Monday, May 26, 2014

why gas prices are so high?




ronilo


we have a car and we suffer of this gas crisis. Im wondering why, nature does not get money from those oil miners, they get gases underground for free!!!!and why do they increase the prices of these FREE gases underground???

high demand??? what a heck, why the dont suck gas underground to make millions and millions and billions of gallons of gas. or get a underground gas-sucking device???

im mad of those high prices.

or, mother nature makes it high to reduce global warming??? oh men, go back to bicycle...

and i expect that the prices WONT get down when it higher.



Answer
we cant do anything but to reduce the usage. china and other countries use more gases and we pay for it. bikes? electric cars are better. if the gas prices become low, i think it will be in 2012, or something like that.... and i think that we already sucked the rest of the underground gas. go electric!!!!

Has the "BP"(ARCO) oil spill made the 2012 destruction of planet Earth a reality?




guitarohol


Is it possible the global corporate community is hiding the devastating truth?
Will the destroyed eco systems cause all of the others to fail?
How many new jobs will be created to get the cleanup done?
Where is the public outrage?
Would a boycott of ARCO gas stations wake up British Petroleum?
Wow! Impressive answers. Seriously, I appreciate all of the answers because they tell me good people are concerned. I award thumbs up to all answers and will choose the best one... Thanks again.



Answer
No, the "BP"(ARCO) oil spill has not made the 2012 destruction of planet Earth a reality.

When someone says, âI want to boycott BP,â the person you wind up hurting is the guy who lives in the community, buys the pages in the high school year book, and the cookies from the girl scouts.

What I think they ought to do instead isâ¦start walking.

In other words, boycotting certain gas stations only stands to harm individual gas station owners, not the larger company. Thatâs because individual stations that have the BP logo on them may or may not buy from a BP gas distributor. More importantly, stations that donât have the BP logo are just as likely to buy from a BP distributor. A host of liberal media outlets, from the New York Times to Time magazine, have pointed out the futility of a boycott.

the only way to really ensure environmental safety is to boycott oil entirely.

But it doesn't even end there. So you buy a plug-in electric car. But that energy you're charging it with could come from a power plant burning natural gas. And, oh wait -- according to BP's website: http://www.bp.com/sectiongenericarticle.do?categoryId=3050046&contentId=3050873

Today, natural gas makes up more than half of BP's energy production, making us the largest producer and supplier in the U.S. In fact, the metro busses here in DC run on natural gas, so perhaps public transportation is out of the question as well. That leaves your bicycle and feet. An inconvenient truth, indeed.

In the real world, no matter how careful you are, accidents happen. There's always the possibility of human error, and sometimes even machines and computers malfunction. So long as an ecological disaster is possible, no matter how improbable, you have to be comfortable with the fact that it could happen.

That's not to say that BP (and probably others) shouldn't have done a better job in identifying more effective disaster containment. It just means that if we want to live in a world where we consume energy and resources in the way we do, we must accept the possibility that, from time to time, things go very badly. We certainly don't have to like it, but we can't pretend that boycotting one company will change very much. o_O




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