Secondly, there are a lot of pipelines already running through the Sand Hills area in Nebraska - so the arguments that it needs to be kept pristine are false,  Finally, as per "safe fracking" - the opposition to fracking is  not based on science, but perception.  Think about the incentives operators have to not contaminate ground water, or otherwise do damage.  As an industry, we do a terrible job at public perception, and that needs to change...

 "Think about the incentives operators have to not contaminate ground water, or otherwise do damage."

I don't think that we explain the logic properly. If we in the oil field contaminate ground water due to poor zonal isolation between the production zone and any other zone, then we lose frac fluids, proppant and eventually production to areas where it's not suposed to be. That would be thowing money away, oil companies like any other company doesn't plan throw money down a hole for no reason.

There is no reason an energy company would knowingly allow contamination, because of the loss of income, if for no other reason. There is no logical reason that an anti fracking person could point to that would counter that. Yeah I'm going to drill a gas well, frack it and then allow  my multi million dollar frack job to escape into some towns water supply? I don't think so. Even if for some reason they don't care about the environment, they care about profit and there is no profit from lost production capability.

You said that the US EPA was in control of conservation minded policy makers. I wish that they really were conservation minded. Several years ago, an ADEQ employee referred to the US EPA as being "jack booted thugs." Now, I can see that applied to "environmentalists" and "tree huggers" but not a conservationist. Biblically speaking, the environmentalist, if he believes in God at all, believes that the earth takes priority over man. but the conservationist (if a believer) takes the attitude that God created the earth for man. That's a huge difference. True conservationists would never try to subject us to all the crazy things the environmentalists have. Neither would they have used bogus science to try and convince us that they are right. We desperately need to get the US EPA defunded.

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