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Re: Obama Curtails Drilling in Oil-Rich Alaskan Reserve
posted at October 29, 2012 12:11 PM EDT
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Posts: 342
First: October 13, 2012 Last: May 20, 2013 |
In Response to Obama Curtails Drilling in Oil-Rich Alaskan Reserve: Obama Curtails Drilling in Oil-Rich Alaskan Reserve The Obama administration, citing environmental concerns, has banned drilling on half of the vast National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska in a move decried even by Alaska’s congressional delegation. “The price of gasoline, which was $1.84 a gallon the day President Obama took office, has more than doubled since, willfully aided and abetted by an administration that claims we can't drill our way to energy independence as we ignore vast reserves of North American energy that dwarf OPEC's and we sit on 100 years' supply of petroleum,” Investor’s Business Daily (IBD) stated in an editorial. The National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska (NPRA), not to be confused with the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) to the east, is a 23.5-million-acre, Indiana-sized tract on Alaska’s North Slope. It was established by President Harding in 1923 to ensure oil supplies for the U.S. Navy. The desolate NPRA has been described as the largest tract of undisturbed public land in the United States and includes a point 120 miles from the nearest village or usable road. In 1976, the reserve was transferred to the Interior Department and Congress designated it as a strategic oil and natural gas stockpile to meet the “energy needs of the nation.” But in August, Obama’s Interior Secretary Ken Salazar announced that new drilling would be allowed on half of the reserve while the other half will be off-limits to oil and gas exploration. Environmentalists had lobbied to protect the habitat of caribou, eider ducks and other Arctic species. “The move drew praise from environmentalists but sharp criticism from oil and gas proponents who said it would restrict the industry’s ability to tap the nation’s hydrocarbon resources,” the Washington Post reported. The off-limits portions of the reserve are “the most productive areas” of a tract that IBD says contains 2.7 billion barrels of oil and 114 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. Alaska’s congressional delegation — Sens. Mark Begich (a Democrat) and Lisa Murkowski, and Rep. Don Young — call the administration’s action “the largest wholesale land withdrawal and blocking of access to an energy resource by the federal government in decades.” They also said the move “will significantly limit options for a pipeline” through the reserve to transport oil and gas. Erik Milito, the American Petroleum Institute’s group director of upstream and industry operations, said the plan “continues to leave domestic energy resources, jobs and government revenue off the table.” IBD concludes: “The move is typical Obama sleight of hand: Take credit for increased oil production on public lands that you had nothing to do with, lock up resources on federal lands with the exception of places the oil companies find unprofitable or unpromising, then blame them, not your administration, for driving up prices.” Posted by gymdandee Gas prices: Worse than '81 oil shockGas now at highest level, even adjusted for inflation; AAA's reading of nearly $3.20 a gallon marks ninth straight record high in current dollars.May 21 2007: 5:46 PM EDTThe motorist group AAA does a daily survey of up to 85,000 gas stations, but that reading does not go back to the 1981 spike. Its survey has been showing a series of record high prices in current dollars since May 13, and Monday the average price for a gallon of self-serve unleaded hit $3.196, the ninth straight record high and up from Sunday's record of $3.178.
The AAA survey now shows prices up 4 percent over the course of the last week, along with an increase of 11.8 percent over the last month.
AAA warned in congressional testimony last week it believes that more record prices could be on the way. It is forecasting prices will approach $3.25 a gallon over the next 60 days.
Still AAA is predicting a record number of Americans will be hitting the road holiday weekend, with 38.3 million expected to be traveling 100 miles or more over the Memorial Day holiday, up 1.7 percent from a year ago. And most of those - 32.1 million - will be driving on their trip, according to the motorist group.
Topping post-Katrina records Before this recent run of record-high gas prices, the highest price ever recorded in current dollars was $3.057 in the AAA survey, which was set Sept. 4 and Sept. 5, 2005, in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. That storm disrupted refinery operations and pipelines and caused a temporary spike, sending prices above the $3 mark for eight days.
The only other time that the AAA national average has topped the $3 mark was in August 2006, after Israel invaded Lebanon and oil futures shot higher. Gas prices then reached as high as $3.036 during that 19-day spike.
The current price increases are due to problems in gasoline supplies and refinery output. The average gas price went above $3 a gallon on May 4, and has been climbing since. Unless prices fall suddenly, Wednesday will mark the longest stretch of $3 gas on the AAA survey's history.
Few states have an average gas price below $3. California had the highest average price, with a gallon of self-serve unleaded costing $3.457, up slightly from the $3.453 reading Sunday after several days of prices slipping slightly there.
New Jersey retained the lead in the race to have the cheapest average gas price, but it is quickly approaching the $3 a gallon threshold itself. The average price there came in at $2.938 a gallon in the Monday reading, up from $2.93 Sunday.
New Jersey is one of only three states with an average price below the $3 mark. The other two - South Carolina and New Hampshire - are both within a penny or less of that mark, after both rose in the latest reading.
Four more states - Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee and Virginia - became the latest states to cross that $3 a gallon benchmark in the Sunday survey. http://money.cnn.com/2007/05/21/news/economy/record_gas_monday/ |
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Re: Pre-obama Gas Prices
posted at October 29, 2012 12:45 PM EDT
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Posts: 342
First: October 13, 2012 Last: May 20, 2013 |
Thanks, Obama, for lower gasoline prices3 days, 13 hours ago http://voices.kansascity.com/entries/thanks-obama-lower-gasoline-prices/ Quote: "So when Obama took office, gasoline was at nearly its lowest in a long time, largely because demand had fallen and no one yet knew how badly the recession was going to financially damage America. That’s why it’s so funny to hear conservatives talk about what the price of gasoline was when Obama took over: He and his policies had nothing to do with getting the price that low. And frankly, he and his policies have had very little to do with getting it so high in the subsequent years - or with forcing it down in recent weeks." |
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Re: Obama Curtails Drilling in Oil-Rich Alaskan Reserve
posted at October 31, 2012 12:22 AM EDT
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Posts: 585
First: May 28, 2012 Last: May 15, 2013 |
Short memory ? Gas prices went up to $4.50 per gallon under Republican George W. Bush. President Obama, nor any President can control gas prices. Yeah, just drill and drill more, who cares about the repercussions or the B.P. accidents of tomorrow, its not in your backyard. Who cares how we leave this Nation for our children and their children. Just keep ignoring President Obama's plea for alternative energy sources and keep raping our land. Inverstor's Business Daily is a pro corporate profits first source that doesn't like President Obama because he fights Wall Street Greed. President Obama fights the Republican's attempt in privatizing and turning Social Security over to Wall Street and President Obama is fighting the Romney / Ryan attempt to dismantle Medicare into a voucher system, that will make private healthcare companies Billions more in profits, while costing us thousands more for care. Vote for Romney and see what happens to your Social Security and Medicare. You are so blinded by your hatred, that you dont even know who's actually on your side. Response to Obama Curtails Drilling in Oil-Rich Alaskan Reserve: Obama Curtails Drilling in Oil-Rich Alaskan Reserve The Obama administration, citing environmental concerns, has banned drilling on half of the vast National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska in a move decried even by Alaska’s congressional delegation. “The price of gasoline, which was $1.84 a gallon the day President Obama took office, has more than doubled since, willfully aided and abetted by an administration that claims we can't drill our way to energy independence as we ignore vast reserves of North American energy that dwarf OPEC's and we sit on 100 years' supply of petroleum,” Investor’s Business Daily (IBD) stated in an editorial. The National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska (NPRA), not to be confused with the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) to the east, is a 23.5-million-acre, Indiana-sized tract on Alaska’s North Slope. It was established by President Harding in 1923 to ensure oil supplies for the U.S. Navy. The desolate NPRA has been described as the largest tract of undisturbed public land in the United States and includes a point 120 miles from the nearest village or usable road. In 1976, the reserve was transferred to the Interior Department and Congress designated it as a strategic oil and natural gas stockpile to meet the “energy needs of the nation.” But in August, Obama’s Interior Secretary Ken Salazar announced that new drilling would be allowed on half of the reserve while the other half will be off-limits to oil and gas exploration. Environmentalists had lobbied to protect the habitat of caribou, eider ducks and other Arctic species. “The move drew praise from environmentalists but sharp criticism from oil and gas proponents who said it would restrict the industry’s ability to tap the nation’s hydrocarbon resources,” the Washington Post reported. The off-limits portions of the reserve are “the most productive areas” of a tract that IBD says contains 2.7 billion barrels of oil and 114 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. Alaska’s congressional delegation — Sens. Mark Begich (a Democrat) and Lisa Murkowski, and Rep. Don Young — call the administration’s action “the largest wholesale land withdrawal and blocking of access to an energy resource by the federal government in decades.” They also said the move “will significantly limit options for a pipeline” through the reserve to transport oil and gas. Erik Milito, the American Petroleum Institute’s group director of upstream and industry operations, said the plan “continues to leave domestic energy resources, jobs and government revenue off the table.” IBD concludes: “The move is typical Obama sleight of hand: Take credit for increased oil production on public lands that you had nothing to do with, lock up resources on federal lands with the exception of places the oil companies find unprofitable or unpromising, then blame them, not your administration, for driving up prices.”
Posted by gymdandee |