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November 22, 2008, 10:01 am
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If We Drill In The US, We Don't Get The Oil



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Just passing on an article by Cenk Uygur, Huffington Post, that explains why more drilling doesn't mean lower gas prices:

One thing has been driving me crazy about this drilling debate -- everyone seems to assume that if we drill for oil in the US, that we will get the oil. And hence, we won't be dependent on foreign oil anymore. But we won't get anything, Exxon-Mobil will.

The oil that comes from that drilling will not be United States property (Republicans aren't suggesting we nationalize the oil companies, are they?). It will be the property of whichever oil company got the rights to that contract. They can then sell it to whoever they like -- and they will. They will sell it on the world market, so the Chinese will have just as much access to the oil that comes out of the coast of Florida as we will.

The Democrats have done a decent job of beating back the argument that this will effect prices in the short run, or even in the long run. But no one has addressed the point above. The Republicans make it seem like we won't be dependent on foreign oil -- and that prices will go down in the US -- if we have our own oil. But it won't be ours. And it will be sold on the world market, so its effect on global oil prices will be even smaller.

When we ask the question of whether there should be drilling off the coast of Florida or in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, we should ask the question this way -- would you be comfortable with the Chinese or the Germans or Russians or the Saudis drilling on American land? Because for all intents and purposes, they will be.

Large multi-national firms like Exxon-Mobil are not US property. They sell to the world and their allegiance is to corporate profits. So, when they drill, they drill for the whole world, not just us. Some might find that heart-warming, but it certainly has nothing to do with the US having more oil or lower prices.


You are exactly right in...

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You are exactly right in your point about oil. It will go to whichever entity has the mineral rights to it to sell on the open market to who ever can pay the price they will demand. Our only real way to fight back is to develop new sources of extracting usable energy that can run our machines. The days of business as before are over. I can't believe that a country like ours that can send humans to the moon and back, and continue working in outerspace can't make this happen. I think the real problem is how to regulate who can make money off of such technology, and the energy it needs.


Submitted by concernedperson on September 10, 2008 - 8:12am.

It doesn't matter which...

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It doesn't matter which company "owns" crude oil pumped from new wells drilled within the U.S., the extra barrels put on the market is subject the laws of supply and demand: If say, in the bottled drinking water market at a hypothetical daily shipping rate of 100 million liters of water a day by all brands in the world were to suddenly go up by 5 million liters a day because a start company in Idaho tapped a new Rocky Mountain well the increase in world supply will drop retail prices across the board, ever so slightly. It doesn't matter what the Idaho company calls itself or the fact that they "own" the water. Unless there's artificial price fixing by a monolithic water cartel, the price must go down. Saudi Arabia quit the oil cartel this morning. (Yea!) Why? Because most cartels fall apart in the end due to artificial prices that eventually lead to each participant in the cartel to look out after it's own greedy pricing, rather than the cartel's higher greedy pricing.


Submitted by Mongo on September 11, 2008 - 8:11am.

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