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Enorah.
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July 4, 2008 at 9:05 PM #233412July 5, 2008 at 12:24 AM #233267
afx114
Participant[quote=jficquette]Interesting that Gas has doubled since the Democrats have taken over Congress.[/quote]
Correlation is not causation.
These high gas prices have been brewing since the 70s. It’s just been delayed time and time again and the pain potential gets worse and worse. Kinda like the housing market (yay back on topic!)
July 5, 2008 at 12:24 AM #233394afx114
Participant[quote=jficquette]Interesting that Gas has doubled since the Democrats have taken over Congress.[/quote]
Correlation is not causation.
These high gas prices have been brewing since the 70s. It’s just been delayed time and time again and the pain potential gets worse and worse. Kinda like the housing market (yay back on topic!)
July 5, 2008 at 12:24 AM #233403afx114
Participant[quote=jficquette]Interesting that Gas has doubled since the Democrats have taken over Congress.[/quote]
Correlation is not causation.
These high gas prices have been brewing since the 70s. It’s just been delayed time and time again and the pain potential gets worse and worse. Kinda like the housing market (yay back on topic!)
July 5, 2008 at 12:24 AM #233445afx114
Participant[quote=jficquette]Interesting that Gas has doubled since the Democrats have taken over Congress.[/quote]
Correlation is not causation.
These high gas prices have been brewing since the 70s. It’s just been delayed time and time again and the pain potential gets worse and worse. Kinda like the housing market (yay back on topic!)
July 5, 2008 at 12:24 AM #233456afx114
Participant[quote=jficquette]Interesting that Gas has doubled since the Democrats have taken over Congress.[/quote]
Correlation is not causation.
These high gas prices have been brewing since the 70s. It’s just been delayed time and time again and the pain potential gets worse and worse. Kinda like the housing market (yay back on topic!)
July 5, 2008 at 10:27 AM #233344Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantCooper: While John won’t answer your questions, they are interesting. I’m on the periphery of the oil/gas business (I do seismic and blast engineering for refinery operations), and I’m also somewhat new to the business (coming out of defense biz). I hear a lot about Peak Oil and refineries having to work harder for less output.
Your question #2 caught my eye. Do you have this information? If so, I’d be curious to hear that number, as well as how it was derived. The second part of my question is driven by the fact that different oil companies (i.e. ExxonMobil, RD/S and BP) use different methodologies for the calculation(s), and therefore the variance between their respective numbers can be quite large.
Again, just curious, but it does pick at an interesting thread, especially in light of $5 per gallon gasoline.
July 5, 2008 at 10:27 AM #233476Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantCooper: While John won’t answer your questions, they are interesting. I’m on the periphery of the oil/gas business (I do seismic and blast engineering for refinery operations), and I’m also somewhat new to the business (coming out of defense biz). I hear a lot about Peak Oil and refineries having to work harder for less output.
Your question #2 caught my eye. Do you have this information? If so, I’d be curious to hear that number, as well as how it was derived. The second part of my question is driven by the fact that different oil companies (i.e. ExxonMobil, RD/S and BP) use different methodologies for the calculation(s), and therefore the variance between their respective numbers can be quite large.
Again, just curious, but it does pick at an interesting thread, especially in light of $5 per gallon gasoline.
July 5, 2008 at 10:27 AM #233482Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantCooper: While John won’t answer your questions, they are interesting. I’m on the periphery of the oil/gas business (I do seismic and blast engineering for refinery operations), and I’m also somewhat new to the business (coming out of defense biz). I hear a lot about Peak Oil and refineries having to work harder for less output.
Your question #2 caught my eye. Do you have this information? If so, I’d be curious to hear that number, as well as how it was derived. The second part of my question is driven by the fact that different oil companies (i.e. ExxonMobil, RD/S and BP) use different methodologies for the calculation(s), and therefore the variance between their respective numbers can be quite large.
Again, just curious, but it does pick at an interesting thread, especially in light of $5 per gallon gasoline.
July 5, 2008 at 10:27 AM #233526Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantCooper: While John won’t answer your questions, they are interesting. I’m on the periphery of the oil/gas business (I do seismic and blast engineering for refinery operations), and I’m also somewhat new to the business (coming out of defense biz). I hear a lot about Peak Oil and refineries having to work harder for less output.
Your question #2 caught my eye. Do you have this information? If so, I’d be curious to hear that number, as well as how it was derived. The second part of my question is driven by the fact that different oil companies (i.e. ExxonMobil, RD/S and BP) use different methodologies for the calculation(s), and therefore the variance between their respective numbers can be quite large.
Again, just curious, but it does pick at an interesting thread, especially in light of $5 per gallon gasoline.
July 5, 2008 at 10:27 AM #233535Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantCooper: While John won’t answer your questions, they are interesting. I’m on the periphery of the oil/gas business (I do seismic and blast engineering for refinery operations), and I’m also somewhat new to the business (coming out of defense biz). I hear a lot about Peak Oil and refineries having to work harder for less output.
Your question #2 caught my eye. Do you have this information? If so, I’d be curious to hear that number, as well as how it was derived. The second part of my question is driven by the fact that different oil companies (i.e. ExxonMobil, RD/S and BP) use different methodologies for the calculation(s), and therefore the variance between their respective numbers can be quite large.
Again, just curious, but it does pick at an interesting thread, especially in light of $5 per gallon gasoline.
July 5, 2008 at 10:32 AM #233349JPJones
Participantjcfuquette is a troll. Stop being victims!
July 5, 2008 at 10:32 AM #233480JPJones
Participantjcfuquette is a troll. Stop being victims!
July 5, 2008 at 10:32 AM #233487JPJones
Participantjcfuquette is a troll. Stop being victims!
July 5, 2008 at 10:32 AM #233531JPJones
Participantjcfuquette is a troll. Stop being victims!
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