Hay Dude
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2012
- Messages
- 18,731
- Location
- A Hay Field along the PA/DE border
- Tractor
- Challenger MT655E, Massey Ferguson 7495, Challenger MT535B, Krone 4x4 XC baler, (2) Kubota ZD331’s, 2020 Ram 5500 Cummins 4x4, IH 7500 4x4 dump truck, Kaufman 35’ tandem 19 ton trailer, Deere CX-15, Pottinger Hay mowers
Oil and gas are currently HIGHLY REGULATED AND TAXED.What kind of fantasy is there that we are not producing oil and gas in this country? There are currently 26 million acres of federal land oil and gas leases issued that can be drilled and producing at any time. Decades worth of cleared areas ready to go. Oil company drill rig counts fluctuate based on oil prices and the companies business operations. Currently, most oil production is in the Permian basin in my region, because oil companies can produce more profitably here. Our state has a $1.6 billion dollar budget surplus this year, due to the increased production during 2021. They have moved rigs from North Dakota here recently because that oil costs more to produce. Companies make business decisions. Oil companies lost big during Covid when demand plummeted. They are now operating to recoup those losses. The keystone pipeline is irrelevant: Canadian oil destined for export (our refineries can’t handle the low grade tar sand oil). Oil and gas companies make decisions to satisfy shareholders, not those of us at the pump.
Therefore, the ones doing the regulating and taxing could lower the price by decreasing regulations and taxes.
Its THAT simple. Did you see how there was a recent, albeit token release of the “strategic oil reserves” last week? See how easy that was? With the stroke of a pen, the federal gas tax could be reduced to help in the same way. With the stroke of a pen, the federal government could ease restrictive regulations.
Your reasoning is over complicated. It’s really very simple.
Also, are you telling me that if the Keystone Pipeline ADDS more oil supply it WONT reduce cost? I guess Econ 101 doesn’t apply anymore?
I agree oil companies exist to make profits and benefit shareholders, but regulations and taxes added affects their prices, too
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