Shit I Made Up

Oil’s dirty little secret

We’ve all sat around over the past year and watched gasoline prices skyrocket.  There has been much ballyhoo as to how to stave off the rise but little of it makes sense to me.

I believe that moving away from international dependence on oil is and inherently good thing, what I don’t believe is that it will have any discernible impact on oil prices.

Many people blame the green lobby for not allowing oil to be tapped in the Anwar province.  Some blame OPEC for excessive profits.  There are even some that believe that taxation of oil company windfall profits will drive the prices down.

All of them are dead wrong.

On a daily basis there are some 7 million barrels of oil pumped from within the United States.  US oil consumption dropped over the course of the past year to 20.7 million barrels.  To help with the math, over one third of the oil needed to support this country is already being produced by this country.

Here’s the kicker, oil pumped from US oil fields is being sold for roughly $1.70 less a barrel ($133) than those mean old Arabs are selling it for($135).  Remember, US demand for oil has dropped so internal supply and demand isn’t a factor.

The way I see it there are a few major factors.  Other developing countries are willing to pay top dollar, oil is a finite resource controlled by a mere handful, and with it being a finite resource they can pretty much charge whatever the market will bear.

Drilling in more locations in the US won’t reduce the cost of oil because the same countries competing for that oil will continue to compete and American capitalism will prevail.  That, and US oil companies have already capitalized on the greed factor and if they’re not going to sell US produced oil any cheaper now, what makes anyone that will change.  The only thing that can possibly be accomplished is our lack of dependence on foreign oil and more money going into US held companies.

The real answer?  How about a realistic energy plan that weans us off of a finite resource and puts on a realistic path toward sustainable energy.

The next time your at the pump, don’t get mad at the Arabs, we’re getting screwed right in our backyard.

Sources: OPEC Changes Oil Forecast

All American Crude Oil Pricelist

Increasing American Production to Reduce Oil Prices

Posted by deadscot on 14 Jun, 2008 at 22:23

I’m not the first one to say that all the hundreds of billions that the U.S. borrowed from China (and others) for the privilege of pissing it away into the dunes of Iraq would have been better spent on energy independence. Weaning the U.S. off its oil guzzling habit is almost certainly the single most important national security issue—one that may just help with global warming, too.

Perhaps the price at the pump is finally having its own trickle-down effect: GM, Ford Look to Euro Divisions for Small Cars

With fuel prices at over $4 a gallon, sales of gas-guzzling American SUVs and trucks are tanking. Now Ford and General Motors are looking to their European divisions for more efficient, smaller cars that can be quickly produced for the suddenly fuel-efficiency conscious American market.

German carmaker Opel, owned by American automobile giant General Motors, as well as the European division of Ford could both profit from the current crisis at their mothership companies across the big pond. GM and Ford have been hit hard by falling sales of gas-guzzling pickup trucks and SUVs. With drivers having to pay an average of over $4 per gallon, sales of larger cars have slowed to a trickle, blindsiding US automakers, who have focused for years on the formerly lucrative truck and SUV market. Unable to quickly retool to develop their own fuel-efficient models, GM and Ford are both reviewing their units in Europe—where compact and subcompact models are far more prevalent—for possible models that could be produced for the American market.

Blindsided?!

Posted by elwedriddsche  on  16 Jun, 2008  at  09:37

It’s amazing how that works.  Granted, we pretty much have our national ignorance to blame but as more and more people become conscious of the happenings in the world, the more likely we are to see realistic change.

To me it seems that if people don’t see a complete solution in one fell swoop, then they drag their heels at taking even the smallest of steps forward in solving the problem.

Posted by deadscot  on  17 Jun, 2008  at  20:53

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