pstarr wrote:Dicktuneery for fancy words
Warning for lurkers. This poster claims to be an alumni from this university. As you might surmise, inaccurate spelling might not be an accident.
pstarr wrote:Dicktuneery for fancy words
pstarr wrote:That's right Rock. But you left out that corn liquor and animal fat lolBiofuels: Liquid fuels and blending components produced from biomass feedstocks, used primarily for transportation. Biogenic: Produced by biological processes of living organisms. Note: EIA uses the term "biogenic" to refer only to organic nonfossil material of biological origin.
"Petroleum and other liquids: All petroleum including crude oil and products of petroleum refining, natural gas liquids, biofuels, and liquids derived from other hydrocarbon sources (including coal to liquids and gas to liquids). Not included are liquefied natural gas (LNG) and liquid hydrogen. See liquid fuels."
http://www.eia.gov/tools/glossary/index.cfm?id=p
pstarr wrote:The time you spent carefully photoshopping that picture specifically for me is an indication of a severe mental illness.
pstarr wrote:I will be forced to repost everything I previously wrote.
ROCKMAN wrote:there are millions of our citizens that struggle to jeep their gas tanks full. RELATIVELY SPEAKING "$2.05 a gallon" is expensive.
“U.S. crude oil supplies are at their highest level for this time of year in 86 years,” AAA noted in its weekly report on Monday. As a result, “Gas prices are likely to remain low for the remainder of the summer compared to recent years.”
pstarr wrote:As per your intended insult: The Slippery Rocks in my namesake University refer to oil seeps in the local streams, not far from Drake's Well in Pennsylvania. Where US oil production began. So yes, I do know something about oil production and geology. As for the artwork.
ROCKMAN wrote:And I just noticed the mistake in the thread's title. It should read "America now has more UNTAPPABLE oil then any other country". LOL. And I'm not really sure we have the most proven noncommercial oil at the currernt price.
Alfred Tennyson wrote:We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
Tanada wrote:Also as a side question, it was pointed out right after the election that the Congress is highly motivated to grant drilling permits for ANWR because the TAPS needs more oil to ship, Alaska wants to have those permits ASAP and with both houses of Congress and the Executive branch nothing stands in the way of those permits being granted in January 2017. Presuming all that comes to pass and ANWR permits start getting issued in February 2017 is $50/bbl high enough to motivate the big oil companies to go forward with development in ANWR? If so how long will it take for presumed resources to be networked into the TAPS processing and pumping system at Prudhoe and shipped down to Valdez for export?
Subjectivist wrote:What if they put a terminal at Prudhoe Bay where we can import Russian Siberian oil across the soon to be ice free Arctic Ocean? That would open up a new better relationship with Russia and keep TAPS operating for a very long time, say another 30 years.
vtsnowedin wrote:Subjectivist wrote:What if they put a terminal at Prudhoe Bay where we can import Russian Siberian oil across the soon to be ice free Arctic Ocean? That would open up a new better relationship with Russia and keep TAPS operating for a very long time, say another 30 years.
Is not the European market as well as China a closer delivery point for them?
Alfred Tennyson wrote:We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
Tanada wrote:
Markets are not about who is closest, they are about who is willing to pay the most and is a long term reliable customer. Part of the stated reason KSA flooded the world market in fall 2014 was to retain market share that was being lost. If Puting decides the USA would be a more reliable trading partner than the EU AND we had the ability to import through Prudhoe (which we do not have) then I could see a case being made to sell our way instead of to Germany and Poland and France.
vtsnowedin wrote:Tanada wrote:
Markets are not about who is closest, they are about who is willing to pay the most and is a long term reliable customer. Part of the stated reason KSA flooded the world market in fall 2014 was to retain market share that was being lost. If Puting decides the USA would be a more reliable trading partner than the EU AND we had the ability to import through Prudhoe (which we do not have) then I could see a case being made to sell our way instead of to Germany and Poland and France.
While transportation costs to deliver are just one factor I'm sure it is given full consideration every day.
Would we want to become dependent on deliveries from Putin's Russia?
I think not.
Alfred Tennyson wrote:We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
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