5/3/2011 6:45:38 PM
The flipside is that, as we've already seen, it brings the "Drill, Baby, Drill!"/"Drill Here, Drill Now, Drill in the Skulls of Baby Seals!" howlers from out of the woodwork demanding some quick fix as opposed to making legitimate proposals to transition off of dead dinosaurs/algae all together or at least lesson it to a point to where higher fuel prices won't cause disruptions to our economy.
5/3/2011 6:53:52 PM
5/4/2011 9:22:45 AM
5/4/2011 11:34:12 AM
5/4/2011 12:35:32 PM
5/4/2011 1:42:50 PM
5/4/2011 3:18:48 PM
Oh not this thing again. I'll go ahead and assume you've seen the studies that conclude more CO2 enriched plants are actually less nutritious. But I'll concede the point on carbon insofar as we don't apply the same nonchalant attitude when it comes to something like methane.And for what it's worth, mrfrog, I wasn't talking to you, for you or about you. Sorry to diminish your self importance.
5/4/2011 3:46:47 PM
^^^ The figures for 2010 were not out yet, even if they were we don't yet know if the recent reductions will be temporary or permanent. It should depend on your theory of future fuel prices. If China manages to keep fuel prices high, then as in the early 80s and late 00s energy use will trend down and stay down. If fuel prices collapse again, then energy use should climb back up. Clearly the people of the EIA expect fuel prices to collapse again. Do you? As such, as I believe fuel prices will remain high, I don't forsee U.S. energy consumption recovering any time soon. As for the rest of it, you can consume more steel every year without consuming more resources, as steel, concrete, asphalt, and most other resources that don't grow on trees tend to be recycled, which consumes far less energy than original production. As such, while steel production is up nearly every year, iron ore consumption peaked in 1995.
5/4/2011 5:31:27 PM
Onions have no futures market, yet their recent price volatility makes the swings in oil and corn look tame.http://money.cnn.com/2008/06/27/news/economy/The_onion_conundrum_Birger.fortune/?postversion=2008062713http://mjperry.blogspot.com/2011/05/what-can-onions-teach-us-about-oil.html
5/4/2011 5:38:38 PM
5/4/2011 7:19:13 PM
5/4/2011 7:36:35 PM
lol @ OP
5/4/2011 8:49:21 PM
5/4/2011 11:40:50 PM
The biggest factors in oil prices are1) fundamentals of supply and demand, which is what most of this thread is about2) geopolitical concerns--mideast tension3) monetary policy. The only way to make money these days is in stocks and commodities because interest rates are so low. Most people think that only "evil speculators" invest in commodities, but you would be surprised how many pensions, endowments, 401(k) plans, IRA accounts, etc own some fund that has at least a small exposure to commodities and energy.
5/4/2011 11:45:20 PM
^It would probably also be helpful if we were able to utlitize more of the 160+ billion recoverable barrels of oil we have located in the US.
5/5/2011 8:23:55 AM
5/5/2011 10:08:18 AM
5/5/2011 11:18:53 AM
5/5/2011 1:26:48 PM
the question is not whether any individual car would do better, but whether we overall would do better enough to impact national statistics, and back in 1973 when this was tried the impact was estimated at less than 1%. Well, today, the individual savings from slowing down are less than they were then, so the national savings should also be even less than they were.
5/5/2011 1:39:34 PM
Overall I think we all agree that petroleum demand from the U.S. now has much much less short term elasticity than at any point in recent history.As LoanShark was pointing out, much of the quick reductions in the 70s were due to reduction of use of oil in other industries, and we've almost eliminated it for power generation.
5/5/2011 1:53:38 PM
[Edited on May 5, 2011 at 7:45 PM. Reason : plz to drop gas prices?]
5/5/2011 7:45:09 PM
No.
5/6/2011 12:17:34 AM
5/6/2011 12:35:42 AM
Tell me again what subsidies you are talking about. Are these subsidies in the same sense democrats call non-tax hikes on the rich to be a subsidy of the rich?
5/6/2011 10:01:45 AM
^^Did you miss the whole part in this thread about how they don't really get "subsidies"?^agreed[Edited on May 6, 2011 at 10:03 AM. Reason : arguing with him is like arguing with a brick wall]
5/6/2011 10:02:56 AM
Haven't both of you argued that ethanol "subsidies" should be ended because they are market distorting and generally an all around bad idea. That without those subsidies ethanol blended gas would be almost nonexistant? The primary "subsidy" to ethanol is a tax credit (the volumetric ethanol excise tax credit, almost $0.45 a gallon)how are tax credits to oil companies not subsidies in the same sense?
5/6/2011 10:15:36 AM
5/6/2011 11:18:24 AM
My prediction is looking really good so far (made on 3/8 before the tsunami)... Breaking everything down:
5/6/2011 3:52:08 PM
5/6/2011 4:27:28 PM
^here ya go : http://bit.ly/kuRFlO
5/7/2011 1:45:49 AM
So, do you still agree with privatizing most of the government?
5/9/2011 9:15:00 PM
Hopefully the recent articles predicting it to go back down are accurate. Looks like summer could actually provide cheaper prices.http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1336599
5/11/2011 8:53:24 AM
5/11/2011 11:37:08 AM
$3.94 for regular near me i was looking at my scooter mileage log and i paid $2.59 when i first got it
5/11/2011 1:37:44 PM
I hate these arrogant fucking bureaucrats that have no fucking idea what they are talking about, have no idea about how economics works, and are just grandstanding to placate whatever base they are pandering toohttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LY420_U4U0I&feature=player_embedded
5/14/2011 9:02:59 AM
^^The 3 stations near my office (in Morrisville) are all $3.99 (Two Exxons and one Marathon). Suffice to say I fill up elsewhere.
5/16/2011 12:43:14 PM
We should get there this summer.
8/8/2011 1:57:10 PM
Oooooh sick burn. So the economic collapse beat the hyperinflation by just a hare. I didn't think bernanke would delay qe3 at all but he did. But don't worry here it comes baby!!!
8/8/2011 2:48:03 PM
^^by this summer do you mean 2012? B/c it ain't happening in 2011.I sure do wish Obama would stop driving oil companies away and making approval of the new Canada to Texas pipeline a done deal.
8/9/2011 10:14:17 AM
I have been hearing mumblings about the keystone XL pipeline for a while. I don't know what the deal with it is.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keystone_Pipeline
8/9/2011 10:41:22 AM
The pipeline is still under environmental review. A new environmental impact statement is supposed to be submitted soon, then there will a month or two of review by stakeholders.my guess is it will get the support it needs from the administration, but I doubt it will do anything meaningful to gas prices.
8/9/2011 11:05:12 AM
http://earlywarn.blogspot.com/2011/08/oilgas-prices.html#more
8/9/2011 12:47:06 PM
god please yes
8/9/2011 12:59:16 PM
^^nothing would make me happier, but I don't see it happening.
8/10/2011 10:52:10 AM
Its not going to happen for us at this crude price. We are tied to the Brent much more so on the east coast. The brent is trading at an extreme premium to WTI (around $100). With that aside, if the spot prices matches the futures prices that are currently trading with the $75-$80 level of WTI, it amounts to gas around $3.25 a gallon in this state. We have a ways to go to get gas prices down.Also, it used to be the case that you could tie crude prices directly to gas prices. That correlation, while not completely useless, it not very accurate any more.[Edited on August 10, 2011 at 11:39 AM. Reason : .]
8/10/2011 11:38:37 AM
^good points, you can actually see in that graph that the variability in gas prices versus WTI has grown atleast compared to the 1993-2003 time period.-If the current stuff going on the market ends up being an overall slowdown in the US economyand-because we are coming out of the summer driving seasonand -the EU economy slows down due to all their financial stuffthen I think we could see a significant price drop. I'd agree that about $3.25 would be about the lowest prices we could see but that would still be a pretty big relief for me .The wildcards being the libya situation and if developing economies slowdown at all[Edited on August 10, 2011 at 12:13 PM. Reason : $3.25 being the absolute lowest price we could realistically hope for IMO]
8/10/2011 12:12:07 PM
$5 gasoline is an attempt at a self-fulfilling prophecy by oil speculators and traders.
8/10/2011 1:23:04 PM
^^ Just so there is no confusion, I am saying if prices were frozen today, and the spots caught up to the futures, $3.25 is what we'd see. I still see downside to go a lot lower than $3.25. That's not my official prediction, however. The market is too crazy at the moment to make a good prediction that is anything other than guesses.[Edited on August 10, 2011 at 1:49 PM. Reason : .][Edited on August 10, 2011 at 1:59 PM. Reason : crap]
8/10/2011 1:46:16 PM
i only got 90mpg on this last tank
8/10/2011 2:11:53 PM