oil dropped from in the 130's to less than 100. yet gas went from 3.17 here to 3.49.
Where had gasoline at $3.17 in early June? The cheapest I can see is Minnesota and that was over $3.60.
i don't want to hear the hurrican bs either as there's refienries in nj
And they can supply Texas when there's a shortage. There's a shortage in the SW now, and they are buying gasoline from wherever they can get it to make up the shortfall. That means some gasoline is going from NJ to the sw, and that means NJ is short as well.
and as the oil companies wouldn't be so "overtasked" if they had put some money back into their business and built more.
Of course they would. New refineries shut down in a hurricane just like old ones. They could avoid the problem by building a lot more all over the US, and keeping a large amount of spare capacity. But that increases costs, and if the refiners have increased costs they will pass them on to their customers. That means higher gasoline prices.
The answer to short term supply disruptions is a stockpile, not excess long term capacity.
yes, because the price jumped BEFORE the hurricanes hit. and it jumped a LOT.
No, it didn't. I think you are a victim of your own misconceptions.
US gasoline prices per week, according to the DOE:
July
week 1 - $4.11
week 2 - $4.11
week 3 - $4.06
week 4 - $3.96
August
week 1 - $3.88
week 2 - $3.81
week 3 - $3.74
week 4 - $3.69
September
week 1 - $3.68
week 2 - $3.65
week 3 - $3.84
According to gasbuddy.com
we DO have an emergency stockpile i think.
The US has a crude oil reserve. That's not much use when the problem is refinery shutdowns.
they've tried to tell us there wasn't enough oil before. it was a lie then and it is a lie now.
Oil production remained flat between 2005 and 2007, at the same time as the world economy boomed. That's what led to the price increases. There is most certainly a shortage of oil production.
they try to say there isn't the refining capacity. then build totally tubular refineries.
There isn't a refinery shortage. There was following Katrina, and that affected repair cycles and caused shortages for a long time. There isn't any more. There are temporary disruptions due to weather, but the answer to those is stockpiling, not excess capacity.
they knew 50 years ago that the demand was going to keep rising. did they think that the few refineries they had would majickly produce more gas from the oil?
No. That's why they've been expanding refinery capacity. US refinery capacity has grown by about 1.5 million barrels a day over the last decade.
Why do you want more refineries? Don't you realise you'll have to pay for them? Maintaining excess capacity costs a lot of money, and will lead to higher gasoline prices.