Varmonter wrote:Take s look at this chart..
This chart shows the price of a barrel of crude.(green line)
It also shows the ave price of regular unleaded in the US(Blue line)
t also shows the ave price of regular unleaded in the Canada(Red line).
The trend seems to show gas prices pretty much following the trend of
crude oil prices until Jan of this year where crude seems to go down
but gas prices are shooting thru the roof.
What are everyones thoughts on this?
I don't think boycotting for 1 day amounts to pounding sand down a praire
dog hole. I have heard that if it could be organized boycotting one
company for a month would do more to help lower prices.
What your chart doesn't show is the supply situation for gasoline which affects spot pricing more than futures traded crude oil prices do. None the less, the trend in pricing from crude to gasoline still follow each other trend-wise. Gasoline has been in short supply in recent months.
Also, IF....a huge IF....if you could convince consumers to not buy gasoline for a month, it would reduce prices somewhat, but it would not change the fact that the WORLD market is consuming crude oil at levels never seen before. The domestic (US) supply of crude and gasoline would increase some for a short period of time, but it wouldn't last. And how would we get to work, etc.?
We are so used to having more than enough crude oil and gasoline in our country that we see it as a given right to have low gas prices. In reality, we are fast approaching a point where other parts of the world are now starting to consume huge amounts of crude oil and products and it is now affecting our supply. Remember we import more oil than we produce domestically. Oil that is bought on the world market.
The Europeans have been paying high prices for 15 years simply because they do not readily have the domestic supplies which we have to help offset world demand. For years they have been totaly dependend on the world market with little or no recourse. The situation has now reached our shores due to increased world demand.
Boycotts aren't the answer. More refinery capacity will help, but we're now in a situation where conservation on a large scale and/or new technology and energy sources are the only long term answers to lower prices. (Can you envision the US population accepting rationing and/or mandated large scale public transportation everywhere?)
And none of these things have to do with politics... It is pure economics at work. Now the world is playing the economic game competing for something (crude oil) that we used to consume in quantities they never imagined ever needing or wanting. Unfortunatley world production and refining capacity have not grown in stride with world demand.
-BCB