The Price of Oil (fwd)

2000-03-26 Thread Stephen E Philion

NYT: March 26, 2000

The Price of Oil
 
 Letters Index
 _
   
   To the Editor:
   
   As a former oil trader, I think there are several issues to consider
   about the currently high price of oil ("Clinton Calls for New Pool of
   Heating Oil for Northeast," news article, March 19).
   
   The tightness in the oil market is directly attributable to our
   country's lackluster research and development in alternative fuels and
   the improvement of vehicular fuel mileage, as well as lack of
   investment in our railroads. It is also a result of an aggressive
   foreign policy that has left important oil-producing countries like
   the former Soviet Union and Iraq in shambles.
   
   Storing large quantities of heating oil can create its own problems:
   it becomes very expensive in oil markets that are (like now) declining
   in future value by more than $1 per barrel per month. And there are
   chemical and stability issues that usually mandate a product
   changeover every few years.
   
   ERIC BRILL 
   Bedford Hills, N.Y., March 19, 2000
 _
   
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Re: The Price of Oil (fwd)

2000-03-26 Thread Michael Perelman

I would add the lack of city planning as another major culprit -- which makes
public transit work poorly and requires long commutes.

Stephen E Philion wrote:

 NYT: March 26, 2000

 The Price of Oil

  Letters Index
  _

To the Editor:

As a former oil trader, I think there are several issues to consider
about the currently high price of oil ("Clinton Calls for New Pool of
Heating Oil for Northeast," news article, March 19).

The tightness in the oil market is directly attributable to our
country's lackluster research and development in alternative fuels and
the improvement of vehicular fuel mileage, as well as lack of
investment in our railroads. It is also a result of an aggressive
foreign policy that has left important oil-producing countries like
the former Soviet Union and Iraq in shambles.

Storing large quantities of heating oil can create its own problems:
it becomes very expensive in oil markets that are (like now) declining
in future value by more than $1 per barrel per month. And there are
chemical and stability issues that usually mandate a product
changeover every few years.

ERIC BRILL
Bedford Hills, N.Y., March 19, 2000
  _

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Quick News | Page One Plus | International | National/N.Y. | Business
| Technology | Science | Sports | Weather | Editorial | Op-Ed | Arts |
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Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Chico, CA 95929
530-898-5321
fax 530-898-5901