well thank youuuu
Woo go US government, and gotta love the Canadian Government for jumping on the bandwagon. even though we get out oil from Venezuela gas is going up here 9 cents a liter(34 cents a gallon) on monday.... how does a hurricane in Texas have anything to do with our gas here?? seriously can someone explain that to me?
It's probably basic supply and demand. My understanding is that refineries in Houston process approximately 20% of gasoline produced in the United States. Without Houston refineries, supply plummets without a similar reduction in demand. U.S. gasoline prices likely greatly influence the price in Canada.
Woo go US government, and gotta love the Canadian Government for jumping on the bandwagon. even though we get out oil from Venezuela gas is going up here 9 cents a liter(34 cents a gallon) on monday.... how does a hurricane in Texas have anything to do with our gas here?? seriously can someone explain that to me?
Thanks Peg. We fled to San Antonio so the family and I are fine. My neighborhood friends who stayed have informed me that I have minor roof shingle damage and a fence down in the backyard. All in all, it does not sound too bad -- we feel like we dodged a bullet. We remain in a San Antonio Hotel, however, as our community is still without electricity. I am hoping to hear that power is restored tomorrow so we can return to Houston, though there is by no means any guarantee that this will happen.
It *should* be based on supply & demand, but more often than not, it's caused by theoretical supply & demand, which is then blown completely out of proportion.
The general formula (from what I've observed, YMMV) is thus:
Possible event "X" (threat of attack on oil reserves in Iraq, possible tropical storm/hurricane), causes gas price "Y" to increase by multiplier "Z", where Z is some completely arbitrary number.
A Canadian politician said on the news a while ago that a "Category 2 tropical storm turns into a category 5 fleecing for consumers at the pumps"... It's not so far off-base.
I understand that this time rigs and refineries in Texas were ACTUALLY shut down, so it makes this pill a bit easier to swallow... but not much
The general formula (from what I've observed, YMMV) is thus:
Possible event "X" (threat of attack on oil reserves in Iraq, possible tropical storm/hurricane), causes gas price "Y" to increase by multiplier "Z", where Z is some completely arbitrary number.
A Canadian politician said on the news a while ago that a "Category 2 tropical storm turns into a category 5 fleecing for consumers at the pumps"... It's not so far off-base.
I understand that this time rigs and refineries in Texas were ACTUALLY shut down, so it makes this pill a bit easier to swallow... but not much


