Crude oil & related products we export each month.
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Crude oil & related products we export each month.
I know many of you have wondered how much diesel, gas and crude oil products that we export each month so here is place for you to look and see how much we send out and to whom: http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/pet/pe...Z00_mbbl_m.htm
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RE: Crude oil & related products we export each month.
DBLR Thanks for the Info, thats a great link. All of you forum members this is a great site. I have been following these inputs/info for two years since I bought my 2006 Ram, butIjust joined last month. I've learned alot about Tires, exhaust system, AirIntake and intake-manifolds. Most of all, the service and operationl stuff is great.
Back to the links, note who are the biggest importers of our preciouse Diesel fuels.
Netherlands, Mexico,Chile, Peru, Argentina, on and on......
Based on what the Government and Oil Companies say, the reason for hight prices in the US are.....Refinery Capacity issues, Transportation costs, the high price of Oil, and of course the ****ty worthless US $.
So let me see, we use alarge part of our capacity for other countries. Seem like we have plenty of capacity
We ship a large percentage of our fuels out off this country.Must be cheaper to transport out of the country and Europe!
The Fed is currently increasing the M3 monies supply (Printing Money $US Dollars) at a rate of 18% =>20% annually.Adding over $20 to the cost of a barrel of Oil.
We need a joint session of Congress were all the terroist in this country preside and have them arrested by the public.We the people put then on trial for being traitors and committing treason torwards the US constitution and enemies of the United States of America! Death too tyrannts!
Back to the links, note who are the biggest importers of our preciouse Diesel fuels.
Netherlands, Mexico,Chile, Peru, Argentina, on and on......
Based on what the Government and Oil Companies say, the reason for hight prices in the US are.....Refinery Capacity issues, Transportation costs, the high price of Oil, and of course the ****ty worthless US $.
So let me see, we use alarge part of our capacity for other countries. Seem like we have plenty of capacity
We ship a large percentage of our fuels out off this country.Must be cheaper to transport out of the country and Europe!
The Fed is currently increasing the M3 monies supply (Printing Money $US Dollars) at a rate of 18% =>20% annually.Adding over $20 to the cost of a barrel of Oil.
We need a joint session of Congress were all the terroist in this country preside and have them arrested by the public.We the people put then on trial for being traitors and committing treason torwards the US constitution and enemies of the United States of America! Death too tyrannts!
#6
RE: Crude oil & related products we export each month.
Like it or not, there is a world market for petroleum products. A little country like the Bahamas probably has little or no refining capability, so they need to import all the petroleum products they consume. The same goes for a lot of other small countries. Should the US Government tell our oil companies they cannot export anything? That sort of thing would be found in a chapter of the Soviet command economy.
No, AangryWhiteMan, we do not export a large part of our capacity to other countries. It is a very small percentage, according to the website that DBLR linked to his post.
I think some of you guys just like to bitch about something. If it wasn't high fuel prices, it would be your nagging wife or your receding hairline, etc.
No, AangryWhiteMan, we do not export a large part of our capacity to other countries. It is a very small percentage, according to the website that DBLR linked to his post.
I think some of you guys just like to bitch about something. If it wasn't high fuel prices, it would be your nagging wife or your receding hairline, etc.
#7
RE: Crude oil & related products we export each month.
Joel_MDThanks for the reply: I'm not bitching or whinning. Just pointing out that our system is very manipulated and it isn't a free market system anymore. I don't have a nagging wife nor a receding HairLine. It isn't free trade anymore nor fair. Why can we buy Diesel in Mexico for $2.00? [sm=icon_cheers.gif]
http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/us/...el.mexico.ktvk
GLOBALIZATION KEEPS THE US STRONG
After four decades of chronic inflation, the US was extraordinarily vulnerable to competition from Asia. In the 1980 decade, immediately after the near death experience of mighty Intel Corp, the dispatch and abandonment of US manufacturing began. Japan and the Pacific Rim began a long expansion that continues to today. In the 2000 decade, the refrain was to pursue low cost solutions. How is that working out? A disaster for the US, as China has morphed from a partner to an adversary, precisely as my analysis forecasted in 2004 and 2005 articles. Trade friction is still an issue. Globalization was critically important to maintain profitability of US multi-national corporations. In that respect, globalization keeps the US strong. As it applies to US workers, globalization is a wrecking ball, destroying jobs, destroying livelihood, undermining families, ruining dreams, gutting the US middle class, producing poverty in its wake. The entire Globalization movement has been described by some as a rather global socialist concept, in pursuit of a global level field.
http://www.321energy.com/editorials/...lie041708.html
Brutally Honesty!
http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/us/...el.mexico.ktvk
GLOBALIZATION KEEPS THE US STRONG
After four decades of chronic inflation, the US was extraordinarily vulnerable to competition from Asia. In the 1980 decade, immediately after the near death experience of mighty Intel Corp, the dispatch and abandonment of US manufacturing began. Japan and the Pacific Rim began a long expansion that continues to today. In the 2000 decade, the refrain was to pursue low cost solutions. How is that working out? A disaster for the US, as China has morphed from a partner to an adversary, precisely as my analysis forecasted in 2004 and 2005 articles. Trade friction is still an issue. Globalization was critically important to maintain profitability of US multi-national corporations. In that respect, globalization keeps the US strong. As it applies to US workers, globalization is a wrecking ball, destroying jobs, destroying livelihood, undermining families, ruining dreams, gutting the US middle class, producing poverty in its wake. The entire Globalization movement has been described by some as a rather global socialist concept, in pursuit of a global level field.
http://www.321energy.com/editorials/...lie041708.html
Brutally Honesty!
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#8
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RE: Crude oil & related products we export each month.
I just read this today about why we see so littel Bio diesel:
One producer of canola biodiesel said much of the fuel is exported to Europe because producers get not only the $1-per-gallon U.S. biodiesel tax break but also a European subsidy. Pearson said it is not possible to say how much canola-based biodiesel is going overseas because the federal government does not track biodiesel production, as it does with ethanol.
One producer of canola biodiesel said much of the fuel is exported to Europe because producers get not only the $1-per-gallon U.S. biodiesel tax break but also a European subsidy. Pearson said it is not possible to say how much canola-based biodiesel is going overseas because the federal government does not track biodiesel production, as it does with ethanol.