Terslahoundawg wrote:That would be today for your Tersla.Baldy wrote:![]()
Yeah, lemme know the day when I can power my car with a windmill.
Finish the Keystone XL, open up ANWR, and fire up the coal plants.
genusdawg strikes again.
Terslahoundawg wrote:That would be today for your Tersla.Baldy wrote:![]()
Yeah, lemme know the day when I can power my car with a windmill.
Finish the Keystone XL, open up ANWR, and fire up the coal plants.
I guess they don't cover economics in the genius edition.houndawg wrote:$1.89 two weeks ago, $2.03 right now. My truck loves it.SuperHornet wrote:Under $2/gal? I haven't seen that this year. The closest I've seen is one of our local ARCOs at $2.15. There are still places where gas is over $3/gal....
Thanks Obama!![]()
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/arc ... es/384792/The president ultimately has little influence over gas prices. The only power Obama really has is to raise or lower domestic production on public land, but even that is nary a blip in the complex global oil marketplace. It's shale development on private land that has largely helped production boom at home.
The other side of the equation—global demand—also is out of the White House's hands. When OPEC refuses to cut production even in light of flagging demand, there's an oversupply that keeps prices down, but it has little to do with any U.S. action.

So the conk hand-wringing about Obama hampering the oil industry for the past 8 years has been for naught, huh?ASUG8 wrote:I guess they don't cover economics in the genius edition.houndawg wrote:
$1.89 two weeks ago, $2.03 right now. My truck loves it.
Thanks Obama!![]()
![]()
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/arc ... es/384792/The president ultimately has little influence over gas prices. The only power Obama really has is to raise or lower domestic production on public land, but even that is nary a blip in the complex global oil marketplace. It's shale development on private land that has largely helped production boom at home.
The other side of the equation—global demand—also is out of the White House's hands. When OPEC refuses to cut production even in light of flagging demand, there's an oversupply that keeps prices down, but it has little to do with any U.S. action.

Who? What? Where?Grizalltheway wrote:So the conk hand-wringing about Obama hampering the oil industry for the past 8 years has been for naught, huh?ASUG8 wrote:
I guess they don't cover economics in the genius edition.![]()
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/arc ... es/384792/
The more self sufficient we can become and not in bed with the Saudis the better. Here's a quote from the Clinton News Network.Grizalltheway wrote:So the conk hand-wringing about Obama hampering the oil industry for the past 8 years has been for naught, huh?ASUG8 wrote:
I guess they don't cover economics in the genius edition.![]()
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/arc ... es/384792/
http://money.cnn.com/2015/01/28/news/ec ... -oil-boom/A combination of new technology, primarily fracking, has unlocked oil that was previously out of reach of drillers. That, coupled with high oil prices during much of his term has encouraged investment in the oil exploration, experts say.
The administration has been a bystander during the oil boom, neither encouraging nor discouraging it, they say.
"You can't credit or blame the president [for the oil boom]," said Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst with the Oil Price Information Service. "It's been the twin pillars of price and technology. It's capitalism at work."

You don't even have to look farther than this thread, Curly.CAA Flagship wrote:Who? What? Where?Grizalltheway wrote:
So the conk hand-wringing about Obama hampering the oil industry for the past 8 years has been for naught, huh?

Pat your bagina dry and change your panty shield and don't be so bitchy. If gas were $4/gal you'd be sniveling about Obama in Technicolor.ASUG8 wrote:I guess they don't cover economics in the genius edition.houndawg wrote:
$1.89 two weeks ago, $2.03 right now. My truck loves it.
Thanks Obama!![]()
![]()
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/arc ... es/384792/The president ultimately has little influence over gas prices. The only power Obama really has is to raise or lower domestic production on public land, but even that is nary a blip in the complex global oil marketplace. It's shale development on private land that has largely helped production boom at home.
The other side of the equation—global demand—also is out of the White House's hands. When OPEC refuses to cut production even in light of flagging demand, there's an oversupply that keeps prices down, but it has little to do with any U.S. action.

I got it right. The thing hardly ever says a word.Baldy wrote:Terslahoundawg wrote:
That would be today for your Tersla.![]()
genusdawg strikes again.
Grizalltheway wrote:You don't even have to look farther than this thread, Curly.CAA Flagship wrote: Who? What? Where?![]()
http://www.championshipsubdivision.com/ ... 9#p1097333
Nah, I'd be blaming Bush for all the world's ills like we got to listen to for 4 years.houndawg wrote:Pat your bagina dry and change your panty shield and don't be so bitchy. If gas were $4/gal you'd be sniveling about Obama in Technicolor.ASUG8 wrote:
I guess they don't cover economics in the genius edition.![]()
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/arc ... es/384792/

ASUG8 wrote: I guess they don't cover economics in the genius edition.![]()
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/arc ... es/384792/The president ultimately has little influence over gas prices. The only power Obama really has is to raise or lower domestic production on public land, but even that is nary a blip in the complex global oil marketplace. It's shale development on private land that has largely helped production boom at home.
The other side of the equation—global demand—also is out of the White House's hands. When OPEC refuses to cut production even in light of flagging demand, there's an oversupply that keeps prices down, but it has little to do with any U.S. action.
The Donald wrote:Even though gas prices are going right through the roof, I have no doubt in my mind that President Obama made deal with the Saudis to flood the markets with oil before the election so he could at least keep it down a little bit. After the election, it is going to be a mess. You're going to see numbers like you've never seen. If he wins. So, remember I said it: If he wins... oil and gas through the roof. Like never before. I believe a deal was made. It's a sinister deal.

It's hard to tell with Obama and fracking. Did he really want to stymie fracking and just was unable to (i.e the oil industry beat him) or did he purposely try not to win in his fight to stop fracking because he knew it to be the easiest and fastest way to energy independence? Either way, it's good that Obama was able to/didn't want to stop fracking. Thank you Fracking.Grizalltheway wrote:So the conk hand-wringing about Obama hampering the oil industry for the past 8 years has been for naught, huh?ASUG8 wrote:
I guess they don't cover economics in the genius edition.![]()
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/arc ... es/384792/

I'm not so sure you saw the 0.4% following it either. Pretty sure the entire country can run off Old Faithful, but NNNNNOOOOOOOOOOO. It's in the middle of a beloved National Park!CAA Flagship wrote:Geothermal generates electricity? I'm not familiar with that.89Hen wrote:I'm not sure you understand the article.
Electricity Production
Coal = 33%
Natural gas = 33%
Nuclear = 20%
Hydropower = 6%
Other renewables = 7%
Biomass = 1.6%
Geothermal = 0.4%
Solar = 0.6%
Wind = 4.7%
Petroleum = 1%
Other gases = <1%