4/21/2011 1:10:50 PM
And the state GOP are trying to pass a measure that would force Gov. Perdue into an agreement with the republican governors of Virgina and South Carolina to set up off shore drilling off our coast. I hope she vetoes the hell out of it with a giant tar ball stuffed inside for good measure before sending it back.
4/21/2011 3:05:01 PM
^^ no, you see oil is the one commodity where supply has no effect on price.
4/21/2011 3:11:10 PM
I don't think anyone doubts that she'll veto it...not for a second. I sure wish she wouldn't though.
4/21/2011 3:12:00 PM
I respect you greatly as a poster and as a person, so please don't take any offense when I ask this but are you from North Carolina?
4/21/2011 3:13:10 PM
i would be against coastal drilling if we had plans for significant expansion of modern nuclear power.
4/21/2011 3:14:46 PM
oil is not the answer to any problem. Our goal is to find an artificially renewable and recyclable energy so abundant, it'll be practically free.Like the air we breath.But I'm sure they will tax breathing in the near future.[Edited on April 21, 2011 at 3:18 PM. Reason : .]
4/21/2011 3:17:38 PM
It should also be mentioned that the GOP wants to open up leases for exploratory oil shale drilling. This alone should have folks very concerned...I mean if you value clean drinking water and such.
4/21/2011 3:18:14 PM
We need energy and we're gonna get it. If you dont want it to be coal and oil then you need to get behind nuclear.
4/21/2011 3:21:47 PM
No arguments there. Despite what the wingnuts want you to believe, modern environmentalists see the benefit of nuclear over the alternatives until more renewables come online to help with energy loads.
4/21/2011 3:27:20 PM
Coal and natural gas are getting closer actually.Coal plants being built in the developed world are IGCC and other relatively clean technology types. These pretty much make the Sulfur and NOX arguments mute, all that's left is the CO2.At the same time, natural gas has always been clean by it's nature (in regards to local pollutants) and less CO2 intensive, which I think is ultimately due to the fact that Hydrogen-Carbon bonds are higher energy state than Carbon-Carbon bonds. But the battle over the global warming impacts due to the methane are just starting.I'm just despotic, but I really like the fact that we're shifting from coal to NG. The reason is because Methane is a faster global warming gas, which means things are going to get hotter, sooner, while having less long term effects and putting less CO2 in the ocean.Humans will get around to problems exactly as they start hurting them personally.
4/21/2011 3:43:16 PM
really, our legislators want drilling off the NC coast? that is simply retarded. "hey everyone, let's ruin our beautiful coastline, so that maybe in 5-10 years when there's potentially some small amount of production online everyone's gas prices will be 1 cent per gallon lower!!!!" stupid ass state legislators. i'm convinced the dumbest people in the U.S. self-select into state politics.
4/21/2011 3:55:20 PM
The problem I see with methane is that the table has already been set by CO2 when it comes to greenhouse gases and their effect on climate change. By this point, some people are so brainwashed, myopic or just too lazy to realize that methane is a real threat and (I could be wrong here) doesn't have a sink like CO2 does with the ocean.
4/21/2011 3:56:04 PM
but isn't the point to combust the methane into CO2? or are we talking about small amounts of methane leakage in addition to the CO2 that's produced?
4/21/2011 3:59:33 PM
^^^ I seriously doubt offshore production would have much if any impact on our shoreline.
4/21/2011 4:53:16 PM
Yeah, ask the gulf coast's smelly, tar ball ridden beaches if there is no effect from offshore drilling. . .
4/21/2011 4:57:43 PM
4/21/2011 5:17:35 PM
4/21/2011 5:24:31 PM
Links plz
4/21/2011 6:23:53 PM
The GOP filibustering the closing of the Enron Loophole has allowed the price of gas to rise. Face. You can thank your republican Senators for fucking you up the ass.
4/21/2011 7:13:37 PM
Dude, are you trying to be the resident idiot? Like, actively trying? Or is it just who you are?
4/21/2011 7:42:42 PM
The "Enron Loophole" allows speculators to blow up the the price by 25%.
4/21/2011 9:20:24 PM
b-b-b-but Clinton did it!
4/21/2011 9:42:51 PM
^^ If speculators are making the market price too high, then where are they hiding all the excess supply?
4/21/2011 11:02:50 PM
^ it's not excess supply, it's excess demand.
4/21/2011 11:07:59 PM
^^ Supertankers.
4/21/2011 11:13:23 PM
^^ Excess demand, to where? At some point they must accept delivery of the oil somewhere or they have had no real impact on spot prices. ^ really? Where are they parking them? It takes a lot of money to keep a supertaker just floating there, especially when it seems your market idea is to buy oil high and sell it low after you paid to store it for awhile.
4/21/2011 11:18:14 PM
The idea is to buy, hoard, and sell higher. Google 'JP Morgan' & 'supertankers'.[Edited on April 21, 2011 at 11:35 PM. Reason : 3]
4/21/2011 11:34:05 PM
^ why bother buying and hoarding? nature stores crude oil for us right in the ground (at not charge). If gas futures rise high enough relative to spot prices, it will become more profitable to leave the oil for now in hopes of refining it into gasoline tomorrow for a much higher price. thus supply TODAY actually drops and prices TODAY actually rise. Its actually because of the relative ease of storing oil that speculation in the gas futures market is relevant for today's prices. I think LoneSnark would have a much easier time believeing this if you could think of a way to blame the government. For example, if you said that the government announced it would add a $10 tax next year, I'm sure he would quickly connect the dots to tell you why prices today would go up. The steps of that argument will be slightly different (and certainly more agreeable to his ideological priors), but the same inter-temporal forces of supply and demand will still be at work. P. [Edited on April 21, 2011 at 11:58 PM. Reason : ``]
4/21/2011 11:48:44 PM
4/22/2011 12:15:04 AM
If the market req'd the oil to be delivered, it'd take the speculation out of the market and prices would go down.
4/22/2011 12:53:58 AM
^^ Cute. But think about it a little deeper. An oil well cannot be produced all at once. It takes time, measured in barrels per day. Well, if I turn off my pumps for a week, that doesn't allow me to pump more next week: I'll pump about the same amount next week as I would if I left the pumps on this week. As such, the only speculation I can do with an existing pumping well is do I produce this week or gain an extra week of production 20+ years from now? I cannot imagine anyone being that forward thinking. That, plus I can refute this right friggin' now: oil production is higher today than a year ago. Who exactly are you suggesting is shutting their production on behalf of speculators? As for Prawn Star, if you are right that someone is going through the expense of storing oil in supertankers, what do you care? They are making current prices higher and future prices lower. If they are betting correctly and prices in the future were going to be much higher than today's spot prices, then they are doing you a service by stabilizing prices over time. If they are betting wrong then they will lose money and stop the practice.
4/22/2011 12:54:10 AM
^ ha, none of that makes any real sense considering how the real world works.You seriously don't think the speculators trying to make a quick buck are driving the price of oil up now? You don't think oil wells can control their output? You don't think people can store barrels of oil if someone (ie a speculator) is paying for that barrel?Have you been asleep the past few years when investment bankers threw long-term thinking out the window to make a quick, easy buck on the housing market? If they don't personally have to deal with it, the industry is perfectly happy to leave the mess to their successors. The clever ones just cash out early and watch the world and everyone else crumble.
4/22/2011 1:34:16 AM
4/22/2011 7:39:43 AM
4/22/2011 9:05:44 AM
4/22/2011 10:16:52 AM
4/22/2011 10:36:48 AM
4/22/2011 10:43:42 AM
4/22/2011 10:45:31 AM
4/22/2011 11:58:43 AM
More regulation is needed in the hydraulic fracturing industry.That said, we are the Saudi Arabia of shale oil and gas. We are sitting on literally hundreds of years worth of recoverable shale oil, coal and natural gas. If it can be extracted safely and without catastrophic damage to the environment, we should invest in the extraction of these resources, for energy independence. I do realize that it's an open question whether this can be done in a responsible manner.[Edited on April 22, 2011 at 12:32 PM. Reason : 2]
4/22/2011 12:31:46 PM
4/22/2011 12:50:07 PM
The EPA is currently studying Fracking, we should know more soon (I think by the end of 2012?). But the problems are more than just poor disposal. A decent amount of the fracking fluid is never recovered, casings can bust, and there are still questions of if the fracking process releases trapped gases/metals/chemicals in ground layers above the shale (ie into the drinking water aquifer).
4/22/2011 2:24:09 PM
4/22/2011 3:05:31 PM
But Fox News told me that more government is bad.
4/22/2011 3:35:46 PM
I shit very cleanly.
4/22/2011 6:56:53 PM
1. Invest in oil stocks2. Use money to offset the rising gas prices3. Win
4/22/2011 8:26:46 PM
I think this thread would be more readable if it wasn't written by a disgraced Battlestar Galactica creator.
4/23/2011 2:06:26 PM
4/23/2011 3:34:35 PM
4/23/2011 5:27:47 PM