Paige's old sccoter is lookin' pretty sexy now...
* DrewKaree searches for some more rocks
It's pretty simple, really. Combine a decent travel holiday and the loss of a few refineries and the laws of supply and demand are displayed in vivid detail. The problem isn't that we have a loss of oil, so Bush is doing a dumb thing by tapping the reserve.
What the hell good does getting more OIL do us, when the problem that no one seems to be willing to face is that none of us put oil into the gas tank of our car. The problem is that we have less refineries to turn the oil into the stuff that we DO put into the gas tank of our car.
As Zakk said, their prices are going up because we asked "pretty please", so they have less to sell in their country. Less here, our prices go up. Having to buy it from Canada, the prices go up. Shipping it from Canada, Canada's prices go up.
Take the whole fiasco in GA. Some newspaper printed some inane story about how we're gonna be running out of gas, and everyone panicked and drove to the gas station. That area is going to quickly be out of gas precisely because everyone wants to fill up before they "run out". In turn, it's going to cost more to replace that gas because of the refinery issue. With people panicking the way they were, they'd have to raise prices even more, because perhaps now, instead of ordering one truckload of gas, now they've got to order two truckloads, and it's gonna take longer to get there. Longer to get there means it costs more for shipping it...and so on and so on.
For the love of Pete, I bought gas yesterday morning at about 5 A.M. and it was $2.69/gallon. 2 hours later, it was $2.99/gallon. Today, it was $3.29/gallon. There WILL NOT be a shortage of gas. These prices will keep people from buying as much gas, or waiting until they really need to. Just look at some of the comments in this very thread. Because of the refinery issues, the increase in prices will allow the stations to cover their prices in having gas replaced. Because of the refinery issues, it may take longer to have the gas shipped to the stations, and THAT will be the reason you won't be able to get gas at one station, but go right up the street, try a different station, or perhaps different "brand" station (hit a Citgo instead of a BP, or whatever) and you'll get gas.
The problem is the refineries and the stupid, downright idiotic rules and regulations in place at the local levels in your areas. I'm in WI with SirP, and check this out. He lives about 2 hours away from me. In my area, or actually an area that extends to about an hour-ish away from him, the stations are FORCED to pay for some stupid reformulated gas that is proven to be LESS efficient, and cost MORE money. And as someone pointed out, if all these political blowhards on ANY side of the aisle wanted to do something to reduce prices, they'd temporarily suspend the numerous taxes on each gallon of gasoline. To say "Bush has to do something about the price of gas in this time of crisis" is simply pointing out to everyone that you're an idiot and don't understand or care to educate yourself on all the things that go into the cost you are paying for gasoline right now, and gives credence to someone using a disaster to further their political aspirations.
4 trucks @ $300? This isn't meant to be a "I can top that", I'm just pointing out that I'm getting hit pretty good too. I have 1 truck, 3 large machines, and several 2-stroke machines I had to fill up today. $284.34 It simply makes piss-poor business sense to not pass along these costs to the customer, as it's the price of doing business. There's a reason people who do service-type work like painting and landscaping usually limit themselves to a certain area to begin with - you'd lose your shirt on travel and fuel. Why would such an exorbitant increase in gas not be passed on....or do people still bid out jobs based on the gas prices at the time they founded their companies?
Not ripping on you, just explaining good business practices.