SexyBossyBBW -> RE: $4-$5 gallon gas on the way/Gas prices up 28 cents in 10 days! (3/5/2011 12:01:39 AM)
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I hate that propaganda, and speculation is allowed, while the consumer is held hostage to the bullchit. There is a town in the US, with excess reserve of oil, and they need to build additional space, in order to accomodate more storage. Additionally, reports on CNBC are that there is no fundamental support for the increase in prices, because there is plenty of supply, and fairly flat demand at present. quote:
http://fuelfix.com/blog/tag/cushing-oklahoma/ Oklahoma oil hub helps keep oil prices from going higher Posted on March 3, 2011 at 12:46 am by chron.com Energy in Oil, Social, Supply and Demand, United States | 1,386 | 8 CUSHING, Okla. — U.S. oil prices closed above $100 a barrel Wednesday for the first time in more than two years, and might be higher still if the giant storage tanks in this small prairie town northeast of Oklahoma City weren’t so full. Here, at the nation’s main hub for oil storage and distribution, bulging stockpiles of crude are acting as a partial buffer to Middle East turmoil that’s driven international oil prices much higher. At the moment, about 11 percent of the nation’s oil inventory is parked in Cushing, nearly double where it stood a few years ago. However, all that oil hasn’t shielded Americans from paying higher gasoline prices, for several reasons. While the price of the benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude at Cushing hasn’t soared as high as comparable oil elsewhere, it’s still well above its price just a few weeks ago, and the price of crude is the main component of prices at the pump. Whatever its price, the oil at Cushing represents just a small fraction of the nation’s total demand, and crude stored in the town doesn’t have an easy path to all the refineries that might otherwise welcome its lower cost. Beyond its limited influence on pump prices is a larger question, at least in oil markets — whether the higher supply and lower price at Cushing mean that West Texas Intermediate, which has defined U.S. oil for decades, is waning in its influence on world prices. “WTI is not a broken marker; it’s just not a global marker,” said Larry Goldstein, a director of the Energy Policy Research Foundation, which is partly financed by the oil industry. Record levels Inventories in Cushing hit record levels in January amid rising output from emerging U.S. fields like the Bakken Shale formation in North Dakota and after a new Canadian pipeline began transporting oil from Alberta to Cushing last month. “The biggest impact on Cushing is you’ve had more supply coming in than going out,” said Eric Dixon, director of crude supply in Houston for Northern Tier Energy, a Ridgefield, Conn.-based oil refiner I wish people would stop buying for 24-48 hours, I would bet what is happening in Lybia, and Saudi Arabia would quickly cease being the information used to screw us over with. M
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