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Old 07-11-2008, 08:39 AM   #1
Mr. Sandman
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oil...up another 5 bucksnow 147/barrel

The talk now is 170/barrel in a couple months and 150 possibly today.

Jesus, At some point we have to drill. This liberal attitude that drilling is not the solution is exactly WHAT GOT US HERE. It is time to drill here and create more domestic supply.
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Old 07-11-2008, 08:49 AM   #2
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It's not that we don't have the raw capacity, we would still need refinery's

80 pct of offshore leases are untouched at the moment.
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Old 07-11-2008, 09:03 AM   #3
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The same folks that prevented drilling have prevented refineries as well. Yes we need a few more. You want more jobs...build refineries and drill. The leases are in areas that will not produce like where they want to go. Most places had test wells and produced little to nothing. They had 6 wells on the Grand Banks...not much there.
They only want t 2000 acres in ANWAR which is 1/2 of 1% of the area.
Image how bad things will be in 10 years if you don't start drilling here....just from a domestic security, not to mention the economy.

I am for developing most alternatives (and a big proponent of nuclear) as well but they are a ways off as well. So lets get it in gear, build baby build!

Lets face it you are not going to see a solar powered airliner in our children's lifetimes. Imagine what the cost of travel, shipping, and goods will be with $ 50-100/gallon gasoline. This could happen if they don't start now. Forget about the pleasure boating industry... this is history now. No new boats (of any size...those are the ones with profits) are selling at all, none. Most will be gone forever after a couple more years of this.
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Old 07-11-2008, 09:06 AM   #4
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Think about it, why would the oil companys want to produce more oil if they can get more for less. Alternate energy is the answer, that's what will drop the price.
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Old 07-11-2008, 09:32 AM   #5
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I hear Katama and Stonewall beach are likely sites for wells!

Why even try.........
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Old 07-11-2008, 09:44 AM   #6
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If we could only get stuff like this accepted.

http://www.hcnonline.com/site/news.c...d=639295&rfi=6

Rather than squelched by oil companies.

Forget the feds too, they won't do it.
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Old 07-11-2008, 09:45 AM   #7
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Alternative energy is the answer, but it requires a couple things:

--More than lip service from the politicians (Congress) who are going to undo everything Bush (I'm still waiting after 2 years)

--Something to hold us over (oil) for the short term (5-10 years) while truly viable replacements are developed and brought out of the labs to production levels.

There has been no new infastructure added in this country since the 70's in terms of refining capability.

We are so focused on ethanol, does anyone remember that Otto Diesel developed the diesel engine so farmers could burn oil they produced themselves??

Last edited by Fishpart; 07-11-2008 at 09:46 AM.. Reason: I spell like an engineer

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Old 07-11-2008, 09:50 AM   #8
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Alternatives will not be the answer for a loooooong time. It took over a 100 years to build this infrastructure and the entire world economy is powered by it. You can't tare it down overnight without massive pain, and the poor will suffer them most. You need to transition or the pain will be enormous. Unfortunately the liberals are vested in high oil prices...I honestly feel they believe have something to gain if oil is so high it causes great pain to others. Unfortunately, the only economic plan they have is based on Robin Hood.


If there was oil in my backyard, I would drill for it, but there ain't. Just sand, clay and seawater.
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Old 07-11-2008, 09:53 AM   #9
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Very very simple.
ANWR will have no effect on oil prices.
The end.

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Old 07-11-2008, 09:58 AM   #10
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Very very simple.
ANWR will have no effect on oil prices.
The end.
Total Agreement, lease expansion is just another land grab by the private sector
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Old 07-11-2008, 10:10 AM   #11
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Paid a record $86 today to fill my explorer. Last year I was gawking at the pump when I paid $60 to fill it.

There's a consensus among many economists that speculation is driving this to a large degree also. At some point the specs will exit and prices will pull way back, but we may see 200/bbl first.

Boone Pickens was on CNBC yesterday pushing for implementation of wind turbines in the great plains as a renewable energy source. Turbines on the cape are sounding better all the time.

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Old 07-11-2008, 10:12 AM   #12
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I really don't understand why we lease our oil to the oil companies and buy it from them at what the market will bear. As much as I'm not a fan of big government, there is no reason why we need Exxon and mobil to drill our own oil and then sell it back to us, or worse yet, sell it abroad.

If we can build stealth fighters, why can't we have a national oil dept that just drills our own oil and only sells it domestically at cost. The entire global econmy is hostage to the greed of the oil markets.
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Old 07-11-2008, 10:19 AM   #13
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Jesus, At some point we have to drill. This liberal attitude that drilling is not the solution is exactly WHAT GOT US HERE. It is time to drill here and create more domestic supply.
This isn't a liberal vs conservative issue alone. There's been a good number of conservatives against a lot of offshore drilling for instance, particularly in the Gulf. Go ask Jeb

And the reason we don't have new refineries is because industry was trashing this great country 50 years ago. Let them build again and you get more health and environmental issues. This is a bigger problem than just writing new legislation.

Liberals love expensive energy? Now that's a new one...If anything conservatives should be loving high energy costs as it's the only thing that's going to push industry to innovate and get our economy moving.

Drilling in ANWAR will probably happen, as will the Gulf, but unless we want the government to sieze production all we're doing is adding more the global supply, and global supply isn't the big issue at the moment.

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Old 07-11-2008, 10:22 AM   #14
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Your naive, You said that 10 years ago...and this is what that thinking produced we now have now ...little domestic oil supply. I see it as more of a security matter. It is that very thinking that has reduced the security of this country.

Private sector Land grab? that is laughable. You are in the "just say no to anything" camp. Altatives just don't have the energy density that is required to meet real needs of people. Yes a farmer or a rural bare bones home can get buy but a couple of apartment buildings in Miami in July will require an AC load that will will require an windfarm the area of the state of RI. Do the numbers.

Sorry, you have to tell us all how airplanes will be powered for the next 100 years. Windmills I guess eh?

Go take a Physics class and get back to me. Please show me how alternatives (besides nukes) will drive this world, they cant.

5-10 years? add another zero. REALLY! It takes 5-10 years for GM to introduce a new car and that is fast! More like 50-100 years. We need some domestic supply of oil, drilling here will produce that. What is your problem with drilling wherever we can?
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Old 07-11-2008, 10:43 AM   #15
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Nuclear submarine technology + Fords declining sales = Nuclear powered Expeditions.

Nuclear is really the way to go for powering cities and towns.

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Old 07-11-2008, 10:57 AM   #16
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Fuel

I would wager it will be $200 /barrel by the end of the year.

We need a unified national resolve to develop realistic alternatives to fossil fuels. I don't believe that the US political system is capable of unifying the US towards that goal. The US political process is interested in attaining and remaining in officer/power by any means, that is their goal and always will be.

I do believe new advances are on the horizon, but only through private sector technology working towards the goal, in spite of our elected offiicials, not because of them, though they will smile and take credit when it happens.
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Old 07-11-2008, 11:18 AM   #17
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I don't know what the answer is, I'm just not smart enough. I am bright enough to know that if our government doesn't do something pretty quick the economic structure of this country will completely dissolve and we will be in the Great Depression of the Millinium.

No boat, back in the suds.
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Old 07-11-2008, 11:35 AM   #18
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One thing I do know is that practical alternatives will not be available to power this nation for at LEAST 40 years. Yeah we could slap up some wind mills in the mean time but they will do very little in the big picture. I am not against them but they don't produce very much and require a lot of space and equipment.

One thing is many seem to tie together oil with electrical production. We actually use very very little oil to directly produce electricity. We use mostly coal and hydro. If you want a lot of electrical and low carbon output nuke is your best choice.

For vehicles, we need all electric vehicles. (charged at home with nuke plants providing the power) The problem is electric storage...batteries don't cut it. We are many years away from a dramatically advanced storage device. We need gas to carry us over. Things like ethanol are silly pipe dreams. It takes 1700 gallons of water and 4 acres of corn to produce a single gallon of ethanol. It is not WORTH it. Algae (pond scum) is actually a better source of fuel...as it can double in mass every 24 hours in the right conditions. Even so, the first plant to produce it in substantial amounts could not be here for 10-12 years. We need DOMESTIC OIL to provide the transition time...IMO.

You can't get there from here with just alternatives, noway nohow. I think most will realize this but I think when oil hits 250/barrel the gov't will step in and mandate drilling and refinery development.
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Old 07-11-2008, 11:36 AM   #19
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i just cant believe world demand has doubled the price of oil in 4 years, just doenst seem reasonable. I've read all the explanations but still dont buy it.

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Old 07-11-2008, 11:54 AM   #20
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its more than worldwide demand. look at the value of the dollar over the last 4 years....

i bent my wookie
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Old 07-11-2008, 11:56 AM   #21
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its more than worldwide demand. look at the value of the dollar over the last 4 years....
Jimmy I agree.
Zacs, it has to be a mix of that, demand to a smaller degree and speculation.

Bryan

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Old 07-11-2008, 12:16 PM   #22
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Jimmy I agree.
Zacs, it has to be a mix of that, demand to a smaller degree and speculation.

the weak dollar is much more then you realize.

Look at it this way....

5 years ago, 1 dollar bought .9 Euro
today, 1 dollar buys .6 Euro

that is a significant decline.

this means that a dollar today is buying only 2/3 of what it did 5 years ago for any globally traded commodity.

i bent my wookie
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Old 07-11-2008, 12:21 PM   #23
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the weak dollar is much more then you realize.

Look at it this way....

5 years ago, 1 dollar bought .9 Euro
today, 1 dollar buys .6 Euro

that is a significant decline.

this means that a dollar today is buying only 2/3 of what it did 5 years ago for any globally traded commodity.
wow - I went to Europe in 2001 and 1 dollar bought @ 1.15 E

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Old 07-11-2008, 12:34 PM   #24
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The talk now is 170/barrel in a couple months and 150 possibly today.
Yeah, only if we're really lucky

I'd bet it's going to be considerably higher than that and we're going to have to accept a new paradigm on how we live our daily lives. And that's not necessarily a bad thing.

Those of us who grew up in the '50's and 60's will be able to say we had the best of it in terms of cheap energy and all that it brought us. On the other hand, it's also what brought us to the situation we're in now. We've got to get used to it because this is the tipping point and the chickens are just now coming home to roost.

So get used to using a bicycle. I do - I bought a new mountain bike at the beginning of the summer and use it to go to work, shop, run errands, etc and feel better than I have in a long time. What's the problem?

For those of you - like me - that have SUV's, dump 'em and get something more fuel efficient unless you have the means to pay $100+ for a fill up in the very near future. Or walk, it's real cheap.

You know, there's a nice girl I see at work who's a twenty-something and when she saw me on a mountain bike she was stunned (okay, maybe the white hair and matching mustache had something to do with it) - but when I told her I rode 2 miles to work and 2 miles home - with another couple around the complex, she acted like she couldn't comprehend anybody doing that and certainly not herself.

More than 30 years ago we had a gas crunch and people got rid of their gas hog sedans for imports, Japanese or otherwise. Remember? And as soon as gas got cheap again, people went back to their gas guzzlers! How is that the government's fault? These are all self-inflicted wounds.

So, get used to turning off your lights and electronic devices at home when not in use. Turn your thermostat down - or up - depending on the season. Brush your teeth and say your prayers. You hear this crap all the time and now we'll all have to put it into practice - we'll not only live, we'll be better for it in the long run.

The way I see it, the United States is at a tipping point right now on a lot of fronts and if you use what you have wisely, you'll get through it.

Here endeth the Gospel for today.

Myself, I'm going for a bike ride in ten minutes or so

I've got some errands to run.

"There is no royal road to this heavy surf-fishing. With all the appliances for comfort experience can suggest, there is a certain amount of hard work to be done and exposure to be bourne as a part of the price of success." From "Striped Bass," Scribner's Magazine, 1881.
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Old 07-11-2008, 12:36 PM   #25
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wow - I went to Europe in 2001 and 1 dollar bought @ 1.15 E

i know... its crazy. you would think it would be the number one story on the news every night. it barely gets a mention, because i think most Americans don't understand how currency effects things.

It is especially hard for a guy like me that sells imported commodity (seafood). I have to tell this story day in and day out, to people who should understand it. They usually just look at me and scratch their head when I tell them this is the reason their prices are increasing 15% year over year.

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Old 07-11-2008, 12:38 PM   #26
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we're screwed... plain and simple.
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Old 07-11-2008, 12:38 PM   #27
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oh.. if we drill anwar, oil prices will not go down, but the oil companies who drill it will make a lot more profit off of it because its closer to us than the middle east.
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Old 07-11-2008, 03:04 PM   #28
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Old 07-11-2008, 03:39 PM   #29
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[QUOTE=Crafty Angler;604193]Yeah, only if we're really lucky





So get used to using a bicycle. I do - I bought a new mountain bike at the beginning of the summer and use it to go to work, shop, run errands, etc and feel better than I have in a long time. What's the problem?

For those of you - like me - that have SUV's, dump 'em and get something more fuel efficient unless you have the means to pay $100+ for a fill up in the very near future. Or walk, it's real cheap.





this maybe all fine and well for those who sit at their work place and need nothing but a puter and a pencil...but I'd like to see you carry 2 tons of tools back and forth to work on your bike.It also requires a gas hog to tote those tools to each job...plus there isn't any fuel efficient car big enough to do the job of hauling a trailer full of said tools......now what do you do?
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Old 07-11-2008, 04:12 PM   #30
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[QUOTE]For those of you - like me - that have SUV's, dump 'em and get something more fuel efficient unless you have the means to pay $100+ for a fill up in the very near future. Or walk, it's real cheap.[QUOTE]


Yeah, I tend to agree but consider this.... I have a Chevy 1500 pickup that is 9 years old. It's paid for. It has just over 100K on it. Everything in that truck is either broken, or on it's way out, A/C is dead, dash lights are half gone, the rear view mirrors have stopped working, etc, etc, IMHO, it's a POS....

BUT the engine starts each day no matter what.

So, what would be gained to buy a Honda Accord that will cost me $400/month and gas will still cost me $4.27 a gallon? Financially, the dollars and cents don't compute.

When this truck dies, in another ten years I hope, then I will mostly likely buy smaller.
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