--- In cia-drugs@yahoogroups.com, "Vigilius Haufniensis"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> the dollar is circling the toilet bowl.

Cart before the horse. The dollar is sinking, automakers and airlines
bankrupted, because of the oil tax(and offshoring jobs disemploying
many at the same time), not vice versa.

Index the dollar to the euro or any other first world currency for the
last six or eight years. The dollar has not changed value in relation
to those currencies by a factor of 7:1 (ten dollars per barrel, Clinto
low) or 4:1 ($16.50 bl, Bush low).


> 
> 
>   ----- Original Message ----- 
>   From: muckblit 
>   To: cia-drugs@yahoogroups.com 
>   Sent: Tuesday, August 08, 2006 7:32 AM
>   Subject: [cia-drugs] No Reason For High Gas Prices
> 
> 
>   From 2000 to 2004 I used to read Platt's Oil fairly often and
several Hightower reports every morning.
> 
>   Hightower actually said once that there was no change in oil
supply or on-shore inventory to explain why gasoline prices were rising.
> 
>   Gasoline prices have continued to rise, but you have not read a
single story which gives objective data to show that the oil supply or
on-shore inventory has been altered by wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, or
Lebanon. Have you? Didn't think so. What did you think, Mike Ruppert's
Peak Oil scare explained today's gasoline prices? Or environmentalist
concerns that falsely so-called fossil fuel was going to be in short
supply some day by and by?
> 
>   I give you an example of a story which does explain an instance of
reduced supply. And you remember Hurricanes Katrina and especially
Rita might have altered supply for a few days. But neither last year's
hurricane story or this story are about war-related oil supply
reductions. Iraq was under sanctions until the US invadd in 2003, and
Iraq's oil capacity has not been reduced or increased much since the
invasion.
> 
>   Admit it, you WERE NOT THINKING. What numbed your mind out every
time you paid higher prices for gasoline? What is the NEURO-LINGUISTIC
BASIS for our collective unconsciousness? How did Goebbels do it?
George Bush and Sean Hannity say,"911 changed everything", but why are
oil and gasoline prices so high if the US supply of oil has not
changed in MANY YEARS?
> 
>   Curious? The answer is that oil companies have raised prices.
That's all. And? And nothing. Congress did not investigate "price
gouging". Congress did not fine oil companies billions to recover what
they looted from us. They used to do that.
> 
>   -Bob D
> 
>  
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/08/07/AR2006080700131_pf.html
> 
>   Pipeline Closure Sends Oil Higher
>   BP to Halt Production of 400,000 Barrels a Day in Alaska
> 
>   By Steven Mufson
>   Washington Post Staff WriterTuesday, August 8, 2006; A01
> 
> 
>   After noticing an oil spill on a deserted stretch of frozen road
in Alaska's North Slope in early March, workers needed three days to
find the quarter-inch-wide hole in a pipeline, just where it dipped
into a culvert to allow the caribou to pass.
> 
>   On Sunday, five months after that unwelcome discovery, BP PLC
conceded that the tiny hole was part of a widespread corrosion problem
that will force it to replace 16 miles of a 22-mile pipeline from
Prudhoe Bay and to shut down 400,000 barrels a day of production from
the largest oil field in the United States.
> 
>   News that BP would have to suspend production equal to 8 percent
of U.S. petroleum output for an indefinite period helped push the
price of crude oil up by 3 percent yesterday, to $76.98 a barrel on
the New York Mercantile Exchange. The price jump underlined the
fragility of world oil markets, already anxious about the thin cushion
between global supply and demand and potential threats to flows from
Iran, Nigeria, Iraq and the hurricane-prone Gulf of Mexico.
> 
>   Shutting down the field will take three to five days, BP said, and
Merrill Lynch & Co. oil analyst John P. Herrlin said that the repairs
would take "a minimum of two to three months," dealing another blow to
the chances of motorists getting relief from high gasoline prices
anytime soon.
> 
>   Alaskan crude oil usually goes to refineries on the West Coast,
where there is enough surplus to last about two weeks, analysts said.
After that, some refiners will have to scramble to line up new supplies.
> 
>   Energy Secretary Samuel W. Bodman said yesterday that the Bush
administration would consider releasing supplies from the Strategic
Petroleum Reserve, though getting that oil from the salt caverns along
the Gulf of Mexico to the West Coast would take some time or involve
some swaps.
> 
>   BP's announcement also gave another black eye to a firm that has
fashioned an image as a responsible, environmentally concerned
company, and it drew new criticism from pipeline experts and
environmentalists who have been saying for years that the company had
failed to do the maintenance needed to keep the pipeline free from
sludge and protect it from corrosion in the harsh Alaska conditions.
The Environmental Protection Agency has launched a criminal probe to
determine whether the company was negligent in managing the pipeline,
said sources who had talked to government investigators.
> 
>   "They have known about these problems for a long time and promised
for many years to fix them, and they haven't done so," said Peter van
Tuyn, an environmental lawyer based in Anchorage.
> 
>   Thomas J. Barrett, head of the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials
Safety Administration, visited BP's operations in early July and said
in a July 26 letter to Rep. John D. Dingell (D-Mich.) that he was
"disappointed by the lack of progress BP had made" since the agency
had ordered repairs and an analysis on March 15, after the spill was
discovered.
> 
>   There are 1,100 miles of pipelines in Alaska's North Slope, most
of them small lines that lead into three major, 36-inch-diameter
transit lines called Prudhoe West, where the March leak occurred;
Prudhoe East, which was closed on Sunday; and Lisburne. BP operates
the pipelines and owns about 26 percent of Prudhoe Bay; Exxon Mobil
Corp. and ConocoPhillips Co. are the other major shareholders. These
pipelines in turn feed into the 800-mile-long, 48-inch-diameter Trans
Alaska Pipeline.
> 
>   The oil companies have to regularly clean the lines to prevent a
sludge of sand and solid residue from building up, and they must
monitor the aboveground lines to detect corrosion in the harsh Arctic
climate. To clean the pipelines, they usually use a device known as a
"pig" because of the screeching noise it makes as it works its way
through the line. A separate "smart pig" is used to detect weak spots
in the pipeline.
> 
>   Steve Marshall, president of the BP subsidiary BP Exploration
Alaska Inc., said yesterday that BP had discovered 16 "anomalies" in
12 locations after inspecting about 40 percent of the 22-mile of
transit lines. In some places, corrosion had eaten away more than 70
percent of the 3/8 -inch pipeline wall. In one spot, the company said
it found a leak of four to five barrels.
> 
>   At the center of the criticism involving BP is the decision by the
world's second-largest publicly traded oil company to let seven years
go by without using a smart pig on the pipeline that sprung a leak in
March. The pipeline segment closed Sunday was last inspected with a
smart pig in 1992, before it was acquired by BP, a company spokesman said.
> 
>   Transportation Department regulations say that higher-pressure
pipelines should be inspected this way every five years, at least. If
companies delay pipeline cleaning, accumulations of sludge can make it
impossible for a pig to move through the line.
> 
>   The buildup of sludge was one reason that BP had failed to fully
comply with the March order from the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials
Safety Administration, part of the Transportation Department.
> 
>   "It's almost like a guy who is out of shape, who has been eating
cheeseburgers and whose arteries start getting clogged up and the
doctor says it's time to start exercising," said a congressional aide
who spoke on condition of anonymity because he did not want to appear
to be speaking for his representative. "And the question is how to get
back in shape without having a heart attack."
> 
>   The Justice Department has asked BP to cut out a 10- to 12-foot
section of pipe where the 270,000-gallon March leak occurred and to
give that to the government for analysis, a source said. But there are
thousands of gallons of oil in that section, creating engineering
problems. Next month, after overnight freezing temperatures return to
the area, those engineering problems could become more severe.
> 
>   BP chief executive John Browne was in Alaska last week to try to
polish the company's image and apologize for pipeline problems. BP,
which used to be known as British Petroleum, has tried to cultivate an
environmentally friendly image, saying that BP stood for "beyond
petroleum." But yesterday an official from a competing oil company
said it stood for "big problems."
> 
>   "We will not resume operation of the field until we and government
regulators are satisfied that they can be operated safely and pose no
threat to the environment," Robert A. Malone, president of BP America
Inc., said in a statement.
> 
>   Prudhoe Bay's production level has been slowly declining since it
hit a peak of 1.5 million barrels a day in 1989, and BP has
increasingly turned to new prospects in places such as Russia.
> 
>   "It's ironic," said Athan Manuel, an oil drilling expert at the
Sierra Club. "This is the company we've had the best relationship
with. But maybe they were taking money out of Alaska, which has aging
fields, to put money elsewhere."
> 
> 
>    
> 
> 
>
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>






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