What's new

US Gas prices shot up 11 cents overnight , Gas thieves are drilling holes in car gas tanks. The cost of supporting Ukraine is rising

beijingwalker

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 4, 2011
Messages
65,195
Reaction score
-55
Country
China
Location
China

US Gas prices shot up 11 cents overnight , Gas thieves are drilling holes in car gas tanks. The cost of supporting Ukraine is rising​


Someone is drilling holes into the gas tank of cars and letting the gas drain out

USA TODAY
Mar 4, 2022
Gas prices were already high, but overnight they went up 11 cents, approaching the $4 per-gallon average nationwide.

The national average for a gallon of regular gasoline rose to $3.84 on Friday, up from $3.73 on Thursday, according to AAA. That comes after another 11-cent increase between Monday and Thursday.
Prices averaged $3.57 a week ago and $3.42 a month ago, the organization said.

Concerns over Russia's invasion Ukraine have put pressure on global oil markets and affected U.S. gas prices.

 
.
The cost of supporting Ukraine is rising
Analysis by Zachary B. Wolf, CNN
Updated 2:15 AM ET, Sat March 5, 2022

California gas prices reach $5 for the first time

(CNN)Americans and most of the world have been united in condemning Russia for invading Ukraine.

Now they might have to start putting their money where their mouth is as US lawmakers consider an embargo on Russian oil.
High inflation and rising energy prices amid the economy's pandemic recovery were already making life more expensive.

Now, a little more than a week into Russian President Vladimir Putin's war, California has become the first US state to have an average gas price above $5 per gallon.

Nationwide, US gas prices are "surging at a pace drivers haven't seen since Hurricane Katrina in 2005," writes CNN's Chris Isidore, adding that the national average record for gasoline -- $4.11, set in 2008 -- is within sight. That would be a huge jump from a year ago, when the national average price was $2.75 a gallon.
The average price of diesel is also skyrocketing, which will drive up transportation costs for businesses.

American lawmakers are pushing a bipartisan effort to end all imports of Russian oil and sanction Russia's energy sector.

That the energy sector has so far been left mostly untouched speaks to the nature of the global energy supply. Russia was the world's No. 2 oil producer last year, behind the US. A disruption in oil exports would drive up costs everywhere.

Politicians are willing to pay the price. "I'm all for that. Ban it," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said this week on Capitol Hill.

"I would gladly pay 10 cents more per gallon," Sen. Joe Manchin, the West Virginia Democrat, said at a Thursday press conference.

US gas prices are already up more than three times that amount during the course of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. And energy traders, according to Isidore's report, are already shying away from purchasing Russian oil due to the war.

In a separate story, Isidore notes that many multinational companies, from Apple to General Motors, are going above and beyond required sanctions. It's getting more difficult to find tankers willing to call on Russian ports and insurers willing to guarantee shipments -- which has created a "de facto ban" on Russian oil, according to one oil analyst.

Mostly symbolic. For the US, a ban on Russian oil would be mostly symbolic, since very little of the oil used in North America comes from Russia.
Sanctions by the US and other countries to stop Russian exports around the world would be much more costly, especially in Europe, which is fueled by Russian oil.

"Russian oil is not crucial to the US. It's crucial to Europe," Tom Kloza, global head of energy analysis at the Oil Price Information Service, told CNN's Matt Egan. "I don't know what Europe is going to do without Russian crude. If you take it away, Europe is really behind the eight ball."

I asked CNN's polling director, Jennifer Agiesta, how Americans would react to a protracted hike in gas prices. She offered these thoughts:

Should gas prices be a consideration? A recent CNN poll conducted by SSRS after the Russian invasion of Ukraine began found that 71% of Americans want the government to take the impact on gas prices into account when deciding policies toward Russia, though only about a third (34%) say it should be a major factor in deciding those policies.

Republicans (45%) were more likely than Democrats (28%) or independents (30%) to feel it should be a major consideration. A
Washington Post/ABC News poll completed partly before the invasion began found that 51% of Americans would support sanctions against Russia even if they resulted in higher energy prices in the United States.

 
.
went from $4.39 to $4.99 at the gas station around the corner from my house in a matter of 2 days. Thank God I bought electric cars!
 
.
went from $4.39 to $4.99 at the gas station around the corner from my house in a matter of 2 days. Thank God I bought electric cars!

Same here. Before the war, petrol was €1.79 lt (€6.77 per gallon) now its €1.95 lt ( €7.31 per gallon).
 
. .
The cost of supporting Ukraine is rising
Analysis by Zachary B. Wolf, CNN
Updated 2:15 AM ET, Sat March 5, 2022

California gas prices reach $5 for the first time

(CNN)Americans and most of the world have been united in condemning Russia for invading Ukraine.

Now they might have to start putting their money where their mouth is as US lawmakers consider an embargo on Russian oil.
High inflation and rising energy prices amid the economy's pandemic recovery were already making life more expensive.

Now, a little more than a week into Russian President Vladimir Putin's war, California has become the first US state to have an average gas price above $5 per gallon.

Nationwide, US gas prices are "surging at a pace drivers haven't seen since Hurricane Katrina in 2005," writes CNN's Chris Isidore, adding that the national average record for gasoline -- $4.11, set in 2008 -- is within sight. That would be a huge jump from a year ago, when the national average price was $2.75 a gallon.
The average price of diesel is also skyrocketing, which will drive up transportation costs for businesses.

American lawmakers are pushing a bipartisan effort to end all imports of Russian oil and sanction Russia's energy sector.

That the energy sector has so far been left mostly untouched speaks to the nature of the global energy supply. Russia was the world's No. 2 oil producer last year, behind the US. A disruption in oil exports would drive up costs everywhere.

Politicians are willing to pay the price. "I'm all for that. Ban it," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said this week on Capitol Hill.

"I would gladly pay 10 cents more per gallon," Sen. Joe Manchin, the West Virginia Democrat, said at a Thursday press conference.

US gas prices are already up more than three times that amount during the course of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. And energy traders, according to Isidore's report, are already shying away from purchasing Russian oil due to the war.

In a separate story, Isidore notes that many multinational companies, from Apple to General Motors, are going above and beyond required sanctions. It's getting more difficult to find tankers willing to call on Russian ports and insurers willing to guarantee shipments -- which has created a "de facto ban" on Russian oil, according to one oil analyst.

Mostly symbolic. For the US, a ban on Russian oil would be mostly symbolic, since very little of the oil used in North America comes from Russia.
Sanctions by the US and other countries to stop Russian exports around the world would be much more costly, especially in Europe, which is fueled by Russian oil.

"Russian oil is not crucial to the US. It's crucial to Europe," Tom Kloza, global head of energy analysis at the Oil Price Information Service, told CNN's Matt Egan. "I don't know what Europe is going to do without Russian crude. If you take it away, Europe is really behind the eight ball."

I asked CNN's polling director, Jennifer Agiesta, how Americans would react to a protracted hike in gas prices. She offered these thoughts:

Should gas prices be a consideration? A recent CNN poll conducted by SSRS after the Russian invasion of Ukraine began found that 71% of Americans want the government to take the impact on gas prices into account when deciding policies toward Russia, though only about a third (34%) say it should be a major factor in deciding those policies.

Republicans (45%) were more likely than Democrats (28%) or independents (30%) to feel it should be a major consideration. A
Washington Post/ABC News poll completed partly before the invasion began found that 51% of Americans would support sanctions against Russia even if they resulted in higher energy prices in the United States.

That's old. California has price is now at 6$.

I'm paying over 20$ more than what I was paying about 3 months ago.

went from $4.39 to $4.99 at the gas station around the corner from my house in a matter of 2 days. Thank God I bought electric cars!
What electric car you got? I'm little occupied but I've thought about purchasing one.

Was it brand new or used? And how is its performance compare to gasoline cars?
 
.
That's old. California has price is now at 6$.

I'm paying over 20$ more than what I was paying about 3 months ago.


What electric car you got? I'm little occupied but I've thought about purchasing one.

Was it brand new or used? And how is its performance compare to gasoline cars?
If you are just doing short distance city traveling, you can simply buy super cheap used Nissan Leafs.

They have a very large internal volume and are basically always on fire sale due to their horrible range.
 
.
That's old. California has price is now at 6$.

I'm paying over 20$ more than what I was paying about 3 months ago.


What electric car you got? I'm little occupied but I've thought about purchasing one.

Was it brand new or used? And how is its performance compare to gasoline cars?
a chevy and a kia, used.
 
.
The national average is $3.922/gallon in the US
gasPricesUS.png


It's $5.054/gallon in China

China Gasoline prices, 28-Feb-2022​

China Gasoline prices
Litre
Gallon
CNY
8.424​
31.888​
USD
1.335​
5.054
EUR
1.190​
4.505​


They are even going to raise it more
2022-03-04

Natural gas is a high too

Natural Gas Prices Hit Record High In China​


This is China's cost for sitting on their hands.
 
Last edited:
.
That's old. California has price is now at 6$.

I'm paying over 20$ more than what I was paying about 3 months ago.


What electric car you got? I'm little occupied but I've thought about purchasing one.

Was it brand new or used? And how is its performance compare to gasoline cars?

Still under $4 in my area.
gasPriceMA.png


Says average is $5.17 in CA
gasPriceCA.png
 
Last edited:
.
IMO. a spree to loot the world is nearing its end for the USA, but please return the money of poor Afghans to lighten our burden.
 
. .
Not really, Gas prices (at least in the US and Canada) are rising largely because both countries are currently governed by liberal administrations who are hostile to domestic production. The current Ukraine Crisis contributes partly to the rise in prices but the fundamental cause is two liberal administrations desiring the US and Canada to be mere cogs in the larger "free world" instead of the US and Canada being their own nations with their own national policies.
 
.
Not really, Gas prices (at least in the US and Canada) are rising largely because both countries are currently governed by liberal administrations who are hostile to domestic production. The current Ukraine Crisis contributes partly to the rise in prices but the fundamental cause is two liberal administrations desiring the US and Canada to be mere cogs in the larger "free world" instead of the US and Canada being their own nations with their own national policies.
Total bullshit.

The reason why the U.S. isn't massively ramping up shale oil drilling more than they are right now is primarily because shale oil drilling is horrifically non-economical and WTI is in extreme backwardation, which means that they cannot guarantee that they will make a profit before the oil price crashes.

The reason why the U.S. was producing so much shale oil before was because wall street was burning money on fantasies.



The real problems are due to the bi-partisan concerted effort over decades (intentionally or unintentionally) to turbo-**** U.S. oil majors like Exxon in Russia, Chevron in Venezuela, Exxon in Iraq, etc.

Those are the profitable and viable projects that the U.S. oil majors have basically been prevented from properly developing by the U.S. Government, Republican and Democrat.
 
Last edited:
.
Back
Top Bottom