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Higher Gas Prices Coming .... if Keystone Pipe Line Get's Green Light...

phobicsquirrelphobicsquirrel Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 7,349

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  • jj20030jj20030 Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 5,448
    really??? maybe cheaper
  • The KidThe Kid Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 7,842
    I am in support of expanding North America's fossil fuel infastructructure, given it meets epa regulation
  • beatnicbeatnic Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 4,133
    You're stretching in squirrel.
  • scarlinscarlin Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 1,592
    I don't believe this. It hardly makes sense to me. It really is making the supply greater therefore demand and price should go down if I learned anything in my 3 semesters as an economics major before switching. I think this might be on taxes to fund this more than us exporting the oil and making the supply less. I would love to see us become more dependent on less foreign nations like Venezuela and more like Canada, but I should read up on this more before I go tooting my horn even more.
  • webmostwebmost Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 3,131
  • raisindotraisindot Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 936
  • phobicsquirrelphobicsquirrel Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 7,349
  • fla-gypsyfla-gypsy Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 3,023
    I wish the squirrel ran the whole damn world and we wouldn't have to go through this cycle on such predictable terms.
  • scarlinscarlin Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 1,592
  • pilgrimtexpilgrimtex Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 429
    More oil here means more exporting from here. Supply and demand doesn't work when the global demand allows the oil companies to export everything they can. No increase in inventory because it all goes out means prices can stay high. When inventory outpaces demand than the price and only then will the price drop to push up demand. Besides, don't you want our gov't to get even more money on oil taxes while still taxing the crap out of us?
  • raisindotraisindot Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 936
    pilgrimtex:
    More oil here means more exporting from here. Supply and demand doesn't work when the global demand allows the oil companies to export everything they can. No increase in inventory because it all goes out means prices can stay high. When inventory outpaces demand than the price and only then will the price drop to push up demand. Besides, don't you want our gov't to get even more money on oil taxes while still taxing the crap out of us?
    In a free market economy, yes, more domestic oil production means more exporting if the oil companies can get better offers outside the U.S. (which is how it is now, given China's insatiable demand). That's why our gas and heating oil prices in the U.S. are going up, rather than down. If, however, the government taxed exports of oil then producers would sell more domestically, and domestic prices for gas and oil would fall. This would free up more money for businesses to increase productivity and hire new workers and give consumers more money to spend or save, which would help boost the economy. But that would, lord forbid, cut into the oil companies' obscene profits and we wouldn't want that, would we.
  • pilgrimtexpilgrimtex Everyone, Registered Users Posts: 429
    If the gov't placed higher taxes on exports as to reduce the desire to export than the oil companies will just reduce the flow accordingly in my opinion. We are captives of our greed for oil and will pay what is needed. There may be a small reduction to stimulate the economy thereby allowing more oil to be sold but now we are into the law of diminishing returns instead of supply and demand. There comes a point that the volume isn't worth the lower price created and we see this not only in the oil economy but elsewhere as well. They would produce a finite amount at a finite price that best fits their profit strategies. When we can turn water into wine and oil becomes just another commodity among commodities; then the reasoning of price and demand can return. Until that time we are caught in a catch 22 situation. World demand, oil availability, refining capacities, government restrictions on refining and drilling, distribution, government taxing and on and on set the price today.
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