Posted on 04/27/2006 8:43:37 AM PDT by kellynla
Get used to it.
Gasoline at $2 a gallon has probably gone the way of 5-cent coffee and 15-cent cheeseburgers.
The grim facts are these: Demand for oil is rising around the globe, especially in Asia. Supplies are generally static. Unless something happens to put a damper on demand, simple economics dictate that prices have nowhere to go but up.
In the short term, however, we may get a break. Gasoline prices, now averaging more than $3 a gallon in Orange County, are expected to fall below that level around Memorial Day as refineries ramp up production after completing maintenance work, analysts say.
Here's a look at what's driving this week's higher prices at the pump:
(Excerpt) Read more at ocregister.com ...
Got that right, even if they dropped all taxes.
That looks just a little low on the gasoline tax.
http://api-ec.api.org/filelibrary/Gasoline-taxes.pdf
According to this:
http://www.gaspricewatch.com/usgastaxes.asp
California also includes a 6% sales tax on the gas. So todays inflated prices include even more tax than my previous post.
IMHO, Democrats need to sieze the moment and finally launch Gore's plan -- impose a very high fuel tax to curb consumption and fund alternate energy development. Time for them to walk their talk.
A Primer on Gasoline Prices
Energy Information Administration
http://www.eia.doe.gov/bookshelf/brochures/gasolinepricesprimer/eia1_2005primerM.html
WHY ARE CALIFORNIA GASOLINE PRICES HIGHER AND MORE VARIABLE THAN OTHERS?
The State of California operates its own reformulated gasoline program with more stringent requirements than Federally-mandated clean gasolines. In addition to the higher cost of cleaner fuel, there is a combined State and local sales and use tax of 7.25 percent on top of an 18.4 cent-per-gallon Federal excise tax and an 18.0 cent-per-gallon State excise tax. Refinery margins have also been higher due in large part to price volatility in the region.
California prices are more variable than others because there are relatively few supply sources of its unique blend of gasoline outside the State. California refineries need to be running near their fullest capabilities in order to meet the States fuel demands. If more than one of its refineries experiences operating difficulties at the same time, Californias gasoline supply may become very tight and the prices soar. Supplies could be obtained from some Gulf Coast and foreign refineries; however, Californias substantial distance from those refineries is such that any unusual increase in demand or reduction in supply results in a large price response in the market before relief supplies can be delivered. The farther away the necessary relief supplies are, the higher and longer the price spike will be.
California was one of the first States to ban the gasoline additive methyl tertiary butyl ether (MTBE) after it was detected in ground water. Ethanol, a non-petroleum product usually made from corn, is being used in place of MTBE. Gasoline without MTBE is more expensive to produce and requires refineries to change the way they produce and distribute gasoline. Some supply dislocations and price surges occurred in the summer of 2003 as the State moved away from MTBE. Similar problems have also occurred in past fuel transitions.
Yes, the emerging Chinese and Indian markets are increasing the demand for oil. This is part of why I would like to see more on and off shore oil and gas exploration and drilling in the U.S.
I would also like to add that the pie charts shown fail to separate refinery cost and profit. Cost and profit are economic polar opposites. Federal and state taxes represent the largest profit in gasoline sales in this country IIRC.
California has some of the nuttiest rules and regulations. Here they have their own gas, but hardly any room for error in the supply chain. They did that crazy electricity thing a few years ago (called "deregulation" but really just a crazy set of rules). They seem to do everything exactly wrong. I don't get it.
I would also like to see the taxes in the refinery and the crude production broken out.
Deport the illegals. The demand for fuel will be lessened by doing so. Prices will fall. Problem solved. Next!
Good point! We could have that pie chart looking like a spoked wheel in no time.
If hurricanes aren't too bad this year, anyone think the price will go down?
To the forum:
Anybody here know anything about laws (Fed or state) that forbid gas stations
from "breaking down" the cost of gasoline on the sales tab?
I was listening to Glen Beck shows and he had a gas station owner
in Ohio say something LIKE he was forbidden by law from stating on his
sales receipts to the customer how much HE had paid for the fuel.
I was just wondering how prevalent ordinances against itemizing the cost
of a gasoline purchase are (or if this is something of an urban legend).
I do think itemizing the components for a gasoline sale could be
instructive (and maddening) if people saw things like the assessed tax
printed out on the receipt.
It's gone down about ten cents a gallon this week where I live. It's always about supply and demand.
Here's my question about the taxes. If the market is willing to pay the price at the pump that includes the tax, if we eliminated the tax, wouldn't the price remain the same anyway? Exxon would keep more profits, the gubmint would have less revenue. I don't see that as a good deal necessarily.
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