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U.S. Gas Prices Continue To Fall

First time accepted submitter nmpost writes "Earlier this year, as gas prices hit record highs in the winter and spring for that time of year, experts warned we were headed for all time records this summer. Something strange happened before every motorists recurring nightmare happened: gas prices actually started dropping. In fact, prices have fallen over $.50 since they peaked in the spring. Experts have now flipped their projections, and believe prices will continue to tumble through the fall."

85 of 398 comments (clear)

  1. Maybe by Squiddie · · Score: 2

    But a lower price will drive up demand again, no? I'm thinking this is why prices fell, because people were expecting the worst and cutting back on travel.

    1. Re:Maybe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Prices fall because of presidential elections. My super paranoid conspiracy theory is that oil and gas companies do not want to be the subject of discourse during the elections.

    2. Re:Maybe by tomhath · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Demand is low because we're in a world wide recession. They'll go back up when the economy recovers, but that could be a while because we're still coming down off the 90's bubble which knocked everything out of line.

    3. Re:Maybe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      My paranoid conspiracy: Incumbents have to pay exorbitant amounts to get the prices brought down. Otherwise, the prices inflate so the opposition can blame the incumbent.

    4. Re:Maybe by guises · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Supply and demand doesn't apply to oil the same way it does to other products. The OPEC countries decide what the price of oil should be and they adjust how much they pump based on that. The price of oil has been very high in the last few years as a result of the Arab Spring - the Saudis needed tons of money to fend of talk of revolution in their country. If the price of oil is falling then it's because they've decided that is no longer of primary importance. You could guess their reasons: maybe they want to squash all this talk of wind and solar power, maybe they're trying to do something about Syria, etc. It's hard to say for sure.

      The OPEC countries are very careful about maintaining their control over the oil supply and making sure that it isn't subject to typical market forces. One interesting consequence of this, albeit unrelated to the topic at hand, is that the United States has essentially no influence over the price of gas in their country. At least not in the long term - this is interesting, I think, because people talk sometimes about drilling in the nature preserve in Alaska or offshore drilling as a way to reduce gas prices, but doing so would have, at best, a short term effect. The OPEC countries would quickly cut their supply and stabilize the price. Since oil is a global commodity there's really no difference between "foreign oil" and "American oil" unless some major war breaks out that stops international trade.

    5. Re:Maybe by Mabhatter · · Score: 2

      Ideally, fuel efficient cars will keep the peaks down. There for a while we were PHYSICALLY using less gas, not just using less than PROJECTED.

      This is such a silly thing. We all talk about USING less gas, and now we ARE. Rather than tell everybody "good job" we have to keep up with the FUD that we're hurting their profits?

    6. Re:Maybe by manu0601 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Demand is low because we're in a world wide recession. They'll go back up when the economy recovers, but that could be a while because we're still coming down off the 90's bubble which knocked everything out of line.

      But you will have more bubble bursts and more crises. The system is just instable since neoliberal policitians removed all the safeguards that were set up after the 1929 crisis: the, Glass-Steagall Act, an higher income tax for the wealthie...

    7. Re:Maybe by Lord+Kano · · Score: 2, Informative

      On average, cars were more fuel efficient 30 years ago. The problem is with pollution controls.

      Engines attain maximum efficiency when they run hotter, the problem with hotter running engines is that they produce more nitrogen oxides and cause more smog. So, in the 1980s, they imposed pollution controls to reduce the nitrogen oxides and therefore smog. The only way car makers could meet this was to make engines run cooler, and in so doing reduced the efficiency of the engines.

      Miles per gallon hasn't changed much in the average family sedan, but 30 years ago the cars were bigger and heavier and used a lot more steel.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    8. Re:Maybe by ColdWetDog · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What on earth makes you think that any American financial firm has the clout to get OPEC, Russia and the other petroleum exporting countries to change prices at whim?

      They cannot of course. The price drops have much more to do with demand destruction - less money, less gas. No speculator conspiracy, no Wall Street conspiracy, no oil company conspiracy.

      Turns out the petroleum price is pretty elastic, at least in the short term.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    9. Re:Maybe by humphrm · · Score: 2

      OPEC only has so much control, and they're not united in their controls. They don't control demand, which has fluctuated wildly lately. Saudi Arabia, for instance, has been quite reticent in their controls and have been flooding the market as long as it makes them money. The anti-US contingent in OPEC would love to pull back production but the countries that actually make a profit aren't biting.

      --
      -- "In order to have power, I must be taken seriously." -Mojo Jojo
    10. Re:Maybe by Papaspud · · Score: 3, Informative

      The OPEC countries can only cut so much, and then they will start going broke. For many, if not most, of these countries this is their only source of revenue. If they don't sell oil, they have no money. If US could get all of it's supplies here in the US, it really doesn't matter how much they cut their own throats trying to raise prices, instead they will start pumping more and bringing down the prices to try and regain market share. They don't have as big of a stranglehold on the worlds market as they once did, and they have gotten used to getting all of that money and spending it.

      --
      Everything above is my opinion....YMMV
    11. Re:Maybe by TapeCutter · · Score: 2

      On average, cars were more fuel efficient 30 years ago.

      As a driver for 35yrs, I call bullshit. OTOH if you're american your idea of a 1980's family sedan is probably closer to my idea of a small truck.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    12. Re:Maybe by whoever57 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Miles per gallon hasn't changed much in the average family sedan, but 30 years ago the cars were bigger and heavier and used a lot more steel.

      Bigger, yes, heavier, no. Modern cars don't creak like those cars of 30 years ago, because much more steel is used to make a stiffer unibody than in the past. The modern mini, while slightly larger than the original mini is almost twice the weight. My 5-passenger car weighs the same as the 7-passenger minivan that it replaced.

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    13. Re:Maybe by smellotron · · Score: 2

      the US has the most money and buys and sells oil in thousandths of a second with HFT supercomputers and day traders. They set the price.

      Having the most money does indeed enable price manipulation (the guy with the widest stop-limits an deepest margin accounts wins in a game of chicken). But what on earth makes you think that trading faster allows one to "set the price"?

    14. Re:Maybe by TubeSteak · · Score: 2

      The price drops have much more to do with demand destruction - less money, less gas. No speculator conspiracy, no Wall Street conspiracy, no oil company conspiracy.

      [Citation needed]
      Even a cursory google search will give you two basic facts
      1. Saudi Arabia is pumping the most oil in decades (~10 million bbl/day), over the protests of other OPEC members, in order to keep oil prices down.
      2. Some refinery shutdowns/closures from the last year have been resolved, thus increasing capacity and lowering gasoline prices.

      The real chokepoint these days is refining capacity and it's nearly impossible for them to make money with oil >$100/bbl.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    15. Re:Maybe by TubeSteak · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If the price of oil is falling then it's because they've decided that is no longer of primary importance. You could guess their reasons: maybe they want to squash all this talk of wind and solar power, maybe they're trying to do something about Syria, etc. It's hard to say for sure.

      Saudi Arabia is pumping like crazy in order to balance the supply disruption from the embargo on Iran.
      They're also pumping a bit more, which is causing the price of oil to go down because the Saudis are oversupplying the market.

      Sooo... no need to guess their reasons.
      It's because the Europeans are trying to squeeze Iran.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    16. Re:Maybe by thegarbz · · Score: 2

      The real chokepoint these days is refining capacity and it's nearly impossible for them to make money with oil >$100/bbl.

      This is only of concern if you're a refining company. Few of those exist. Most refineries are positioned strategically to the retail market and it's quite acceptable they make a loss. Hell our local refinery made a loss for 14 years straight. About the only refineries that can turn a profit are newer mega refineries who don't have sky-rocketing maintenance costs, refineries in 3rd world countries where labour and compliance is cheap, and refineries which have special enough configurations that they can make some weird and wonderful premium products.

    17. Re:Maybe by DragonTHC · · Score: 2

      it's not paranoid if it's true.

      --
      They're using their grammar skills there.
    18. Re:Maybe by ppanon · · Score: 2

      Isn't the definition of speculator that for every barrel they buy, they have to sell a barrel? Otherwise they are in the oil storage business. How can someone who has to sell whatever they buy cause the price to increase? What would stop a real buyer from waiting until the speculator was about to be forced to take delivery (and panicking) and then buying? I don't get it.

      Oil storage business?. It's a staring content. The one who blinks last wins. The consumers of crude oil (such as refineries) need the supply or else they lose money because the refinery is idled while the refinery owners still have to pay the cost of capital (often in terms of the interest on loans used to purchase the capital equipment). That pretty well works the same down the whole consumption line to the guy who needs to fill his gas tank to get to work. Gas and crude prices shift wildly because most of the demand is very inelastic, so when supply drops...

      Saudi Arabia are pretty smart in adjusting supply to keep prices down. What the other OPEC nations don't seem to understand because they are so focused on lost short term profits, but which Saudi Arabia appears to, is that if oil prices are too volatile and/or high, then customers will start looking more aggressively for alternatives/substitutes. That could lead to more research investment and discovery of a power source that might make most oil production obsolete and drastically drop the price. You play the fish just right or else either the line will snap or the hook will tear out.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    19. Re:Maybe by Jeremi · · Score: 2

      Ideally, fuel efficient cars will keep the peaks down.

      They'll help, but OTOH every single person in China wants their own car now, and many of them can now afford to buy one as well, traffic and smog be damned. So the likelihood of the world ever seeing a significant gas surplus is small.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    20. Re:Maybe by tomhath · · Score: 3, Informative

      Depends on who you mean by "we". Much of the oil imported by the US is refined and exported as gasoline and diesel fuel; China imports a lot of it.

    21. Re:Maybe by tomhath · · Score: 2

      Iraq war for oil

      Please. Saddam was pumping as much oil out of the ground as he could. Nothing the US could do would add any more of Iraq's oil to the world's supply.

    22. Re:Maybe by Mindcontrolled · · Score: 2

      The answer is because the worlds wealth is almost all based in the US.

      LOL.

      --
      Ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant.
    23. Re:Maybe by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 2

      Sorry, but have to call bullshit on that one. Looking at diesel standby engine generators, the fuel consumption per MWh for a low-emissions unit over a "standard" unit is about a 9% delta. Comparing an engine from (about) 1970, you would see nominally a 30% higher number.

      1970 - ~90-100gal/MWh
      2012 Tier 2 - 73 gal/MWh
      2012 non-tiered - 65 gal/MWh

      The improved performance is mainly from tighter manufacturing tolerances and higher compression ratios and EFI.

  2. Meh! by Nethead · · Score: 2

    I live on the west coast you inconsiderate bastard!

    --
    -- I have a private email server in my basement.
    1. Re:Meh! by Nethead · · Score: 3, Funny

      We voted to have the fire at the Cherry Point refinery? I missed that one.

      --
      -- I have a private email server in my basement.
    2. Re:Meh! by Jeremi · · Score: 4, Funny

      We voted to have the fire at the Cherry Point refinery? I missed that one.

      See what happens when you forget to vote?

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  3. In other words by godrik · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Experts have no clue what will happen and guess like everybody.

    1. Re:In other words by Idbar · · Score: 2

      Indeed. I can read two point extrapolations too: if the slope is negative is going down, if it's positive it goes up, and if it's zero I keep my mouth shut.

  4. Saudi Arabia by ihatewinXP · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Saudi Arabia is currently flooding the oil market to drive down prices in an attempt to destabilize the economies and governments of Syria and Iran and weaken their broker Russia.

    More or less anything else that might be conjured up to explain this precipitous drop (aside from a worldwide recession that is driving down consumption and demand) is just nonsense. This is an odd byproduct of economic warfare. My only question is looking for the bottom so I can maximize returns after this economic war turns into a shooting one.

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    ---- The real Slashdot is still here. You just have to browse at -1 to read the comments.
    1. Re:Saudi Arabia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Bullshit. Barrack Obama *personally* lowered gas prices though sheer fiat of will. Newt Gingrich was going to do it if he got the Republican nomination, but he lost to Romney. Barack decided to just go ahead and do it since Michelle is busy with her book tour. Note that Mitt Romney doesn't have the power to make gas prices rise and fall--only Barack Obama and Newt Gingrich have this power--Mitt's magic underwear prevents it.

      Newt gets his power from sucking the souls of the babies of the poor. Barack's power source is just sheer awesomeness.

      This "supply and demand" stuff is just a big pile of bullshit, just like science, economics and compassion. That's why the Republicans don't believe in any of it. They just use "common sense".

    2. Re:Saudi Arabia by M1FCJ · · Score: 2

      Not at all. The prices are driven by the long-term speculators. The speculators banked on a war between Iran and US which would bring the Arabian Gulf production to almost a standstill and drive the petrol prices rocket high. The war (so far) has not happened. The economic recovery in Europe has not happened, UK and many other European countries are going through a dual-dip recession (i.e., we're fucked) and there's not enough business to go around. Everyone is making savings, driving less, driving shorter, do stuff over the phone / internet instead of shipping someone around. Families stay at home, they don't have money to spend as if it was a decade ago. Everyone is selling their old clunkers and buying more efficient cars, diesels if they can, all over 45-50mpg. Even Chinese economy is not growing as fast as it was a couple of years ago because less people can afford to buy stuff.

      All of this reduces the global prices, you guys get a free lunch out of it. Enjoy.

  5. Gas prices peak in the late spring by Kohath · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yeah, gas prices peak in the late spring around Memorial Day. Refineries have less capacity in May as they transition from making home heating oil in the winter to summer gasoline blends. Last winter was one of the mildest on record, so less home heating oil was needed. Also, cheap natural gas and popular migration to warmer areas of the country are leading to less use of home heating oil in the northeast. So refineries were able to stop making home heating oil earlier than normal this year. The gas price spike happened earlier in the year than normal, at a time that coincided with Iranian sabre-rattling about closing down the Persian Gulf. Now, as TFA mentions, weak economic growth worldwide is holding down demand, and prices are dropping.

    Why does anyone listen to stupid news reports predicting future gas prices anyway? You only get on the news by predicting extreme change or extreme hardship. When you say it will be about the same as always, there's (magically) no air time available for that report. This goes for all predictions that masquerade as news. Predictions are not news, and no one know the future. Stop listening to them.

  6. Election season by nurb432 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Incumbent qualifies for another term... Need i say more?

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  7. We need demand destruction. by couchslug · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Demand destruction benefits the US enormously. We now export gasoline and now care about fuel economy.

    Use less fuel, keep more of your money.

    --
    "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  8. Re:Now the question is by dmbasso · · Score: 2

    Too late, the AC before you already did that.

    But the real point here is: economists continue to have no clue about the economy, yet are still taken in consideration for policies. What about asking some astrologers too?

    [I'm overgeneralizing, but how to find the REAL economists, not the clueless ones?]

    --
    `echo $[0x853204FA81]|tr 0-9 ionbsdeaml`@gmail.com
  9. Re:Fall, really? by fightinfilipino · · Score: 3, Informative
    you might be right in one sense: Obama really should not be claiming credit for dropping gas prices.

    that being said, he can't really be blamed for their insane increase, either. we have Egypt, Israel, Syria, Iran, Saudia Arabia, gas price speculators, BP, and a whole slew of other bad actors to blame for that

  10. Re:Fall, really? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, because the prices at the local gas pump are under the direct control of an international cabal of "gentlemen" who can make the prices jump like a flea circus.

    *facepalm*

    What's actually happening is a combination of seasonal events, international events, wars, lack of wars, uncertainty of supply, shutdown of local refineries, state of global economy and local supply prices. In other words, gas is based on a globally traded resource that is processed somewhat locally and sold very locally.

    So yes, they did *fall*.

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  11. Re:Is this pump price? by Cryacin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Interesting that Rolling stone magazine wrote this article a while back. http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-great-american-bubble-machine-20100405

    Note the whole thing about oil prices having been spiked as a bubble, and in the process of being respiked. Also note the whole thing on carbon tax credits etc. If true, I wonder how much longer the world at large will put up with such shenanigans?

    --
    Science advances one funeral at a time- Max Planck
  12. Price dropped $0.50 in 3 months? by CompComp · · Score: 2

    Experts Agree: With this trend, by this time next year gas will cost $1.50, and 2 years from now, they'll be paying US $0.50 to take away a gallon of gas!

    1. Re:Price dropped $0.50 in 3 months? by green1 · · Score: 2

      Mandatory XKCD
      http://xkcd.com/605/

  13. Re:This is not new, guys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Did everyone already forget our current Administration saying they'd try getting gas prices below $2.50/gal by election time?

    Bullshit. Nobody in the Obama administration with any credibility with the media EVER said ANYTHING like that.

    Newt Gingrich made some promises that sounded like that, though.

  14. Re:Fall, really? by bky1701 · · Score: 2

    Everything is a conspiracy, eh? Anything bad that happens proves Obama is evil and/or incompetent. Anything good that happens proves he is just manipulating the American people. You know, these arguments are basically the same but inverted as the ones given for why an all powerful god would allow evil to exist... ie, not coherent internally, even ignoring the lack of evidence which would be required to take them as fact.

  15. Re:what would help keep it this way by repapetilto · · Score: 2

    No that would solve nothing, you have never speculated on anything in your life. Stop talking about things you know nothing about.

    Go find the correlation between Gas price and Gold price. It is steady since the 70s, you'll find pearson's R is above .90. It is all inflation/deflation.

  16. I wonder... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Will those people who put signs up at gas pumps blaming Obama for rising gas prices put up signs giving him credit for the drop in prices?
    Because the US President clearly has a whole hell of a lot of control over the price of a global commodity.

  17. Re:what would help keep it this way by repapetilto · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Sorry R^2 is above 0.90. Pearsons R between average gas price at the pump in the US vs Gold/oz from Jan 1976 to Feb 2012 is 0.833. And pearson's R assumes a the most simple (linear) relationship. This has likely only become stronger recently. You can look at what gold and gas prices have done recently on your own.

  18. Re:Fall, really? by meglon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You are right, Obama has no control or input what so ever on the price of gas. However, most people will not forget the blathering, frothing at the mouth, idiots that the republicans became when prices were going up trying to blame it on Obama.

    Interestingly enough, most of the fluctuations in prices in the US comes from speculators gambling on the commodities markets. Occasionally we get changes because of world events, but those world events in reality only drive speculators changing their speculations. OPEC, the great evil cartel, unlike in the mid to late '70's, is almost a wall flower in the day to day, week to week, changes.

    --
    Fascism: An authoritarian and nationalistic right-wing system of government and social organization. See also: NAZI's
  19. Re:Is this pump price? by ToadProphet · · Score: 4, Informative

    crude is at US$20/barrel

    It's actually at $80USD a barrel.

    --
    It's on America's tortured brow, That Mickey Mouse has grown up a cow
  20. Re:This is not new, guys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    He confusing Barack Obama with Newt Gingrich. Easy mistake. I do it all the time. Black people look alike to me.

  21. California Gas Prices by billstewart · · Score: 5, Interesting

    California's gas prices are always a bit higher because we have about 50 cents more tax per gallon than most states - but it mostly goes to road maintenance, and otherwise it would just be built into the income tax or sales tax (which are also very high, but that's a separate problem.)

    The other issue is that California requires somewhat special mixes of gasoline to reduce pollution, and that means there's less flexible supply chasing our demand, so we're likely to have higher prices and higher variability than states that let you burn anything. It's arguable how much of that is necessary - we could probably have more flexible definitions of low-pollution gas that would still keep our air clean, especially since car engines are more efficient and cleaner today than 10 or 20 years ago. (With my old telecommuter-friendly car, I also noticed that I consistently got about 10% worse mileage with winter gas than summer gas, though I'm not sure if my current car is as sensitive.)

    By the way, if you're buying a new car, expect to spend about $1M / YourMPG on gas over the lifetime of the car. It'll last about 200K-250K miles, and gas will cost $4-5 much of that time, so you'll end up spending $20K if you buy a 50mpg Prius, or $50K if you buy a 20mpg car. (Your miles per year don't affect the total, just the variance - you can burn up your car in 5 years or keep it around for 20, you're still buying the same amount of gas before it dies. If you sell the car while it's still working, obviously the gas cost gets pro-rated.) I figure my current 30-33mpg car will cost me about $30-33K in gas, so $10-13K more than a Prius (which would have cost about $8K more to buy.)

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
    1. Re:California Gas Prices by Quila · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I figure my current 30-33mpg car will cost me about $30-33K in gas, so $10-13K more than a Prius (which would have cost about $8K more to buy.)

      Does that count the couple battery replacements the Prius will likely need during that lifetime?

    2. Re:California Gas Prices by Alex+Zepeda · · Score: 4, Informative

      Considering that the total tax for on the road gasoline in California is less than fifty cents a gallon, you might want to check your numbers. That's combined state and federal excise taxes as well as a variety of other fees added by the state.

      http://taxfoundation.org/article/state-gasoline-tax-rates-january-1-2012

      --
      The revolution will be mocked
    3. Re:California Gas Prices by Mistlefoot · · Score: 2

      You are looking at up to $3.60 per gallon in L.A right now per gasbuddy.com.

      California, per the link you provided charges $0.48 per gallon tax PLUS 7.5% state sales tax plus 2% local tax in many areas. "May include" does not mean "does include".

      http://www.caltax.org/research/calrank.html

      The state tax portion adds $0.27 to the tax and the 2% another $0.07 for a total tax of between $0.75 and $0.82 in California.

      Per you link which shows most States with no sales tax to be added and taxes of under $0.30 per gallon, you are validating the grandparents claim that the tax is $0.50/gallon higher....

    4. Re:California Gas Prices by Gavagai80 · · Score: 2

      Your miles per year do matter quite a lot, because no car is going to last 70 years just because you don't drive it much. For example my car is under 60K miles, but it's a 1998 with rust issues and I doubt it'll live to 100K since I've been driving about 3K/yr lately. To get 200K miles out of a car before it dies of old age you have to do a ton of driving.

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      This space intentionally left blank
    5. Re:California Gas Prices by Alex+Zepeda · · Score: 3, Informative

      Did you even bother to read, well, anything other than your bullshit tea bagger propaganda? The link you provided is nothing but failed reading comprehension and awful scare tactics. High property taxes even with Prop. 13? Two percent of a McMansion in Malibu is still going to be a lot more than a twenty percent tax levied on a yurt in Oklahoma. Blame big government. lawl.

      The link I provided broke out the taxes into excise and other taxes. So that's state+federal excise taxes plus other things like "environmental fees, storage tank taxes, other fees or taxes, and general sales tax" for a combined rate of forty-eight and six tenths cents per gallon. That's also based on the API's February 2012 prices.

      If you want to look at the link that you provided, go ahead. The fear mongers come up with higher numbers that aren't directly comparable to the ones I provided. Look at the API data the tea baggers use. California's at 69.0 cents (same #2 rank) per gallon, with an average of 49.5 cents. Per the link you posted, including DC, the only state with less than 30 cents per gallon in combined taxes is Alaska.

      So, no California does not charge fifty cents more per gallon of unleaded gasoline in taxes than most states.

      --
      The revolution will be mocked
    6. Re:California Gas Prices by vlm · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Please mod funny not insightful. Everyone knows the packs last the life of the car, guaranteed like forever, and the cost of a pack is a bit less than your rounding error above. This is a topic near and dear to my heart as my wife's Prius is nearing the end of its aesthetic life, trashed internally, dinged out externally, its really showing signs of age, and sooner or later I'll have to replace the car. Battery failures are extremely rare, so I'm not concerned about that.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    7. Re:California Gas Prices by Junta · · Score: 2

      my wife's Prius is nearing the end of its aesthetic life

      Curious as to how long you think a car should last. In our household, we have a 1999 vehicle with no plans to replace in the near future (no significant mechanical issues that drive repair cost higher than its worth. While you might live in Japan or have imported on older Prius, I doubt your prius is as old as '99. Some of us amortize the cost of our vehicles over a longer period of time.

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    8. Re:California Gas Prices by cayenne8 · · Score: 2

      We're at 3.64/gal here in Milford, CT. And no, we're not some hick town either. We're right on I-95, the NY to Boston Corridor.

      You know...I couldn't actually tell you what the cost of gas is here. I just never look...gas is a necessity of my life, have to have it to drive to work, shop, etc. So, I just drive to the pump....grab the premium gas (turbo car)...fill it, and leave. I don't even look at the price really.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    9. Re:California Gas Prices by Toonol · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "...aesthetic life...".

      Good lord. Some times I wonder if humanity deserves to live. Should a species that has a concept such as a car 'nearing the end of its aesthetic life' survive?

    10. Re:California Gas Prices by BlackSnake112 · · Score: 2

      Those people take often take better care of the car then they do people.

      I think the parent leaves their car outside in the elements. Not everyone has a garage to keep their car in. Many apartment/condo places do not have a place to wash your car, so you have to go to a car wash. I have always found that hand washing and waxing does a better job then a car wash does. Just my personal experience with my 11 year old car that people think is 1-2 years old. I also not have a garage. I just wash it at least once a month and wax it 3-4 times a year.

      Take car of your car both cosmetically and mechanically.. It should last and look good if you do.

  22. Charts by Ronin441 · · Score: 3, Informative

    And here I expected a story about changes in the price of something over time would include a chart.

    To remedy the lack of charts: http://www.consumerenergyreport.com/2012/02/27/how-high-have-gas-prices-risen-over-the-years/

    (This is a good link because it includes an inflation-adjusted chart.)

  23. "Experts" by tyme · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Experts who claim that prices will continue to rise when prices have been rising, or continue to fall when prices have been falling, are nothing but weather vanes. These are the same idiots who have denied that we were in the last half dozen bubbles; the same idiots who were excited about DOW 30,000; the same idiots who claimed that stock/housing prices could just keep going up and up FOREVER!

    --
    just a ghost in the machine.
  24. Peak demand for oil happened in 2008 by dbIII · · Score: 2

    Peak demand happened in 2008, so supply actually exceeds demand sometimes. Technically peak production happened then as well, but so many people bring their own unrelated baggage to "peak oil" when it's just the maximum point on the production graph. In this case the decline has happened because people we unwilling to buy more oil, for mostly economic reasons, and to a much lesser extend which is only really kicking in now, because other sources of energy become increasingly popular the longer the oil price is high.
    Personally I'm hoping for a very slow slide down the oil production graph instead of a sudden drop to nothing which is what some people think of with "peak oil". Before people start arguing about irrelevant stuff, you should note that's liquid oil, the easy to get stuff, not the more expensive per Joule stuff like oil from tar sands, shale, made from coal or whatever. That stuff will be our liquid fuel of choice only when mineral oil is scarce enough to be very expensive to obtain.

  25. Re:what would help keep it this way by dbIII · · Score: 3, Insightful

    George W. Bush got the price of gas down to $1.80/gallon when he left office

    Yes, that's one consequence of letting the economy crash by removing all the safety barriers, then refusing to pay attention to all the warnings because he was on vacation all of the time.
    I can see a trend - the extremists in the Republican party want someone far crazier than Reagan at his worst and lazier than Bush when he was asleep. I'm sure they'll do a "heck of a job".

  26. Re:Fall, really? by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, because the prices at the local gas pump are under the direct control of an international cabal of "gentlemen" who can make the prices jump like a flea circus.

    You say that as if something like OPEC doesn't exist. There are relatively few petroleum exporting countries, and many of them collude. There are very few companies, all of them globally oriented, that control the supply chain all the way from exploration to refining capacity. There is also quite a lot of politics involved, from local to international, that affect the price of oil, and eventually gasoline.

    So while the demand portion is a very normal market, the supply portion is in no way anything close to a free market. As such, it is quite reasonable to question whether a price change of oil or gasoline is due to typical market conditions or price manipulation.

  27. Re:Fall, really? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 3, Informative

    You say that as if something like OPEC doesn't exist.

    No, I say it as if OPEC doesn't have the type of price control it used to have, and not anywhere near the price control it wishes it had. Here's a nifty little link: http://people.hofstra.edu/geotrans/eng/ch5en/appl5en/shareopec.html OPEC currently controls about 45% of global output. The Persian Gulf sits at below 30%. Furthermore, OPEC is definitely not the single entity a lot of people make it out to be. Yes, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States are pretty much in lock step. You know who else is part of OPEC? Iran, aka mortal enemy of Saudi Arabia.

    So yes, they do influence the market. But they are clearly not able to control the price to the degree you intimate.

    The same applies to your argument about companies, by the way. And then, as you rightly guessed, politics are also thrown in the mix. And the global economy. All in all, you make my point: while there are some entities that have more control over price than others, there are so many that it is ludicrous on the face of it to argue that there is even the possibility of a cabal. And then there's the data, which conclusively proves that individual actors have very little influence on the price of gas in the US.

    While it might be reasonable for someone to question whether prices are subject to global manipulation, it implies that that person has never looked closely at either gas prices or who the players are.

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  28. Re:what would help keep it this way by jamstar7 · · Score: 2

    Why the hell won't Obama make an executive order making it illegal to invest speculatively (so basically at all) in gasoline and oil?

    Because the instant he did it, he'd be hauled into court for 'overstepping his authority' and rightly so. There's a reason why the federal government was meant to be relatively weak, it was to keep the tyranny of the minority to a minimum and stop the various states from exporting their various stupidities nationwide.

    Course, ol' Honest Abe said 'We'll see about that, now, won't we?'

    --
    Understanding the scope of the problem is the first step on the path to true panic.
  29. Re:Is this pump price? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If true, I wonder how much longer the world at large will put up with such shenanigans?

    The real question is how much longer the world will put up with the economic shenanigans that our financial god-kings have been pulling for at least the past thirty years, with bankers getting parachute drops of free money which they then set on fire, while the people are being told to "tighten their belts".

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  30. Re:what would help keep it this way by codepunk · · Score: 2

    "Because the instant he did it, he'd be hauled into court for 'overstepping his authority' and rightly so"

    That does not seem to be slowing him or his administration so far.

    --


    Got Code?
  31. Please tell me by publiclurker · · Score: 2

    you are not using those old BS battery life numbers that were trotted out a few years ago. I'd like to think that there are some new fantasy stories out there to laugh at.

  32. Re:Is this pump price? by ToadProphet · · Score: 3, Informative

    Brent crude is around $90, only about a $10 premium over WTI.

    --
    It's on America's tortured brow, That Mickey Mouse has grown up a cow
  33. Re:Now the question is by compro01 · · Score: 3, Funny

    What about asking some astrologers too?

    Nancy Regan did. That alone should get Republicans on board with it.

    --
    upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
  34. Re:Fall, really? by Locutus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I did notice that it wasn't until Obama threatened to investigate the increasingly high gas prices that the gas prices started to decline. Quite the coincidence I would say.

    LoB

    --
    "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
  35. Re:Fall, really? by TubeSteak · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Interestingly enough, most of the fluctuations in prices in the US comes from speculators gambling on the commodities markets.

    If you want to see a real world example of what happens when speculators are driven out of a market, look at silver.
    The Chicago Mercantile Exchange pumped up margin prices 8 times last year and the price of silver plummeted as speculators had to get out.
    They've since cut margins twice, but silver prices have not rebounded, because the gamblers have moved on to less hostile commodities.

    This is a good example of how to drive out speculations, but...
    A lot of traders are more or less accusing the CME of manipulating prices by fiddling with the margins
    (they increased silver margins 5 times in 2 weeks) and have been claiming the whole thing is a big scam.

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
  36. Re:Is this pump price? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This happens every election year. It happened in 2008 as well.

  37. The explanation is simple by shiftless · · Score: 2

    It's the collapse of the European economy. Duh. Back when these forecasts for high oil prices were made, the "experts" were also forecasting all kinds of other B.S., like economic recovery in the Euro zone. Guess what, it didn't happen, and isn't going to happen because the Euro is going to collapse--with massive economic fallout. It's happening now. The reduction in demand due to this catastrophe explains the drop in oil pricing.

    The problem is, a) low oil prices are now making certain oil fields too costly to explore, plus b) worldwide supply is now at peak, a future spike in demand is going to send prices skyrocketing. It's only a matter of time.

  38. Re:Fall, really? by CodeBuster · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Obama has no control or input what so ever on the price of gas. However, most people will not forget the blathering, frothing at the mouth, idiots that the republicans became when prices were going up trying to blame it on Obama.

    I believe that it was Harry Truman, a Democratic president, who said, "The buck stops here." Like it or not, the sitting president always gets the blame in the minds of the voters. This is especially true with gas prices, inflation and unemployment. No president since Jimmy Carter has faced an election with such a high Misery Index as Obama is facing now and we all know how that one ended. Reagan asked the voters if they were better off after 4 years of Carter than they were before he was elected. Unless an economic miracle arrives sometime between now and November (unlikely), Obama will be joining the ranks of the unemployed. It certainly would be a fitting punishment for his failure to fix things. Are you better off than you were four years ago? Maybe we should blame Bush in November because hey It could have been worse, right? Put that in your bong and smoke it.

  39. Re:Fall, really? by meglon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ....which is exactly what the republicans in congress have been putting 100% of their effort into. Had those fucking pieces of shit actually been trying to help this country out of the recession instead of using it for a power play, everyone would be better off right now. It doesn't take more than a couple brain cells to understand that, although i do realize that's a couple more than most fucking republican ideologues have.

    Hopefully they'll be enough people with basic common sense to understand this and vote out all the lying piece of shit republicans so democrats can pull this country out of another mess the fascist republicans got us into.

    --
    Fascism: An authoritarian and nationalistic right-wing system of government and social organization. See also: NAZI's
  40. Cap-and-trade can be pretty awesome by F69631 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The carbon credits you refer to, otherwise known as cap-and-trade, is pretty simple and great system that combines the best of free markets and government regulation. There is a consensus that we need to lower emissions and most people agree that some form of regulation from the government is needed. The problem is that it's very difficult to create a set of rules that work as intended.

    For example UK recently built a massive power plant that runs on biofuel and what actually happens is that they transport the fuel all the way from Canada to be burned in UK. Why? Environmentally it would be better to burn it in Canada but UK provides greater incentives for such power plants. We could try to fix every small issue like that - both internationally and inside countries - but we'll always be left with incomplete (and increasingly complex) set of regulations that encourage to do stupid things. We need a free markets based solution that discourages polluting, not regulations that encourage finding workarounds.

    Cap-and-trade is exactly that system. Rights to pollute are auctioned and the acceptable amount of pollution is slowly reduced over time, which encourages solutions that efficiently reduce pollution but discourages expensive solutions that provide relatively little benefits. The economic incentive for any environmental decision is directly relative to how much it actually helps the environment.

    Now... that all said, there are some flaws. First of all, for the system to work perfectly, (nearly) all countries should participate and all pollution (be it traffic, energy, industrial...) should be distributed like that. Certain aspects need tweaking (For example, a ton of greenhouse gases released to the upper atmosphere by airplanes are about as harmful as two tons of such gases released at ground level...) and others are difficult to handle just through cap-and-trade (relatively small amount of pollution to a very important wildlife sanctuary, for example) and one can argue that the way that the pollution rights are currently distributed is unfair towards developing countries... even so, the concept is great and with a little more effort put into cap-and-trade, it could allow us to abolish huge amounts of inefficient regulation and incentivize us to reduce pollution as efficiently as possible.

  41. Re:Fall, really? by roman_mir · · Score: 2

    he can't really be blamed for their insane increase,

    - wrong. The trend in the oil prices is to go up, but it's not the oil that is getting more expensive, the opposite is true. Oil is getting cheaper, there is more supply than ever and the demand is lowest in 11 years.

    It's not the prices for oil that are going up, it's the currency that is being destroyed, devalued by printing, and this is directly related to the policy of the government to spend money and monetise the debts with loans and via central bank 'credit' (money printing).

    The blame for the rising prices of EVERYTHING is squarely on the shoulders of the governments that are destroying the fiat currencies, and USA is the primary mover there, because it doesn't produce anything but it likes to buy stuff that others produce (thus the huge monthly trade deficit), so USA prints, and then everybody else prints to 'catch up'.

    This is inflation, not oil supply/demand curve, and it's not speculation. Speculation discovers the prices, and now speculation is moving prices lower, speculation is a bet that in the future there will be more people with more money to buy the stuff or fewer people with less money to buy it, that's all speculation does.

    Inflation is the trend setter.

  42. Re:Is this pump price? by hairyfeet · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why was this labeled flamebait? Did everyone forget the S&L scandal of the 80s, with everyone getting golden parachutes while the taxpayers got the bills, Worldcom and Enron of the 90s, companies getting tax breaks to send jobs overseas in the 00s?

    Whether you like it or not you could put the holders of 85% of this country's wealth in your average HS gym and have seats left over, and whenever you have wealth concentrated THAT much its gonna become what we have now, bribery and backscratching and screwing the peasants to concentrate ever MORE wealth, simply because there is no such thing as too much wealth and power for those at the top.

    I have to wonder if this is why no democracy has lasted as long as we have, or no empire survived more than a few hundred years. Money simply gets too concentrated, the peasants get tired of living like animals, and eventually the whole thing just falls down. I know it would be damned hard to argue that the average American is better off now than they were 30 years ago, with nearly half paying no taxes because they are too poor and the welfare and disability roles exploding.

    Oil manipulation is just one of many abuses of the system we have seen,and in everything from the housing bubble to the dotbombs we've seen those at the top never seem to lose. that's no accident, that is having enough power to game the system, to make sure you are declared "too big to fail" and getting paid even if you lose.

    --
    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  43. Re:Fall, really? by CodeBuster · · Score: 2

    So let me get this straight - you actually think that people will vote for Mitt Romney?

    The temptation for many people will be to throw Obama out as long as Romney maintains a good family man image and doesn't do or say anything too crazy. The problem for the Obama campaign is that Romney actually does meet that standard. He's a successful business man and all around American dad with an attractive wife and a clean-cut family. He will appeal to middle of the road "family values" voters who are tired of the recession and Obama's east cost ivy league "elitist" attitude and quasi-socialist policies and rhetoric. They will want to give Obama the old heave-ho in November and all Romney has to do in the meantime is to stoke the fires of their discontent. Are they better off now than they were four years ago? For many of them the answer to that question is a resounding, "No", so come November they'll take that anger with them into the voting both. No need for expert political analysis and pollsters here; a blind man could foresee all of this.

  44. Re:what would help keep it this way by amorsen · · Score: 2

    Speculation is what allows to deal with problems before they get REALLY bad. Would you have preferred gas prices to stay at $30 until the moment where demand can't be met, with a sudden jump to $200? Complete with a drop straight back when the Western economy collapses because people can't afford to drive to work?

    Speculators make sure that we know of the problem while we still have some leverage to fix it. Improvements in energy efficiency get profitable earlier, and as long as a price hike is only speculative, there are various options for dealing with it. Once you hit the actual production limits, there is not much you can do if you haven't prepared.

    --
    Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
  45. Give credit where credit is due by rsilvergun · · Score: 4, Informative

    Obama put in place several regulations to control oil speculation. During the Bush administration the laws governing commodities trading where changed (laws, not regulations) so that you no longer have to take delivery of a commodity to buy it. Before that, if you wanted 40,000 barrels you had to have someplace to store them. They did it for food too, which is why the cost of food went up 40% and there were food riots in Mexico...

    Obama pushed through several regulation to control what they could do (sadly, he did not restore the laws about commodity trading). The is why you're paying less at the pump. He also has used the threat of flooding the market from the national reserves to keep the speculators in check. He did these things well over a year ago, but it takes that long for the savings to make it through the pipeline.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  46. Re:Is this pump price? by Genda · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What strikes me as particularly egregious, is that the last time the price of oil got this high, there was suddenly tremendous research into alternative fuels and particularly synthetic fuel from algae growth. Just as it became clear that algae was a viable technology and dozens of researchers were beginning to set up pilot projects to begin producing fuel, the price of oil crashed and wiped them all out.

    I expect this will be a precise repeat of that exercise. It seems to me that the dog is shaking off the fleas. Perhaps its time for someone to subsidize the production of alternative fuels outside of the price of oil, until we have a product that is capable of competing with oil under any circumstance. Adding to the fact that we can slowly swap synfuel into the economy by taxing regular petroleum, and ultimately have a completely green fuel economy. Of course this presumes having federal legislators that don't own knee-pads or have the ability to whistle Dixie while tying a cherry stem in a knot with their tongues. Too much to ask for?