What is Gas up to by you?

pitbike502
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Syracuse, NY US
Edited Date/Time 3/2/2012 4:06am
curious, hit $4.09 up here in syracuse..
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fcr
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Monkeys Eyebrow YE
2/27/2012 9:43am Edited Date/Time 2/27/2012 9:46am
I bought regular for $4.23 for regular last Thursday. Not sure what it is now.
I just heard on the news it is averaging $4.32 in LA.
txmxer
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Weatherford, TX US
2/27/2012 9:50am
It's around $3.50 to $3.60 in the DFW area. Maybe higher.

Funny, prices up north in the Wyoming area have been down...it's related to the Keystone pipeline...
vet323
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Lead, SD US
2/27/2012 9:55am
$3.25 Funny that it seems cheap after reading all the above prices!Smile

The Shop

indy_maico
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5094
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Indianapolis, IN US
2/27/2012 10:20am
Just paid $3.67 in Indy near the Speedway.
Switch
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MP US
2/27/2012 10:24am
$3.69 - $3.79 around here
jndmx
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South Kingston, RI US
2/27/2012 10:33am
pitbike502 wrote:
curious, hit $4.09 up here in syracuse..
Same here
fcr
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Monkeys Eyebrow YE
2/27/2012 10:43am
Always way more in those areas, my dad has a place on the River and just goes over to AZ. Always at least .80 less.
BK
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Gilbert, AZ US
2/27/2012 11:51am
$3.60 to $3.70 in Phx area.
pitbike502
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Location
Syracuse, NY US
2/27/2012 12:07pm
i cant believe all this.. i know about gasbuddy, but its always more "real" when people tell you about their area. I parked the Ram and am now driving an 05 Vue 4cyl 5 speed. 2 weeks ago when i bought it it costs $53 to fill, and i drove all week everywhere on it, i mean everywhere.

I just keep thinking about the effect its going to have in 4 weeks when the season starts around here. I know most of the fellas will drive their F250s and Diesels with 30' toy haulers out because its cold, but 2-3 weeks in, tracks might look like a ghost town. I havent even thought of looking at my camper yet
mx295
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Location
Quartz Hill, CA US
2/27/2012 5:51pm
Paid $4.39 a gallon for regular at Chevron this morning. Premium is $4.59 there
Sully
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JP
2/27/2012 5:56pm
At the current exchange rate, it's $7.65 at the station near my house.
fcr
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Monkeys Eyebrow YE
2/27/2012 11:06pm
Dads place is in Needles in the marina, nothing but tweekers in the town. He goes over to Az for everything. I have been going out that way since I was a kid. First time I remember was about 59, the old highway was an ordeal. Now I can miss all the little places when I go. Only stop for emergency, they have to charge enormous amounts to get by.
motoman0
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Bolivar, TN US
Fantasy
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2/28/2012 5:18am Edited Date/Time 2/28/2012 5:20am


That's why I drive this now! I got 47.9 mpg last take of fuel. 1.9 TDI
indy_maico
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Indianapolis, IN US
2/28/2012 8:36am
Where it was 3.67 yesterday it is 3.85 today
jtomasik
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Golden, CO US
2/28/2012 8:44am Edited Date/Time 2/28/2012 8:46am
$3.06. If I use my King Soopers discount, then $2.96.

Oh, heard on the radio this morning that they're going to finish a $2 section of that pipeline from I believe Oklahoma to the Gulf. They said the problem they're having is we have too much oil and prices are dropping.

Yeah....big problem. We gotta ship that shit offshore so we can pay higher prices! lol... (
Cygnus
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Hanover, CO US
2/28/2012 9:47am
2.98 In fountain yesterday. That is with a sooper card 3 cent discount.
TX24
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San Antonio, TX US
2/28/2012 10:26am
I just ran over to the mc shop on the way back I noticed it had gone up .08 while there. To $3.59
They always say the gas price depends on the price of oil, transportation, taxes, and competition. I guess we should add speculation.
dougie
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Temecula, CA US
2/28/2012 11:15am
Ive noticed that no one in this string has yet hollared "Drill Drill Drill" . I did a search awhile back as I wondered just what effect opening anwar and more off shore leases would have on the price we pay at the pump. It would appear that it would have no effect until maybe 2030.

I know that when Bush opened up more offshore drilling the prices did drop and many attibute the drop to the opening of said leases. But others point to the recession and the fact that it was people deciding to drive less that caused the price drop.

Im going with the use less and it will cost less theory. And I believe its the "only" thing you and I can do.
burn1986
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bossier city, LA US
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2/28/2012 11:29am
$3.58 in New Orleans
SteveS
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WV US
2/28/2012 11:31am
dougie wrote:
Ive noticed that no one in this string has yet hollared "Drill Drill Drill" . I did a search awhile back as I wondered just what...
Ive noticed that no one in this string has yet hollared "Drill Drill Drill" . I did a search awhile back as I wondered just what effect opening anwar and more off shore leases would have on the price we pay at the pump. It would appear that it would have no effect until maybe 2030.

I know that when Bush opened up more offshore drilling the prices did drop and many attibute the drop to the opening of said leases. But others point to the recession and the fact that it was people deciding to drive less that caused the price drop.

Im going with the use less and it will cost less theory. And I believe its the "only" thing you and I can do.
The year 2030 is what has been stated by the oil industry as when we could expect our country to be able to use solely our own oil and purchase none from the Middle East or Venezuela or anywhere else, i.e. total energy independence. That is actually an indication of how long it takes to build up the necessary infrastructure and put the oil into production.

And though it's true that with all that oil in production, we'd still not get back to $30 a barrel prices, we certainly wouldn't have to be at $125 or any of the other outrageously inflated prices speculators create at the merest whiff of a rumor of Ahmejinedad scratching his crotch or anything else inane like that.

Detractors and environmentalists also claim that putting more of our own oil into production wouldn't lower prices because the oil companies pay whatever the world market price is. That's bull and everyone knows it. But even if you accept that and don't believe that having domestic companies producing oil domestically and selling it domestically will result in domestic competition and the possibility of oil price stability, consider this: if the US isn't out there buying oil in the Middle East and taking up the largest portion of it, how much competition among the other countries do you think there is going to be for that oil?

Finally, if the domestic oil companies are producing all the oil we need, and especially if they keep the prices up, how much profit do you think they are going to be making? And if the profit is produced domestically, what will the result be? Huge tax payments. Huge lease/royalty payments (oil is mostly in federally controlled land). What will that do to the federal deficit?
How many people will be employed to produce the oil? (estimates a million and a half) And how many indirect jobs will be created (using the Administrations formulas)? (another million).
motogeezer
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Yorba Linda, CA US
2/28/2012 11:44am Edited Date/Time 2/28/2012 11:45am
dougie wrote:
Ive noticed that no one in this string has yet hollared "Drill Drill Drill" . I did a search awhile back as I wondered just what...
Ive noticed that no one in this string has yet hollared "Drill Drill Drill" . I did a search awhile back as I wondered just what effect opening anwar and more off shore leases would have on the price we pay at the pump. It would appear that it would have no effect until maybe 2030.

I know that when Bush opened up more offshore drilling the prices did drop and many attibute the drop to the opening of said leases. But others point to the recession and the fact that it was people deciding to drive less that caused the price drop.

Im going with the use less and it will cost less theory. And I believe its the "only" thing you and I can do.
We're using way less right now than we did a few years ago.

Supply and demand doesn't affect oil / gas prices, futures speculation drives the market.

We're all being fleeced, like the sheep we are.

"Less than a month after Tillerson's revelations, Gary Gensler, formerly a Goldman Sachs executive and now head of the Commodities Futures Trading Commission, laid the issue out for all to see. As published by McClatchy Newspapers on June 9, 2011, "Gensler cited May 31 data that show end-users accounted for just 12 percent of the 'long' positions in futures contracts for benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude oil. That means that 88 percent of bets on price hikes for oil were held by financial players - mainly Wall Street investment banks and hedge funds that invest for the ultra wealthy - not interests seeking to use the oil."

Read more here: http://www.star-telegram.com/2012/02/27/3765797/oil-the-never-ending-story.html
indy_maico
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5094
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Indianapolis, IN US
2/28/2012 12:25pm
We are actually producing more domestic oil now than we were 4 years ago. It doesn't impact the price of gas at the pump, and drilling for more won't either.

There is no rhyme or reason to why gas prices are approaching $4 a gallon now.

The last time gas was $3.90 a gallon was in July of 2008 when oil was $148 a barrel. How much is it today? $108 bucks a barrel.

So what does that tell you?
txmxer
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9770
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Location
Weatherford, TX US
2/28/2012 3:17pm
SteveS wrote:
The year 2030 is what has been stated by the oil industry as when we could expect our country to be able to use solely our...
The year 2030 is what has been stated by the oil industry as when we could expect our country to be able to use solely our own oil and purchase none from the Middle East or Venezuela or anywhere else, i.e. total energy independence. That is actually an indication of how long it takes to build up the necessary infrastructure and put the oil into production.

And though it's true that with all that oil in production, we'd still not get back to $30 a barrel prices, we certainly wouldn't have to be at $125 or any of the other outrageously inflated prices speculators create at the merest whiff of a rumor of Ahmejinedad scratching his crotch or anything else inane like that.

Detractors and environmentalists also claim that putting more of our own oil into production wouldn't lower prices because the oil companies pay whatever the world market price is. That's bull and everyone knows it. But even if you accept that and don't believe that having domestic companies producing oil domestically and selling it domestically will result in domestic competition and the possibility of oil price stability, consider this: if the US isn't out there buying oil in the Middle East and taking up the largest portion of it, how much competition among the other countries do you think there is going to be for that oil?

Finally, if the domestic oil companies are producing all the oil we need, and especially if they keep the prices up, how much profit do you think they are going to be making? And if the profit is produced domestically, what will the result be? Huge tax payments. Huge lease/royalty payments (oil is mostly in federally controlled land). What will that do to the federal deficit?
How many people will be employed to produce the oil? (estimates a million and a half) And how many indirect jobs will be created (using the Administrations formulas)? (another million).
You aren't entirely wrong...but there's numerous errors in all of this. I won't go through all of it, but here's some key items:

The year 2030 is what has been stated by the oil industry as when we could expect our country to be able to use solely our own oil and purchase none from the Middle East or Venezuela or anywhere else, i.e. total energy independence.


Nobody with any credibility has ever said that the US could reach energy independence (politicians don't count). Not even with all of North America considered in the equation does anyone think this could happen.

How much oil is in ANWR?


Detractors and environmentalists also claim that putting more of our own oil into production wouldn't lower prices because the oil companies pay whatever the world market price is. That's bull and everyone knows it.

Base on what? You apparently have no clue how global markets work. Or oil production specifically. It's a race just to keep up production at current levels. For every well that comes on line, there are wells going offline.

domestic companies producing oil domestically and selling it domestically will result in domestic competition and the possibility of oil price stability, consider this: if the US isn't out there buying oil in the Middle East and taking up the largest portion of it, how much competition among the other countries do you think there is going to be for that oil?


Marginal. If there truly was an excess of oil going to market, it would be difficult for speculators to push the price. But with all the money people are making, SA and other countries don't mind turning down the spigot to match global demand to supply to allow the markets to be corrupted to the higher pricing.

Additionally, almost all oil is traded on global markets. Refer to my first post about the lower prices up north. Want to know why? It's because the Keystone pipeline isn't built. They are discounting the oil $30/bbl to sell it locally. Put in the pipeline and it goes to the global market and makes pennies difference in the commodities price. SA and others with easy oil know that what they don't sell today will sell in the near future. They are stupid rich and could not care less about the populace that's starving.

Finally, if the domestic oil companies are producing all the oil we need, and especially if they keep the prices up, how much profit do you think they are going to be making?

1) Are you planning on socializing oil production to insure it's local trade only?
2) If they keep the prices up then your comments above are moot.
3) Yes, if US oil companies profit, it's good for the US economy.
4) We already have an oil and gas boom that is employing tons of people, but really the problem is not enough equipment to meet demand. Probably a great time to be in the oil field equipment business...but, go back 30 years and see all the equipment that sat in fields rusting and you'll know why more people are not scrambling to get in the business.

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