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Getting Better Transparency From Oil Refineries

Hugh Pickens writes "Gregg Laskoski reports in U.S. News and World Report that virtually all of the retail gasoline price volatility that Americans experienced this past year was connected to significant problems at refineries. It was those refineries' vulnerability that subjected U.S. consumers to the year's highest average price ever, $3.63 per gallon. February delivered the BP refinery fire in Cherry Point, Washington that led to gasoline price spikes all along the Pacific coast, refinery problems in the Great Lakes region pushed Chicago gas prices to an all-time high of $4.56 per gallon, and over the summer, west coast refineries incurred outages, and California saw record highs in most markets, with Los Angeles gasoline's average price peaking at $4.72/gallon in October. Finally after Reuters reported that some 7,700 gallons of fuel spilled from Phillips 66's Bayway refinery in Linden, NJ, after Hurricane Sandy, New Jersey environmental protection officials said they were not made aware of a major spill at the Bayway plant, and the refinery failed to respond to inquiries from Reuters reporters. 'Too many times, history has shown us, the Phillips 66 response or lack thereof characterizes the standard practice of the oil industry. Refineries often fail or are slow to communicate problems that create significant disruptions to fuel supplies and spikes in retail gasoline prices. More often than not, scant information is provided reluctantly, if at all,' writes Laskoski. 'When such things occur is silence from refineries acceptable? Or does our government and the electorate who put them there have a right to know what's really going on?'"

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  1. Re:Yes, better transparency! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Taxes also go to funding gun running to Mexican drug cartels. They also pay for coverups when those gun running operations end up killing hundreds in Mexico and one of our border patrol. Those taxes also pay for drones to kill Americans caught in Yemen.

    So, I would be fine with the federal part of that tax going away and not having the federal government pay for those roads. Instead let my state collect taxes and pay for it. My state government isn't putting citizens on "kill lists" or making secret "no fly lists".

    By the way, what was the Federal Governments reported profits last year, and what did they actually spend of that?